Coward v. Robinson

276 F. Supp. 3d 544
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedAugust 28, 2017
DocketNo. 1:10-cv-147 (LMB/MSN)
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 276 F. Supp. 3d 544 (Coward v. Robinson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Coward v. Robinson, 276 F. Supp. 3d 544 (E.D. Va. 2017).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Leonie M, Brinkema, United States District Judge

Plaintiff Kalvin Donnell Coward (“Coward” or “plaintiff’), an inmate of the Virginia Department of Corrections, alleges [550]*550that the defendants, A; David Robinson, Chief of Corrections Operations, and Harold W. Clarke, Director, in their capacities as employees of the Department (the defendants will be referred to collectively as “VDOC” or “the Department”), unlawfully impeded his religious exercise as an adherent of the Nation's of Gods and Earths (“NGE” or “the Nation”), in violation of the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (“RLUIPA”) and the First Amendment by refusing to recognize the NGE as a religion and instead designating it a gang subject to the Department’s zero tolerance policy. Specifically, plaintiff alleges four violations of RLUIPA based on the VDOC’s 1) refusal to recognize the NGE as a religion pursuant to his December 15, 2008 request for recognition and failure to follow proper procedures when reviewing that request; 2) failure to recognize the NGE or follow proper-procedures in response to plaintiffs March 1, 2009 request for recognition; 3) confiscation of religious material entitled “The Harlem Six” from his mail on June 25, 2009; and 4) confiscation of “Five Per-center literature” from his mail on July 16, 2009. Plaintiff also asserts a fifth claim for theological discrimination in violation of the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.1 [Dkt. No. 7-1]. Plaintiff asks the Court to enjoin the VDOC from enforcing policies that prevent him from practicing the activities that are central to his beliefs as a member of the NGE and order that the NGE be afforded the privileges enjoyed by other religions recognized by the Department. Id. at 30. For the reasons that follow, the Court finds that the VDOC’s policies violate Coward’s rights under both RLUIPA and the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.

1. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

Plaintiff filed his initial complaint pro se and .litigated the case pro se for several years during which the complaint was amended, multiple motions were filed, and several dispositive motions were granted. Plaintiff successfully appealed the disposi-tive rulings, resulting in three remands. After the third .remand, the Court vacated its previous order granting defendants’ Motion for Summary Judgment and ordered defendants to file a renewed Motion for Summary Judgment within thirty days. [Dkt. No. 130], Defendants were granted multiple extensions of time based on the representation that the parties were attempting to settle this litigation. [Dkt. Nos. 138, 140, 149, and 151]. During his third appeal, plaintiff secured pro bono counsel who have continued to represent him before this Court. Ultimately the parties were unable to reach a resolution, and on January 3, 2017 the Court issued a scheduling order giving the parties four months to complete any additional discovery. [Dkt. No. 154], Following the close of discovery, neither party sought summary judgment and the Court held a bench trial on July 13 and 14, 2017. At trial, plaintiff offered testimony from the following witnesses: himself; Rick Panayoty, a twenty-two-year adherent of the NGE and former inmate who was a party in a RLUIPA lawsuit against the New York Department of Corrections regarding recognition of the NGE and who has since been released and is now a senior in college with plans to attend law school; Donald Palmer, a managing editor of the Five Percenter newspa[551]*551per and cofounder of the National Office of Cultural Affairs for the NGE; Michael Muhammad Knight, Ph.D., a professor of religious studies who has written two books about the NGE; defendant Clarke, the most senior official at the VDOC; and Martin Horn, the former head of the Pennsylvania and New York City departments of correction. Defendants called Reverend John Randall Myers, a religious consultant and private chaplaincy services provider for the Department; Christopher M. Burke, the Central Regional Coordinator for the Operations and Logistics Unit of the VDOC; and defendant. Robinson, the second-in-command at the VDOC.

II. FINDINGS OF FACT

A. Background on the NGE

Through the testimony of the plaintiff, NGE adhérents Panayoty and’ Palmer, plaintiffs expert Professor Knight, and plaintiffs exhibits, the following facts about plaintiffs beliefs and the NGE were established:2

Plaintiff, who has been incarcerated for twenty-three years, has been an adherent of the NGE, also known as the Five Percent Nation, since 1985. Tr. at 7:21-25, 47:19-48:5. The NGE originated within the Nation of Islam (“NOI”) and ultimately became a distinct tradition. PX 157 at 7. The NOI was founded by Fard Muhammad in Detroit, Michigan in the 1980s and teaches that Muhammad was god incarnate. Tr. at 106:2-20. The NGE’s founder, Clarence 13X, originally was an NOI adherent, but, in the 1960s, he “challenged’ the core [NOI] tenet that God had been manifested in Fard Muhammad,” and he began teaching the NOI’s catechism, known as the 120 Degrees or the Supreme Wisdom Lessons3 to youths on street corners and basketball courts in New York. Tr. at 220:19-24; PX 157 at 8. He ultimately founded the Allah Youth Center in Harlem (“Mecca,” in NGE parlance),' which remains operational to this day. Id. One of Clarence 13X’s core beliefs was that “if you want to change anything then you should teach children” because they do not know anything about hate and racism unless they are exposed to it by adults. Tr. at 107:7-24; PX 157 at 8.

Today, NGE adherents come from all walks of life and include law enforcement officers, business people, teachers, professors,'and people in the medical field. Tr.' at 86:11-18. These adherents believe that every black man is his own god, PX 157 at 9, and should learn to live righteously through study and self-mastery, Tr. at 11:2-7. In the NGE community, black men are referred to as “Allah” or “God” and women are referred to as “Earth.” PX 157 at 9. As one scholar described it, a black man “is a God in the sense of being a Creator of his own destiny.” Id. By characterizing black men as gods, NGE adherents argue that they, like members of other religions, “have a picture of God that reflects their identity.” PX 73 at 3.

- The 120 Degrees, which is central to both the NGE and the NOI, teaches that “five percent of society [is] enlightened and reject[s] the belief'in a false, unseen deity, instead recognizing the truth of God as the Black Man.” PX 157 at 8. Ten [552]*552percent of people are “the rich[,] the slave makers of the poor, who teach lies to the' poor—to believe that the almighty, true, and living god is a spook and cannot be seen by the physical eye.” PX 9 at 27. The ten percent are often referred to as devils and the 120 Degrees teaches that a devil “make[s] slaves out of the 85% by keeping them worshiping something he knows they cannot see (invisible) and he lives and makes himself rich from their labor.” PX 9 at 25. By contrast, the five percent are tasked with teaching “freedom, justice, and equality to all the human family of the planet earth,” also known as “civilizing” people and making them “righteous.” Id. at 27. Based on these -shared teachings, members of both the NOI and the NGE may identify as Five Percenters, although the label is more commonly associated with NGE adherents. Tr. at 261:13-25.4

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Incumaa v. Stirling
D. South Carolina, 2024
Tyiease v. Kaiser Permanente
E.D. Virginia, 2024
Collins v. Oats
E.D. Virginia, 2024
Boughton v. Northan
E.D. Virginia, 2023
Greene v. Lassiter
W.D. North Carolina, 2022
Allah v. Kiser
W.D. Virginia, 2021

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
276 F. Supp. 3d 544, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/coward-v-robinson-vaed-2017.