Written by Don ByrdThe government shutdown didn’t stop the U.S. Supreme Court from opening its term yesterday. Among the cases the Court will hear include a challenge to a city council’s practice of opening official meetings with prayer. NPR’s Nina Totenberg looked at the new court session including the prayer case in a piece yesterday. You can listen to it here.
Written by Don ByrdPBS’ Religion and Ethics Newsweekly takes a look at the upcoming Supreme Court case regarding legislative prayer, Town of Greece v. Galloway. The video is here. As correspondent Tim O’Brien notes in the piece, the actual outcome of the case may not matter as much as the scope of the court’s reasoning.
Written by Don ByrdThe Baptist Joint Committee yesterday filed a friend-of-the-court brief with the U.S. Supreme Court urging the court to find unconstitutional official prayer at local government meetings. While the Supreme Court has previously found legislative prayer constitutional in the context of state legislatures, the BJC argues the dynamics of local government meetings are significantly different and should lead to a different outcome.
Here are some highlights from the brief…
Written by Don ByrdIn advance of the Supreme Court oral argument in the case of Town of Greece v. Galloway, the Baptist Joint Committee’s Nan Futrell explains why legislative prayer at the local level is different from congressional or state legislative prayer. The Supreme Court in Marsh upheld legislative prayers in certain conditions and settings. Do the unique elements of local government meetings warrant a different outcome?
Written by Don ByrdAssociated Press continues to make news in its investigation of the New York Police Department’s religious profiling practices. AP previously revealed the NYPD was conducting surveillance activities of and keeping files on mosques in New Jersey. A lawsuit was filed and the Department subsequently announced the end of that program.
Yesterday, AP reported the NYPD has “secretly labeled entire mosques as terrorist organizations” to allow the use of informants and surreptitious recordings.