Friday, August 15, 2014

Britain's Equality Commission Seeks Public Inupt On Religion and Belief Issues

Britain's Equality and Human Rights Commission yesterday called for input from the public as part of its three-year project to strengthen the understaning of religion and belief in public life. Yesterday's EHRC Release reads in part:
The Equality and Human Rights Commission has today launched a major call for evidence from individuals and organisations about how their religion or belief, or that of other people, may have affected their experiences in the workplace and in using the services and facilities they need in everyday life. People can give their feedback at www.equalityhumanrights.com/religion.
The Commission wants to gather as much information as possible from members of the public, employers, providers of services, legal advisors and religion or belief organisations.  This will be used to assess how employers and service providers are taking religion or belief into account and the impact this has on individuals.  The work covers all faiths and beliefs and experiences in England, Scotland and Wales. We want to hear about the issues people face and how they find solutions.  The Commission will also use the evidence as part of its work looking at how effective the current legislation is proving in practice.

In Tennessee, A Rare Win For Opponents of Same-Sex Marriage

In the face of a long string of federal cases in recent months striking down state laws that bar recognition of same-sex marriage, the opponents of same-sex marriage last week realized a rare victory. In Borman v. Pyles-Borman(TN Cir. Ct., Aug. 5, 2014), a Tennessee state trial court upheld Tennessee's ban on recognizing same-sex marriages performed in other states. The decision comes in a divorce case involving a same-sex couple legally married in Iowa, but now residing in Tennessee.  A Tennessee court presumably cannot grant a divorce unless the marriage is first recognized in the state.

In upholding Tennessee's anti-recognition law against an equal protection challenge, the court wrote in part:
In the Windsor case the Supreme Court opines that if a state finds same-sex marriage to be valid, the Federal Government cannot trump that State's law. The Supreme Court does not go the fmal step and fmd that a State that defines marriages as a union of one (1) man and one (l) woman is unconstitutional. Further, the Supreme Court does not find that one State's refusal to accept as valid another States valid same-sex marriage to be in violation of the U.S. Constitution.... 
The Court finds that marriage is·a fundamental right. However, neither the Tennessee Supreme Court nor the United States Supreme Court has ever decided that this fundamental right under a state's laws extends beyond the traditional definition of marriage as a union between one (1) man and one (1) woman.... The Legislative Branch of Tennessee and the voters of Tennessee have said that the definition of marriage should be as it always has been.....
The court then adopts language from the state's brief in finding a rational basis for the state's traditional definition.

Moving to the full-faith-and-credit challenge, the court concludes:
The laws of Iowa concerning same sex marriage is so diametrically opposed to Tennessee's laws, and Tennessee's own legitimate public policy concerning same-sex marriage, that Tennessee is not required by the U.S. Constitution to give full faith and credit to a valid marriage of a same-sex couple in Iowa. 
Yesterday Liberty Counsel issued a press release announcing the decision. Earlier this month, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals heard oral arguments in a separate challenge to Tennesseee's marriage recognition laws. (See prior posting.)

Canadian Rival FLDS Leaders Indicted For Polygamy

In Canada yesterday, the Criminal Justice Branch of the British Columbia Minstry of Justice announced that indictments charging polygamy have been filed against the leaders of two rival Bountiful, BC sects of the Fundamentalist Latter Day Saints. The indictments charge that Winston Blackmore practiced a form of polygamy with 24 women, while James Oler is charged with having polygamous unions with four women. Tgey are also charged with unlawful removal of a child from Canada. National Post has more on the indictments. In 2011, atrial court upheld the constituitonality of British Columbia's anti-polygamy laws. (See prior posting.)

NY Farm Fined For Denying Its Wedding Facilities For Same-Sex Wedding

In McCarthy v. Liberty Ridge Farm, LLC, (NY Div. Human Rights, Aug. 8, 2014), the New York State Divsion of Human Rights levied a $10,000 civil fine and awarded compensatory damages of $3,000 in a proceeding against a farm that adversises itself as a venue for weddings, but which refused to contract with the two women complainants for them to use the facilities for their same-sex wedding. The Division held that the discrimination violated the public accommodation provisions of the New York Human Rights Law.  Respondents were also required to take steps to prevent future discrimination.  The Albany Times-Union reported on the decision.

Thursday, August 14, 2014

Leonard Fine, 80, Dies

Leonard Fine, a giant in the field of religion, public policy and social justice, died today at the age of 80. The Forward, for whom he was a long-time columnist, reported on his death. Fine was a co-founder of Moment Magazine, founder of MAZON and of the National Jewish Coalition for Literacy.

4th Circuit Refuses Stay In Invalidation of Virginia's Same-Sex Marriage Ban

By a 2-1 vote yesterday, the U.S. 4th Circuit Court of Appeals issued an Order (full text)  in Bostic v. Schaeffer refusing to delay the mandate in its decision last month invalidating Virginia's ban on same-sex marriage. (See prior posting.)  SCOTUSblog reports that attorneys representing the county clerk who is defending the same-sex marriage ban on appeal say they will seek a stay from the Supreme Court before the 4th Circuit's mandate takes effect next Wednesday. A petition for certiorari has already been filed seeking Supreme Court review of the underlying decision. (See prior posting.) Washington Post has more on the plans to seek a Supreme Court stay.

Indian Court Upholds National Commission For Minorities Act

The Times of India reports today that a 2-judge panel of the Allahabad high court has upheld the constitutionality of India's National Commission for Minorities Act. Rejecting claims that the Act discriminates on the basis of religion, the court said in part:
The commission cannot be regarded as a body which is constituted as an institution in aid of or for the protection of a religion but it is an institution which has been created by the Act of Parliament to ensure that minorities are able to realise their rights to development and freedom.

Recount Looming In Slim Primary Victory of Controversial Wisconsin House Candidate

The Hill reports that a likely recount in Wiconsin's Republican congressional primary has called into question Tuesday's initial apparent victory of state senator Glenn Grothman. As of Wednesday morning, Grothman was leading by only 214 votes. (Wis. Election Watch). Grothman, running for the Republican nomination for the U.S. House of Representatives in Wisconsin's 6th District, has become controversial because of his conservative social views.  According to The Hill:
Grothman recently said it was "unbelievable" that Secretary of State John Kerry criticized Uganda's harsh anti-gay laws, and has repeatedly called homosexuality a "sin," saying it "should not flourish" in American society. He's also attacked what he's called the "war on men" during a 2010 Tea Party rally, has said that "money is more important for men" as part of explaining why he opposed equal pay legislation, and has sponsored legislation that said that single parenting is a contributing factor to child abuse.

Canada's Citizenship Oath To The Queen Does Not Violate Charter Rights

In McAteer v. Canada (Attorney General), (Ont. Ct. App., August 13, 2014), the Court of Appeal for Ontario rejected constitutional challenges to the requirement that immigrants who wish to become Canadian citizens must swear or affirm that "I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Second, Queen of Canada, Her Heirs and Successors." Two of the challengers were committed republicans whose consciences were offended by taking an oath to a hereditary monarch. They alleged that the oath violates their freedom of expression and their equality rights protected by Canada's Charter of Rights and Freedoms. Two other plaintiffs asserted that the oath violates their freedom of conscience and religion protected by the Charter:
The appellant Ms. Simone Topey is a Rastafarian who regards the Queen as the head of Babylon. She deposes that it would violate her religious beliefs to take any kind of oath to the Queen. She further deposes that on account of the oath, she would feel bound to refrain from participating in anti-monarchist movements. The evidence of Mr. Howard Gomberg, a former plaintiff in these proceedings, is that taking an oath to any human being is contrary to his conception of Judaism.
In rejecting the Charter challenges, the appeals court said:
Although the Queen is a person, in swearing allegiance to the Queen of Canada, the would-be citizen is swearing allegiance to a symbol of our form of government in Canada. This fact is reinforced by the oath’s reference to “the Queen of Canada,” instead of “the Queen.” It is not an oath to a foreign sovereign. Similarly, in today’s context, the reference in the oath to the Queen of Canada’s “heirs and successors” is a reference to the continuity of our form of government extending into the future.
The Globe and Mail reports on the decision.

Wednesday, August 13, 2014

In Criminal Trial of Palestinian, Jewish Judge Recuses Himself On New Grounds

In Detroit yesterday, federal district Judge Paul Borman recused himself, sua sponte, in the criminal trial of a Palestinian woman chargged with failing to disclose to immigration officials the fact that she spent ten years in an Israeli prison for participating in two terrorist plots, one of which involved the bombing of a supermarket.  Last month Borman refused to recuse himself when his impartiality was challenged on the basis of his history of fundraising for the Detroit Jewish Federation and his organizing trips to Israel. (See prior posting.) Now, however, the prosecution furnished a translation of the Israeli indictment against defendant Rasmieh Odeh which indicated that the supermarket targeted in the bombing plot was a SuperSol. In United States v. Odeh, (ED MI, Aug. 12, 2014), Judge Borman wrote:
[A]t the time of the 1969 bombing, my family had a passive financial investment connection to SuperSol.... The Court concludes that my family’s passive financial investment connection to SuperSol at the time of the 1969 bombing could be perceived as establishing a reasonably objective inference of a lack of impartiality in the context of the issues presented in this case.
I recuse today, not because of my charitable giving or my work on behalf of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit or other charities, which I concluded in my previous Order created neither the reasonable appearance nor the fact of impartiality. My decision to recuse today is based upon facts which became known to me yesterday in review of a relevant document not previously seen by the Court....
The Chicago Sun-Times reports on the decision.

USCIRF Issues Report On Sectarian Violence In Pakistan

The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom yesterday issued a Factsheet titled Violence Towards Religious Communities In Pakistan. It reports that  from July 2013 to June 2014 there were 122 incidents of sectarian violence resulting in 430 deaths and another 773 injuries.  The most common kind of violence was targeted shooting. The largest number of attacks were against Shi'a Muslims, with 222 deaths. The second largest number were against Christians, with 128 deaths. The report includes details of each violent incident.

Vatican Calls On Muslims and Others To Condemn ISIS

Vatican Radio reports that the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue yesterday issued a statement strongly condemning the atrocities comitted in Iraq by ISIS. The full text of the statement is included in the Vatican Radio report. It reads in part:
The whole world has witnessed with incredulity what is now called the "Restoration of the Caliphate," which had been abolished on October 29,1923 by Kamal Ataturk, founder of modern Turkey. Opposition to this "restoration" by the majority of religious institutions and Muslim politicians has not prevented the "Islamic State" jihadists from committing and continuing to commit unspeakable criminal acts....
The dramatic plight of Christians, Yezidis and other religious communities and ethnic minorities in Iraq requires a clear and courageous stance on the part of religious leaders, especially Muslims, as well as those engaged in interreligious dialogue and all people of good will. All must be unanimous in condemning unequivocally these crimes and in denouncing the use of religion to justify them. If not, what credibility will religions, their followers and their leaders have? 

Israel's Law of Return Extended To Same-Sex Non-Jewish Spouses

Since 1970, Israel's Law of Return which grants every Jew in the world the right to settle in Israel has also permitted the non-Jewish spouse of a Jew to settle in the country. The Jerusalem Post reports that yesterday Israel's Interior Minister Gidon Saar instructed the Population and Immigration Authority and the Jewish Agency to grant immigration visas and Israeli citizenship under the Law of Return to non-Jewish same-sex spouses on the same basis as to heterosexual couples. Haredi (ultra-Orthodox Jewish) groups in Israel and the United States strongly criticized the Interior Minister's decision.

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Ohio Gubernatorial Candidates Take Different Approaches To Public Religious Expression

Yesterday's Columbus Dispatch explores the difference in the public expression of religion by Ohio's two gubernatorial candidates:
Gov. John Kasich doesn’t hide his religious convictions, talking about them frequently in speeches and at other public gatherings.
Ed FitzGerald holds religious values but rarely talks about them.
Although they espouse many of the same principles, the contrast in how Ohio’s gubernatorial candidates apply their Christianity to their public life and policies is stark.
While Democrat FitzGerald, the Cuyahoga County executive, favors abortion rights and supports same-sex marriage as public policy, the lifelong Catholic won’t say how he feels about those issues personally....
Kasich, a Republican who was raised Catholic but became a Protestant after his parents were killed by a drunken driver in 1987, cites God regularly in public, such as in justifying the building of a Holocaust Memorial on the Statehouse grounds, expanding Medicaid to more than a quarter-million Ohioans, in graduation speeches, in his State of the State addresses and even during an event launching a campaign to prevent the elderly from falling....

DC Circuit Acts On Case Remanded After Hobby Lobby

As previously reported, after the U.S. Supreme Court decided the Hobby Lobby case allowing for-profit-businesses to assert religious objections to the Affordable Care Act's contraceptive coverage mandate, it remanded three other cases on its docket posing the same issue. In what appears to be the first Circuit Court to act on the remand, the D.C. Circuit last week entered an order in Gilardi v. HHS (Aug. 8, 2014) providing:
it is ORDERED and ADJUDGED that the case be remanded to the district court with instructions to enter a preliminary injunction for the Freshway companies and to reconsider the denial of the preliminary injunction as to the individual owners in light of Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores, Inc., 134 S. Ct. 2751 (2014).
Yesterday's Insurance Journal reports on the order. In the case, the D.C. Circuit Court had originally rejected the claim that secular corporations have free exercise rights, but had remanded to the district court for further findings the claims of the individual owners. The ruling on corporate rights had been appealed to the Supreme Court. (See prior posting.)

Little attention has been given to the fact that plaintiffs in the case asserted, consistent with their Catholic beliefs, that they have religious objections to all atificial contraception, not just the limited number of contraceptive methods involved in Hobby Lobby. (Gilardi complaint.) Apparently last week's D.C. Circuit Court order requires the district court to issue an injunction protecting these broader objections.

5th Circuit Rejects Discrimination Claim By Jehovah's Witness

In Norbach v. Woodland Village Nursing Center, Inc., (5th Cir., Augl 7, 2014), the U.S. 5th Circuit Court of Appeals, reversing the district court, dismissed a Title VII religious discrimination suit brought by a nursing home activities aide.  Kelsey Nobach was fired by the nursing home after she refused to pray the Rosary with a patient.  The court held that no evidence had been presented to the jury showing that the employer knew or reasonably should have known that her refusal was based on her Jehovah's Witness religious beliefs. BNA Daily Labor Report covers the decision.

Monday, August 11, 2014

Christian-Owned Bridal Shop Refuses Gown Fittings For Lesbian Couple

The latest installment in the battle over whether Christian-owned businesses can refuse service based on religious beliefs comes from Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania. According to yesterday's Christian News, W.W. Bridal Boutique in Bloomsburg recently refused to schedule gown fittings for two lesbian women who were planning their wedding.  One of the women refused service took her complaints to Facebook, and the dispute has now proliferated on social media.  Bridal shop owner Victoria Miller later told reporters: "We feel we have to answer to God for what we do. And providing those two girls dresses for a sanctified marriage would break God’s law." Now Bloomsburg city council is considering enacting an ordinance to prohibit discrimiantion on the basis of sexual orientation.

Texas Court Says There Is No Absolute Right To Home School Free of State Regulation

In El Paso Independent School District v. McIntyre, (TX App., Aug. 6, 2014), home-school parents challenged the right of the state to investigate the curriculum which they utilized. It was claimed that the McIntyre children did little school work, and that one of the children said they did not need to because they were going to be raptured. When another of the children ran away at age 17 so she could attend school, the parents refused to provide the school district with any information.

Most of the appellate court's lengthy decision dismissed various claims by the parents on procedural and jurisdictional grounds, including failure to exhaust administrative remedies, election of remedies and qualified immunity. Reaching the parents' 1st Amendment free exerrcise claim, the court rejected the parents' argument that the U.S. Supreme Court's 1972 Yoder decision gave them the right to withhold their children from any type of institutional school beyond the eighth grade. The court noted tha the situation of the Amish in that case was unique and observed:
No parents have ever prevailed in any reported case on a theory that they have an absolute constitutional right to educate their children in the home, completely free of any state supervision, regulation, or requirements. 

Lebanon Elects New Grand Mufti

Naharnet reports that in Lebanon yesterday, Sheikh Abdul Latif Daryan has been elected as the country's new Grand Mufti. Daryan is currently head of the Sunni Sharia Supreme Court. After his election, Daryan called for moderation and vowed to end the division between the Mufti and the Higher Islamic Council.

Cert. Petitions Filed In Oklahoma and Virginia Same-Sex Marriage Cases

Following quickly on the heels of Utah's Aug. 5 certiorari petition to the U.S. Supreme Court (see prior posting), certiorari petitions have been filed in two more same-sex marriage cases:

A petition (full text) was filed Aug. 6 in Smith v. Bishop, a case in which the 10th Circuit held that Oklahoma's ban on granting licences for same-sex marriages performed in the state is unconstitutional. (See prior posting.) Reporting on the petition, Lyle Denniston at SCOTUS Blog points out that this is the longest-running federal court challenge to same-sex marriage bans, having been filed in 2004.

On Aug. 8, a petition for certiorari (full text) was filed in Rainey v. Bostic. In the case, the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals, in a 2-1 decision, struck down Virginia's ban on same-sex marriage. (See prior posting.) Reporting on the petition, Lyle Denniston at SCOTUS Blog comments that: "The Virginia case has special symbolic significance, because that is the state that produced the case of Loving v. Virginia, in which the Supreme Court in 1967 struck down a state law barring marriage by couples of different races."