Skip to main content

The U.S. Supreme Court Upholds Religious Freedom Of Prisoner

By Bashian & Papantoniou
January 21, 2015

Supreme Court House Photo

Staying true to our nation’s ideals of religious freedom, the United States Supreme Court, the nation’s highest legal authority unanimously held  that a Muslim prisoner in Arkansas, Gregory Holt, is entitled to grow a beard for religious reasons.

Holt brought his claim under a federal law, the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, which seeks to protect prisoners’ religious rights.  The Supreme Court held the Arkansas prison policy, which prohibits prisoners from keeping beards to be a violation of religious rights and rejected the state’s reasoning that the policy was needed for security reasons in order to prevent prisoners from concealing contraband.

Justice Alito noted that the state already searches clothing and hair and failed to provide a valid reason for why it could not search beards as well. In their arguments Holt’s lawyers had noted that more than 40 states and the federal government allow prison inmates to keep similar beards.  If your fundamental or civil rights are being violated please contact Bashian & Papantoniou to schedule your free consultation.

  • Related Posts

    26 June 2026
    Buying or Selling a Business? Why the Right M&A Attorney Matters
  • Related Posts

    13 June 2026
    The Deal That Closes Twice: A Buyer's Guide to Deferred Closings
  • Related Posts

    06 June 2026
    Going Into Business With Friends or Family? Why You Need an Attorney-Drafted Operating or Partnership Agreement