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Monday, the Supreme Court agreed to take up the case of Landor, who filed a lawsuit based on the 2020 incident when he had his dreadlocks cut off by prison officials in the Correction Center. There, ...
WASHINGTON (NYT) — The Supreme Court said Monday that it would decide whether a Rastafarian man may sue prison guards in Louisiana who shaved off his dreadlocks in seeming violation of an appeals ...
Updates and the latest news as the Senate presses forward with Trump's domestic policy agenda bill and the NYC mayoral ...
Landor, an adherent of the Rastafari religion, even carried a copy of a ruling by the appeals court in another inmate’s case ...
Damon Landor says his religious rights were violated under a law called the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons ...
In our news wrap Monday, the Supreme Court is allowing the Trump administration to restart deportations of migrants to ...
The U.S. Supreme Court agreed to hear the case of Damon Landor, a former Louisiana inmate who says prison officials violated ...
While a lower court condemned the actions of the prison guards, it determined that Landor could not sue them for damages because the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act of 2000 ...
The Supreme Court on Monday agreed to decide whether an inmate can sue a government official in his individual capacity – ...
The justices will decide whether prison officials can face monetary damages for violating the religious beliefs of an inmate.
The justices agreed to hear Landor v. Louisiana, a religious freedom case involving a former prison inmate whose dreadlocks were cut by guards ...