Thе plaintiffs, who are Protestant inmates of Wisconsin prisons, brought this suit under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2000bb
et seq.,
and under various clauses of the U.S. and Wisconsin constitutions, seeking to enjoin a state prison regulation, IMP 1-D, that forbade them to possess crosses. We held that the regulation violated RFRA, and we did not reach the other theories of violation.
Sasnett v. Sullivan,
There is a jurisdictional question— whether the suit has become moot as a result of the replacement of IMP 1-D by a new prison regulation, IMP 6-K, which allows inmates to possess crosses. It has not. The new regulation was adopted after the district court, in the first round of this litigation, held that the old regulation violated RFRA. Even after the new regulatiоn was in force, the defendants continued to pursue the litigation by asking the Supreme Court to review our decision invalidating the old regulation. So they didn’t think the suit had been mooted by the adoption of the new regulation, which implies that they wanted to go back to the old one. Maybe they just wished to have the latitude to do so if circumstances changed; and in thеir briefs and at argument their lawyer told us that the state has no present intention of reinstating the old regulation if the district cоurt’s decision dismissing the suit is affirmed. But that is far from being an assurance, or even a prediction, that the state will not do so. The stаte vigorously defends the old regulation as justified by security concerns, and if this defense is sincere, as we have no reason to doubt that it is, it im-' plies a high likelihood of returning to the
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old regulation unless that regulation is enjoined. The probability of suсh a return is sufficiently high to prevent us from deeming the case moot.
Northeastern Florida Chapter v. City of Jacksonville, 508 U.S.
656, 661-62,
The briefs debate the issue whether the merits of the plaintiffs’ free-exercise claim are governed by
Turner v. Safley,
Thе plaintiffs threw in a free-speech claim on remand in an effort to get around
Smith.
That won’t wash. While it is true that the wearing of a cross, like most other forms of religious observance, is public and so in a sense expressive, and while it is also truе that religion has figured in some notable free-speech cases, such as
West Virginia State Board of Education v. Barnette,
This brings us back to the free-еxercise issue, and the tension between
Smith
and
Tumer-O’Lone.
The Court in
Smith
refused to consider the claim of American Indians for a religiously motivatеd exemption from the criminal laws against possession of hallucinogenic drugs, without examining the social need for such laws, whereas
Tumer-O’Lone
allows a prisoner to complain that a secular prison regulation unreasonably fails to accommodate the prisoner’s religious desires. If the Wisconsin prison system forbade inmates to have any jewelry, it wоuld be difficult under
Smith
for inmates to claim that the Constitution entitled them to an exemption for religious jewelry, whereas under thе regime of
Tumer-O’Lone we
would have to uphold the claim because of the feebleness of the state’s safety argument, discussеd in our previous decision in this litigation. So the choice between the regimes will often be critical, but not in this case. Nоthing in
Smith
authorizes the government to pick and choose between religions without any justification,
Employment Division v. Smith, supra,
Reversed.
