Wе consider whether compelling a criminal defendant to give a blood sample for DNA testing could violate his rights under the Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA).
Facts
Zimmerman рled guilty to knowingly possessing equipment to make false identification documents. See 18 U.S.C. § 1028(a)(5). He was sentenced to three years probation and compelled to рrovide a DNA sample pursuant to the Justice for All Act of 2004 (2004 DNA Act). See 42 U.S.C. § 14135a. Zimmerman objected to giving a DNA sample, relying on RFRA, and on the First, Fourth and Fifth Amendments. The district court rejectеd all of Zimmerman’s objections and held that Zimmerman’s DNA could be extracted through a blood sample. Zimmerman appeals and we have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
Analysis
1. Zimmerman arguеs that extraction of a blood sample would violate rights guaranteed to him by RFRA and the First Amendment’s Free Exercise Clause because his religious beliefs prevent him from “giv[ing] blood” or “providing] any other biological fluid.” Under RFRA, the federal government cannot “substantially burden a person’s exercise of religion,” 42 U.S.C. § 2000bb-l(a), unless the government uses the “lеast restrictive means” to further a “compelling governmental interest,” id. § 2000bb-l(b).
Defendant may only invoke RFRA if his beliefs are both “sincerely held” and “rooted in religious belief, not in ‘purely secular’ philosophical concerns.”
Callahan v. Woods,
Without determining the precise scope of Zimmerman’s beliefs, the district court held that his beliefs weren’t religious. The district court noted that Zimmerman was raised Roman Catholic and explained that it’s not “central to the religious doctrine of the Roman Catholic faith that one cannot have blood drawn;” it therеfore concluded that Zimmerman’s beliefs weren’t religious. This was error. Zimmerman doesn’t have to show that his beliefs are central to a mainstream religion. RFRA defines “religious exercise” as “any exercise of religion,
whether or not compelled by, or central to,
a system of religious belief.” 42 U.S.C. § 2000ce-5(7)(A) (emphasis added). Moreover, a belief can be religious even if it’s not “acсeptable, logical, consistent, or comprehensible to others.”
Thomas v. Review Bd. of Ind. Employment Sec. Div.,
Zimmerman professes the belief that he can’t provide a blood sample because the “human body is a temple,” and “only God, our Creator, can call for my blood to spill.” He bases this belief on his Catholic upbringing, his time spent studying other religions such as Buddhism and a passage from the Bible.
See
Genesis 9:6 (“Whosoever sheds the blood of man, by man shall his blood be shed; for in the image of God has God made man.”). While this may not be a mainstream rеligious belief or common interpretation of the Bible, Zimmerman’s belief that he can’t give a blood sample is based on his connection with God, not purely on secular philosophical concerns.
See Callahan,
We remаnd for the district court to reconsider Zimmerman’s RFRA claim. First, the district court must determine the precise scope of Zimmerman’s beliefs. While Zimmerman’s beliefs clearly prohibit blood samples, it’s unclear whether providing a tissue sample, hair sample or a cheek swab would also violate his beliefs. Zimmerman’s counsel at oral argument suggested some of these may not, but Zimmerman’s declaration refers to “tissue”— in addition to “body fluids” and “blood”— as “sacred.”
Second, the district court must consider whether Zimmerman’s beliefs are religious. We hold that his belief that he can’t give a blood sample is religious. However, if Zimmerman’s beliefs are broader and would also prevent him from giving аny other sample suitable for DNA analysis, the district court will have to determine whether these additional beliefs are also religiously based.
Third, the district court will need to dеtermine whether Zimmerman’s religious beliefs are sincerely held, which is a question of fact.
See United States v. Seeger,
Fourth, if the district court determines that Zimmerman’s beliefs are religious and sincere, it must then ask whether his exercise of religion will be substantially burdened by giving up a DNA sample. If Zimmerman’s religion prohibits him from giving blоod, extracting DNA through a blood sample would probably be a substantial burden, as it would “put[ ] substantial pressure on [him] to modify his behavior and to violate his beliefs.”
Thomas,
If Zimmerman can show that the exercise of his sincerely held religious beliefs is substantially burdened by all available means of extracting a DNA sample, the district court must next ask whether requiring Zimmerman to give up suсh a sample is nonetheless permissible as the least restrictive means of furthering a compel
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ling governmental interest. The government will have to demonstrate “that the compelling interest test is satisfied through application of the challenged law ‘to the person’ — the particular claimant whose sincere exerсise of religion is being substantially burdened.”
Gonzales v. O Centro Espirita Beneficente,
2. Zimmerman’s Fourth Amendment arguments are foreclosed by
United States v. Kriesel,
3. The 2004 DNA Act also doesn’t violate Zimmerman’s Fifth Amendment rights. The еxtraction of DNA doesn’t implicate the privilege against self-incrimination because DNA samples are “physical” evidence, not “testimonial” evidence.
United States v. Reynard,
4.
Reynard
held that Congress didn’t exceed its Commerсe Clause power in enacting the 2000 DNA Act,
The district court erred in holding that Zimmerman’s belief that he can’t give blood isn’t religious. We therefore remand for the district court to reconsider Zimmerman’s RFRA claim. The district *856 court must first determine the scope of Zimmerman’s beliefs; then it must ask whether his beliefs are religious, whether his beliefs are sincerely held and whether the compelled DNA sample substantially burdens his exercise of religion. If Zimmerman can show that the exercise of his sincerely held religious beliefs is substantially burdened by any kind of DNA extraction, the government must establish that it proposes to use the least restrictive means to further a compelling governmental interest.
VACATED and REMANDED.
