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Case Preview: Landor v. Louisiana Dept. of Corrections | Landor's Lost Locks: When Prison Guards Clip Constitutional Claims
Episode 271st November 2025 • The High Court Report • SCOTUS Oral Arguments
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Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections | Case No. 23-1197 | Oral Argument Date: 11/10/25 | Docket Link: Here

Question Presented: Whether an individual may sue a government official in his individual capacity for damages for violations of RLUIPA.

Overview

This episode examines Landor v. Louisiana Department of Corrections, a case that could reshape religious liberty enforcement in prisons by determining whether inmates can sue individual prison officials for personal damages under RLUIPA. The case centers on Damon Landor, a devout Rastafarian whose decades-long dreadlocks were forcibly shaved despite existing Fifth Circuit precedent protecting such religious practices.

Episode Roadmap

Opening: Religious Freedom Behind Bars

• November 10th, 2025 oral argument date

• Stakes: Personal liability for prison officials violating religious rights

• Case follows Supreme Court's 2020 Tanzin decision allowing individual damages under sister statute RFRA

• Potential nationwide impact on prisoners' religious rights enforcement

Background: The Nazarite Vow Violation

• Damon Landor: devout Rastafarian following biblical Nazarite Vow for nearly two decades

• Dreadlocks fell "nearly to his knees" when incarcerated in August 2020

• First four months uneventful at two accommodating facilities

• Transfer to Raymond Laborde Correctional Center with three weeks left in sentence

The Shocking Violation

• Landor provided intake guard with Ware decision requiring accommodation

• Guards threw legal materials in garbage and summoned warden

• Warden demanded documentation from sentencing judge

• When Landor couldn't immediately provide, officials handcuffed him to chair and shaved him bald

• Prison then kept Landor in lockdown for remainder of sentence

Statutory Framework: RFRA and RLUIPA as "Sister Statutes"

• Both enacted in response to Employment Division v. Smith limiting religious freedom protection

• RLUIPA applies to state prisons receiving federal funds through Spending and Commerce Clauses

• Identical language to RFRA: "appropriate relief against a government"

• Tanzin held RFRA permits individual-capacity damages - question is whether RLUIPA does same

The Circuit Split and Lower Court Decision

• Fifth Circuit rejected individual-capacity claims under RLUIPA

• Distinguished Tanzin as applying only to federal officials under RFRA

• Judge Oldham's dissent called facts "stark and egregious"

• Judge Clement's concurrence noted "visceral" need for damages remedy

Landor's Arguments (Seeking Individual Damages)

• RLUIPA's text is "identical" to RFRA's - same language must mean same remedies

• Damages were available against state officers before Smith decision

• RLUIPA "made clear" Congress intended to "reinstate" pre-Smith protections and remedies

• Damages often "only form of relief that can remedy" violations like forced head-shaving

Louisiana's Arguments (Opposing Individual Liability)

• RLUIPA only permits suits against "government" entities, not individual officials

• Sossamon precedent shows Congress did not clearly authorize damages against states

• Spending Clause conditions cannot extend to individual officer liability

• Sovereign immunity principles protect state officials from personal damages

Constitutional Stakes: Spending Clause Analysis

• Whether Congress can impose personal liability conditions on state officials through federal funding

• Landor argues conditions clearly relate to federal spending on prisons

• Louisiana contends extending liability to individuals exceeds spending power

• Parallel to other federal funding programs requiring individual compliance

The Practical Impact Question

• Damages as deterrent: Will personal liability improve religious accommodation?

• Louisiana's policy change: Department amended grooming policy in response to lawsuit

• Private enforcement supplement: Government cannot monitor all prison violations

• Fifth Circuit precedent shows even clear legal rulings insufficient without enforcement mechanism

Broader Religious Liberty Implications

If Landor Wins:

• Prisoners gain powerful enforcement tool for religious rights violations

• Individual deterrent effect on prison officials nationwide

• Consistency with Tanzin's RFRA interpretation

• Enhanced protection for minority religious practices in institutional settings

If Louisiana Wins:

• Limits enforcement to institutional defendants only

• Potential immunity shield for individual religious rights violations

• Inconsistency between RFRA and RLUIPA despite identical language

• Reduced deterrent effect on individual officer misconduct

Looking Ahead to November 10th Oral Arguments

• Justices' reaction to "sister statute" argument and Tanzin precedent

• Questions about Spending Clause limits on individual officer liability

• Practical enforcement concerns and deterrent effects

• Constitutional consistency between federal (RFRA) and state (RLUIPA) religious liberty protection

Key Legal Concepts Explained

  • Individual-capacity versus official-capacity lawsuits
  • RLUIPA's Spending Clause and Commerce Clause foundations
  • Religious accommodation in correctional settings

• Statutory interpretation of identical language across related statutes


• Personal liability as enforcement mechanism for constitutional rights

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