ACLU Secures Religious Freedom For American Indians At Wyoming Prison (7/30/2008)
Corrections Officials Had Refused To Allow Northern Arapaho Man Access To
Eagle Feathers Crucial To Religious Prayers
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: (212) 549-2666; media@aclu.org
RAWLINS, WY – Corrections officials at the Wyoming State Penitentiary (WSP)
have agreed to allow American Indian prisoners access to eagle feathers for use
in their traditional Indian religious practices.
According to a court order, prison officials must allow American Indian
prisoners to posses up to four eagle feathers in their individual cells, as well
as a feather fan comprised of more than four feathers that can be used in group
religious activities and stored elsewhere at WSP.
The case settles a lawsuit filed earlier this year in which the American
Civil Liberties Union and the ACLU of Wyoming represented Andrew John
Yellowbear, a member of the Northern Arapaho Tribe incarcerated at WSP since
2006. Yellowbear claimed that his religious freedom was being violated by WSP
officials who refused to allow him to possess eagle feathers – the single most
sacred religious symbol to the tribe and most American Indians.
"The fact that officials at WSP will now ensure that American Indian
prisoners have access to eagle feathers is a great victory for religious
freedom," said Stephen Pevar, staff attorney with the ACLU Racial Justice
Program who, along with Jennifer Horvath, staff attorney for the ACLU of
Wyoming, represented Yellowbear. "The feathers are used to communicate prayers
to the Creator and to receive answers to prayers. Denying Mr. Yellowbear these
highly spiritual feathers was akin to denying Catholics access to a rosary or
crucifix."
Prison officials had previously allowed Yellowbear to have only one feather.
That feather was confiscated after Yellowbear filed a federal lawsuit in U.S.
District Court for the District of Wyoming last January challenging the prison's
policy and asking that he be allowed to possess 10 feathers – the maximum number
of loose feathers the U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife will provide under
federal regulations.
The lawsuit raised claims under the First Amendment, the Equal Protection
Clause and the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA),
which bars states from imposing a substantial burden on a prisoner's exercise of
religion unless it furthers a compelling interest and is the least restrictive
means available. Other American Indian prisoners at WSP have in the past been
permitted to possess entire eagle wings for religious purposes, and corrections
officials provided no evidence of security problems that have arisen as a result
of the possession of multiple eagle feathers.
"Religious freedom is too precious a right to be capriciously denied to
individuals who are at the mercy of prison officials," said Horvath.
Shortly after he arrived at WSP in July of 2006, Yellowbear applied to the
U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife for permission to have bald eagle feathers
shipped to him from the National Eagle Repository in Colorado. The application
was approved in March 2007, but despite this approval both WSP's warden and the
director of the Wyoming Department of Corrections have not allowed Yellowbear
access to any eagle feathers from the repository.
Bald eagles, removed from the U.S. List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife
in 2007, are nonetheless protected by federal law, which stipulates that only
individuals who are enrolled in a federally recognized American Indian tribe are
legally authorized to obtain eagle feathers for religious or spiritual use. The
U.S. Department of Fish and Wildlife can grant American Indians permission to
possess eagle feathers for religious purposes. The federal court order in the
Yellowbear case will allow American Indians to make use of this opportunity.
Additional information about the ACLU's Racial Justice Program can be found
online at: www.aclu.org/racialjustice/index.html
Additional information about the ACLU of Wyoming can be found online at: www.aclu-wy.org
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