Does the Most Favored Nation Approach to Religious Discrimination Apply in Prison?
Yesterday, the Supreme Court held that the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA) cannot be the basis for a lawsuit for money damages against state prison officials who blatantly violate it because, according to the 6-3 majority opinion of Justice Gorsuch, laws enacted pursuant to the Spending Clause cannot authorize liability against people who are not the recipients of federal funding. Louisiana, the Court said, took the federal money and thus subjected itself to RLUIPA, but the officers did not. As a consequence, petitioner Damon Landor was left without a remedy against the officers who shaved his head in violation of RLUIPA, even after they were clearly informed that doing so would violate Landor's sincere Rastafarian beliefs. In my latest Verdict column , I offer three reasons why the holding in Landor v. Louisiana Dept of Corrections and Public Safety is problematic. The first two track arguments made by Justice Jackson (joined by Justices ...