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Nov. 10, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Lawrence HurleyWASHINGTON — The Supreme Court on Monday will weigh whether a devout Rastafarian can bring a damages claim against Louisiana prison officials who cut his dreadlocks in violation of his religious rights.The court, which has a 6-3 conservative majority, is often solicitous toward religious claims, although the bulk of recent cases have involved cases brought by conservative Christians.Prior to the 2020 incident at the Raymond Laborde Correctional Center, Damon Landor had not cut his hair for almost 20 years, following a practice known as “the Nazarite vow.”Landor was serving a five-month sentence on a drug-related charge when he was transferred to the facility.Over his objections, a corrections officer handcuffed him to a chair while two others shaved his head.“In an instant, they stripped him of decades of religious practice at the heart of his identity,” Landor’s lawyers wrote in a court filing.The officers went ahead even though Landor had shown them a copy of a binding court ruling that said it would be a religious rights violation to cut a Rastafarian’s dreadlocks.Landor subsequently filed suit against the state. The claim at the Supreme Court revolves around whether he can claim money damages under a law called the Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act, or RLUIPA.The state, represented by Attorney General Elizabeth Murrill, a Republican, has conceded that Landor’s lawsuit raised claims “antithetical to religious freedom and fair treatment of state prisoners” and said the prison system has since changed its grooming policy.But she argues that damages are not warranted.Landor’s lawyers are asking the Supreme Court to rule that damages should be allowed under RLUIPA, citing a ruling in 2020 that said damages are available under a similar law called the Religious Freedom Restoration Act.Without damages, the protection afforded by RLUIPA would “ring hollow,” they wrote.The state says the outcome is not determined by how the court ruled in the 2020 case in part because that dispute involved federal, not state, officials.Lower courts ruled in favor of the state, prompting Landor to turn to the Supreme Court.Lawrence HurleyLawrence Hurley is a senior Supreme Court reporter for NBC News.

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The Supreme Court weighs whether a devout Rastafarian can seek damages against Louisiana prison officials who cut his dreadlocks in violation of his religious rights.



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Nov. 10, 2025, 5:00 AM ESTBy Monica AlbaWASHINGTON — A group of Senate Democrats is pushing for an investigation into the Trump administration’s use of federal agency websites and emails to post partisan messages blaming Democrats for the government shutdown.In a letter obtained by NBC News, Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts and other Democrats ask the Government Accountability Office to open a probe into whether the political messages violated federal appropriations laws.The lawmakers point specifically to a rule that prohibits the executive branch from using funds for “purely partisan” purposes. They are asking for more information from the GAO to see if several agencies violated laws that pertain to ethics and partisan political activity.Text shown on the USDA’s website.USDAAs NBC News previously reported, multiple agencies have posted messages on their official federal websites blaming Democrats and the “radical left” for the shutdown. Some also encouraged employees to post similar messages in their out-of-office replies. And five employees of the Department of Education told NBC News that their automatic email replies were changed to partisan messages without their consent.Hakeem Jeffries says ‘I hope’ shutdown ends before Thanksgiving: Full interview12:52The letter points to a message posted two days before funding lapsed at the end of September on the Department of Housing and Urban Development’s website as an example. “The Radical Left are going to shut down the government and inflict massive pain on the American people unless they get their $1.5 trillion wish list of demands,” the post read. “The Trump administration wants to keep the government open for the American people.”Once the shutdown began, it was amended to: “The Radical Left shut down the government. HUD will use available resources to help Americans in need.”A spokesperson for HUD defended the message to NBC News in October, saying it was carefully crafted not to blame a political party, but instead focused on an ideology.The departments of Agriculture, Justice and the Treasury, as well as the Small Business Administration, used similar language on their websites, with some specifically naming Democrats. The Transportation Security Administration began playing videos at some airports nationwide that blamed the shutdown on Democrats as well.
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Sept. 25, 2025, 7:43 PM EDT / Updated Sept. 25, 2025, 8:18 PM EDTBy Tim Stelloh and Joe KottkeAuthorities confirmed that remains found in a remote part of Washington state were those of Travis Decker, the U.S. Army veteran accused in the horrific murder of his three young daughters and the subject of a monthslong manhunt. Chelan County Sheriff Mike Morrison said Thursday that officials received DNA results from Washington State Patrol’s crime lab confirming the identity of the remains. Clothing recovered from the scene also belonged to Decker, he said.Travis Caleb Decker.U.S. Marshals ServiceMorrison apologized to the girls’ mother, Whitney Decker, for how long it took to track down Decker.”But I hope that you can rest easier at night knowing that Travis is accounted for,” Morrison said. “He is deceased. Our DNA results confirm that, and this will bring a close to our case.”He said officials are still awaiting a possible cause and time of death from the coroner.A psychologist pointed authorities to a 7,500-foot mountain east of Leavenworth, Washington, Morrison said, “and her insights and guidance led us to an important area to search where we did eventually locate Mr. Decker. Again, we couldn’t have done this by ourselves.”The announcement came after the Chelan County Sheriff’s Office said last week that the remains were found in a wooded area south of Leavenworth, nearly 120 miles east of Seattle. That area wasn’t far from the remote campsite where the bodies of Decker’s daughters — Evelyn, 8; Paityn, 9; and Olivia Decker, 5 — were found with bags over their heads on June 2.The girls had been zip-tied, according to an affidavit in support of an arrest warrant, and Decker’s abandoned pickup was found near the campsite with two bloody handprints on the tailgate.The county medical examiner said the girls died by suffocation. Decker, 32, was accused of murder and kidnapping in their deaths. He was also wanted on one federal charge — unlawful flight to avoid prosecution.Authorities have not identified a potential motive. In the affidavit, a detective noted that Decker — who was divorced from his daughters’ mother — refused to sign a parenting plan that required him to seek mental health treatment and domestic violence anger management.The girls had been with Decker for a May 30 visitation when he failed to return them, setting off an intensive search that covered hundreds of square miles across a rugged swath of the state. There were dozens and dozens of potential sightings in the weeks that followed, authorities said, including one that led investigators as far away as Idaho’s Sawtooth National Forest. That sighting turned out to be false.Decker, who was described by authorities as an outdoorsman who would go “off-grid” for months, appears to have been seen only once, in an area south of Leavenworth, when tracking teams spotted an off-trail hiker who ran from their helicopter.Tim StellohTim Stelloh is a breaking news reporter for NBC News Digital.Joe KottkeJoe Kottke is an assignment editor at NBC News covering domestic news, including politics, crime, natural disasters, immigration and LGBTQ issues.
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