A Rastafarian incarcerated in federal prison should have been able to develop a record for his claims that he was denied a diet that accords with his religion, the Third Circuit has ruled. The U.S.
The high court’s review of a Rastafarian man’s case against Louisiana prison officials could decide whether inmates can get any accountability when their religious rights are violated.
WASHINGTON − Damon Landor was prepared to protect the dreadlocks he had been growing for nearly two decades, in adherence to his Rastafarian beliefs, when serving a prison sentence in Louisiana for ...
The Supreme Court agreed Monday to take up the case of a Rastafarian man seeking to sue prison officials in Louisiana who cut off his dreadlocks while he was incarcerated. The case is the latest that ...
WASHINGTON — Taking up a new religious rights case, the Supreme Court agreed Monday to weigh a claim for damages brought by a devout Rastafarian whose dreadlocks were cut by Louisiana prison officials ...
Washington — The Supreme Court said Monday that it will consider a religious rights case brought by a former Louisiana inmate who is seeking to sue Louisiana prison officials for money damages for ...
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