ACLU of Virginia Defends Federal Law Guaranteeing Religious Rights of Prisoners
CONTACT: media@aclu.org
RICHMOND, VA -- The American Civil Liberties Union of Virginia today filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals defending the constitutionality of the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA).
Passed by Congress in
2000, RLUIPA prohibits state prisons and other institutions that receive federal
funds from interfering with the right of inmates to practice their religion,
unless the institution can cite a security or similarly important reason for the
prohibition.
“RLUIPA’s enactment is a recognition that prison officials often
fail to honor prisoners’ basic religious rights,” said ACLU of Virginia Legal
Director Rebecca K. Glenberg. “It is disturbing to see Virginia once again
trying to evade its obligation under federal law to accommodate inmates’
religion.”
This is the second time the Fourth Circuit will consider the
constitutionality of RLUIPA. In 2003, the appeals court rejected Virginia’s
argument that RLUIPA violated the First Amendment’s mandate for the separation
of church and state.
The case, Madison v. Riter, was returned to the lower
court, where the Virginia Department of Corrections recently argued that
Congress overreached its powers when it enacted the statute. The state argues
RLUIPA unconstitutionally forces states to alter their prison policies by tying
federal funding to compliance with the federal law.
“If Virginia wants to
use federal funds to operate its prisons, it has to play by federal rules -- and
that includes accommodating inmates’ religious practices,” said Glenberg.
This case began nearly five years ago when Ira Madison, an inmate at
Buckingham Correctional Center who is a member of the 100-year-old Church of God
and Saints of Christ, filed a RLUIPA lawsuit in U.S. District Court in Roanoke
to compel prison officials to provide him with a meal consistent with his
religious beliefs. The meal, called the Common Fare Diet, is typically made
available to Islamic and Jewish inmates.
A copy of the ACLU of Virginia’s
brief is online at: www.acluva.org/docket/pleadings/madison_amicus2.pdf.