最高法院驳回起诉监狱官员剪掉其长发绺的拉斯塔法里教徒


2026-06-23T14:18:35.401Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/23/politics/landor-supreme-court-opinion

  • 最高法院裁定,一名拉斯塔法里教派囚犯无权起诉强行剪掉其长发绺的官员,尽管存在宗教保护条款。
  • 大法官尼尔·戈萨奇以6票赞成、3票反对的多数意见写道,囚犯若无国会明确许可,无权提起诉讼。
  • 这一判决是保守派法院罕见地在监狱宗教诉求问题上站在反对立场的案例。

AI生成摘要经CNN编辑审核。

CNN —

美国最高法院周二裁定,一名试图起诉监狱官员将其按倒并剪掉长发绺的虔诚拉斯塔法里教徒无法继续推进诉讼,这一判决将使其他信仰的信徒更难在监狱中执行联邦宗教保护条款。

由大法官尼尔·戈萨奇代表6票多数方撰写的意见书,标志着保守派多数派罕见地站在宗教诉求的对立面,也凸显了他们在没有国会明确授权的情况下,不愿让美国人起诉维护自身权利的态度。

“兰多先生试图让我们首次认定,只要有一分钱联邦支出间接流向某个人,国会就能基于‘他已同意接受监管’的虚构说法直接监管其行为,”戈萨奇写道,“这一切都与我们的先例不符。”

最高法院裁定,本案核心人物达蒙·兰多无权就其遭遇起诉州政府官员,原因是当地官员并不了解保护宗教信仰的联邦法律细节。

为法院三名自由派大法官撰写异议意见的凯坦吉·布朗·杰克逊批评多数派,认为其判决削弱了兰多试图据以起诉的联邦法律。杰克逊写道,最高法院的这一举措将使囚犯在指控官员侵犯其权利时,更难将官员告上法庭。

“像兰多这样在州监狱遭受宗教自由侵犯的囚犯——无论侵犯行为多么明目张胆——往往会求助无门,”杰克逊写道,“而侵犯囚犯法定权利的行为很可能会频繁发生,因为由州政府授权的监狱官员几乎没有动力遵守联邦法律,哪怕白纸黑字写得清清楚楚。”

杰克逊断言,最高法院的推理实际上将“国会最伟大的立法成就之一——保障民权、环境稳定、医疗保健等的联邦法律——贬损为仅仅是某个特别富有的私人主体的投机钻营”。

兰多因持有毒品即将服完刑期仅剩几周时,路易斯安那州一所监狱的狱警将他铐在椅子上,剃掉了他留了近20年的及膝长发绺。几分钟前,兰多曾向狱警出示一份司法意见书,证明他们必须允许出于宗教目的留长发绺。

狱警将那份意见书扔进垃圾桶,随后将兰多按倒并剪掉了他的头发。

在被转至雷蒙德·拉博尔德惩教中心之前,兰多曾在另外两所监狱平安服刑。他随身携带着2017年一份上诉法院的裁决书,该裁决允许囚犯出于宗教目的留长发绺。

兰多于2020年开始服刑五个月,此前他曾立下拿撒勒人誓愿,承诺不剪头发。

兰多在最高法院的诉讼依据是《宗教土地使用和机构化人员法》(RLUIPA)。国会通过该法案以及另一项更广泛涉及宗教适配的法案,是为了回应最高法院1990年一项具有里程碑意义但颇具争议的先例。

2020年底,最高法院裁定另一部措辞几乎完全相同的法律允许宗教权利受到侵害的人,以个人身份起诉负有责任的政府官员并寻求损害赔偿。

但路易斯安那州辩称,《宗教土地使用和机构化人员法》本质上是州政府官员与联邦政府之间的拨款合同,联邦政府为州立监狱提供资金。路易斯安那州称,参与强制剪掉兰多头发的个别官员并非该合同的缔约方,因此无需承担个人责任。

由保守派占多数的美国第五巡回上诉法院的一个合议庭裁定,兰多无权提起诉讼。

第五巡回法院表示,它“明确谴责”兰多所遭受的待遇,但此前的一项上诉法院先例已对该案作出不利于兰多的裁决。全体上诉法院最终拒绝重审此案,兰多于2024年向最高法院提起上诉。

一方面,这起案件似乎契合了近年来一贯支持宗教权益的最高法院的审理方向。去年,最高法院支持一群宗教父母,希望让孩子免于学习涉及LGBTQ主题的小学教材。
2022年,最高法院支持一名因赛前在球场祈祷而被解职的高中橄榄球教练。
一年前,最高法院允许一家天主教寄养机构继续为费城市服务,尽管该机构拒绝将同性伴侣列为潜在寄养父母。

美国政教分离协会主席兼首席执行官雷切尔·莱泽称这一判决虚伪。
“我们再次看到,法院会不遗余力地维护基督徒的宗教自由,却任由政府践踏非基督徒的宗教自由,”莱泽说道,该协会经常反对最高法院支持宗教权益的判决。

本文已更新补充更多细节。

Supreme Court rules against Rastafarian who sued prison officials for cutting his dreadlocks

2026-06-23T14:18:35.401Z / https://www.cnn.com/2026/06/23/politics/landor-supreme-court-opinion

  • The Supreme Court ruled that a Rastafarian prisoner cannot sue officials who forcibly cut his dreadlocks despite religious protections.
  • Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote for the 6-3 majority that prisoners lack authority to sue without explicit congressional permission.
  • The decision marks a rare instance where the conservative court sided against a religious claim in prison.

AI-generated summary was reviewed by a CNN editor.

CNN—

The Supreme Court on Tuesday ruled that a devout Rastafarian who attempted to sue prison officials for holding him down and cutting his dreadlocks could not proceed with his case, a decision that will make it harder for believers of other faiths to enforce federal religious protections in prison.

The opinion, written by Justice Neil Gorsuch for a 6-3 court, marked a rare instance in which the conservative majority sided against a religious claim and underscored its hesitancy to let Americans sue to enforce their rights without explicit authority from Congress.

“Mr. Landor would have us hold, for the first time, that so long as a penny of federal spending makes its way to an individual, however indirectly, Congress can regulate his conduct directly based on the fiction that he has consented to regulation,” Gorsuch wrote. “None of that is consistent with our precedents.”

The court ruled that the man at the center of the case, Damon Landor, could not sue state officials over his treatment because local officials were not aware of the details of a federal law that protects religion.

Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson, writing for the court’s three liberals, criticized the majority for what she saw as a decision to weaken the federal law under which Landor was attempting to sue. The court’s move, Jackson wrote, will make it much more difficult for prisoners to drag officials to court over allegations that their rights have been impugned.

“Prisoners like Landor who suffer violations of their religious freedom in state prisons – no matter how blatant – will often be left remediless,” Jackson wrote. “And encroachments on prisoners’ statutory rights are likely to happen with fair frequency, as state-empowered prison officials will have little incentive to abide by federal law, even if it is handed to them on a piece of paper.”

Jackson asserted that the court’s rationale effectively reduced “some of Congress’s greatest legislative achievements — federal laws that secure civil rights, environmental stability, healthcare, and more — to nothing more than the wheelings-and-dealings of an especially wealthy private party.”

Landor had a few weeks left in his sentence for drug possession when guards at a Louisiana prison handcuffed him to a chair and shaved off the knee-length dreadlocks he had grown over nearly two decades. Minutes earlier, Landor had handed his guards a judicial opinion demonstrating that they were required to allow dreadlocks for religious purposes.

The guards tossed that opinion in the trash before holding Landor down and cutting his hair.

He was incarcerated without incident at two other facilities before he was transferred to the Raymond Laborde Correctional Center. He came armed with a copy of an appeals court ruling from 2017 that allowed prisoners to have dreadlocks.

Landor, who began serving a five-month prison sentence in 2020, had previously taken a promise known as the Nazarite vow to not cut his hair.

Landor’s case at the Supreme Court rested on the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, or RLUIPA. Congress passed that law, and another that dealt with religious accommodation more widely, in response to a landmark but controversial 1990 precedent from the court.

In late 2020, the justices ruled that the other law, which has nearly identical language, allows people whose religious rights have been burdened to seek damages against government officials acting in their individual capacity.

But Louisiana countered that RLUIPA is effectively a spending contract between state officials and the federal government, which provides funding for state prisons. The individual officials involved in Landor’s forced shaving were not parties to that contract, Louisiana said, so they can’t be held personally liable.

A panel of the conservative 5th US Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Landor was not entitled to sue.

The 5th Circuit said that it “emphatically” condemned “the treatment that Landor endured,” but an earlier appeals court precedent settled the case against him. The full appeals court ultimately decided against rehearing the case and Landor appealed to the Supreme Court in 2024.

On the one hand, the case appeared designed for a Supreme Court that has consistently sided with religious interests in recent years. Last year, the court sided with a group of religious parents who wanted to opt their children out of books dealing with LGBTQ themes in elementary school.

In 2022, it backed a high school football coach who had been removed from his job for praying on the field before games.

A year before that, it allowed a Catholic foster care agency to continue to work for the city of Philadelphia even though it declined to screen same-sex couples as potential foster parents.

Rachel Laser, the president and CEO of Americans United for Separation of Church and State, described the decision as hypocritical.

“Once again, we see a court that will bend over backward for the religious freedom of Christians but allows the government to trample the religious freedom of non-Christians,” said Laser, whose group frequently opposes decisions from the Supreme Court that back religious interests.

This story has been updated with additional details.

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