Appellant was found guilty after a bench trial of simple possession of marijuana, a conviction that resulted from his arrest for motor vehicle violations and an ensuing search of his person, which yielded a small quantity of maríjuana. ■ On appeal, his main contention is that the trial judge erroneously barred him from asserting a defense under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb (2005) (the RFRA or the Act), based on his claim that he is an adherent of the Rastafarian religion and that marijuana use is a sacrament of that faith. Our consideration of this issue, however, is limited to plain error review because appellant did not adequately present the statutory claim — as distinct from one under the First Amendment — to the trial judge. Applying plain error analysis to the RFRA claim, and rejecting as well appellant's related arguments for reversal, we affirm the conviction.
I.
Not until his opening statement did appellant signal his intent to defend on grounds of his religious affiliation. There, he told the trial judge through his counsel that he had been a practicing Rastafarian since childhood, that “cannabis is used as a sacrament” in that religion, and that his possession of the marijuana at the time of his arrest was in conjunction with that use. He asserted that his use of the drug was “essential to the free exercise [of] his religion!, and t]hat he ha[d] an absolute right under the First Amendment of the Constitution to so practice this religious faith.” When the trial judge (sitting as trier of fact) interrupted and asked what authority appellant had for the defense, he responded by citing United States v. Bauer,
II.
In this court, appellant makes the threefold argument that the trial judge erroneously “preclu[ded his] religious privilege defense ... in contravention of the [RFRA], the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendmentf,] and the [e]qual [protection and [d]ue [p]rocess” components of the Fifth Amendment (Br. for App. at 1). The latter two strands of this argument may be quickly resolved. In Whyte, supra, this court rejected an all but identical claim under the free exercise clause; see also Smith,
That leaves us with appellant’s primary claim — that the judge erred in barring his defense under the RFRA. This statute was originally enacted in 1993 in direct response to the Supreme Court’s
An individual asserting a claim or defense under the RFRA must show by a preponderance of the evidence that the government action in question would substantially burden the sincere exercise of his religion, whereupon the burden of proof shifts to the government to show that the action (1) would further a compelling governmental interest (2) that cannot be effectuated by less restrictive means. See 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb-l; United States v. Israel,
As the proceedings summarized above demonstrate, appellant never once mentioned the RFRA to the trial judge. It is true that he cited the Bauer decision and that Bauer in fact was a case interpreting and applying the RFRA. But appellant cited the case for the first time during an opening statement in which he claimed that his use of marijuana was essential “to the free exercise [of] his religion,” an “absolute right [of his] under the First Amendment.” When the judge asked him for case law from this jurisdiction or the Supreme Court supporting the religious defense, he again asserted “the First Amendment.” As the trial progressed, the judge twice informed him of binding deci-sional law rejecting his constitutional free exercise claim. On neither occasion did appellant attempt to clarify that instead he was making a statutory argument; rather,
“Points not asserted with sufficient precision to indicate distinctly the party’s thesis will normally be spurned on appeal,” Baxter v. United States,
We accordingly review the statutory claim under plain error standards, and upon doing so, we find no basis for reversal. We assume, for argument’ sake, that appellant held a sincere belief in religious tenets of Rastafarianism, and that enforcement of the marijuana law would substantially burden his exercise of that religion.
For this argument to prevail now, its correctness had to be “obvious” to the trial judge. See Olano,
Affirmed.
Notes
. In reimposing the compelling governmental interest test, Congress criticized the Court in Smith for having “virtually eliminated the requirement that the government justify burdens on religious exercise imposed by laws neutral toward religion.” Id. § 2000bb (a)(4).
. Some courts and commentators have opined that the RFRA encroaches upon judicial authority and thus violates separation of powers principles. See, e.g., La Voz Radio de la Communidad v. FCC,
. These assumptions enable us to avoid, with or without a remand to the trial court, answering such problematical questions as whether Rastafarianism is a religion and, if so, whether its religious tenets in fact embrace the use of marijuana, as appellant contends, and would be substantially burdened by enforcement of the marijuana law as to him. See, e.g., United States v. Meyers,
. See, e.g., United States v. Valrey,
