
Interfaith Alliance is deeply troubled by today’s Supreme Court ruling in Landor v. Louisiana. The Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA) is an important protection for religious freedom in prisons, but today's ruling weakens its real world impact by closing off meaningful ways for compensation when violations occur.
Today’s ruling is not just a setback for Damon Landor, it threatens the enforceability of religious freedom protections for incarcerated people across the country. As Justice Jackson warned in dissent, this ruling ‘ties the other hand’ of the incarcerated people seeking to enforce their rights. Without the ability to hold individuals accountable and limited ways to sue state agencies for monetary damages, the practical consequence is stark.
Interfaith Alliance joined Americans United for Separation of Church and State, and four other religious and civil rights groups in filing an amicus brief in support of Landor, arguing that the ability to sue for individual damages is critical for imprisoned people seeking to defend their religious freedom. We stand by that today.
MEDIA CONTACT:
Ben DePasquale, [email protected], 717-779-4660

Interfaith Alliance welcomes today’s Supreme Court ruling in Trump v. Barbara, striking down President Trump’s executive order attacking birthright citizenship. Today’s decision is a clear victory against the Trump administration’s effort to strip American-born children of a constitutional right that no president has the power to take away.

Interfaith Alliance is deeply troubled by today’s Supreme Court rulings in Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J. By upholding Idaho and West Virginia’s bans, the Court has allowed states to exclude transgender students from playing in school sports simply because of who they are.