Here are some important law-and-religion news stories from around the web:
- Congressional Democrats have reintroduced the Do No Harm Act, an amendment to the Religious Freedom Restoration Act that would prevent people from claiming religious exemptions to justify discrimination.
- The Ninth Circuit reinstated a class action challenging the use of an FBI informant to infiltrate mosques in California and secretly collect information as part of a counterterrorism investigation.
- Three Muslim prisoners have sued the Arkansas Department of Correction, claiming they are being forced to attend combined religious services, or risk losing their religious accommodations.
- The Satanic Temple filed a lawsuit against the Boston City Council alleging religious discrimination after it was denied the opportunity to deliver the opening invocation at a public meeting.
- An anti-Muslim display connecting U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar to the September 11th terrorist attacks set up during “WVGOP Day at the Capitol” sparked a firestorm of controversy that led to the resignation of the West Virginia House sergeant-at-arms.
- The site of Strasbourg’s Old Synagogue, which was burnt down by Nazis in WWII, was vandalized as a large memorial stone was knocked off its plinth.
- The Portland (OR) City Council voted unanimously to extend protections against religious discrimination to atheists, making it the second U.S. city to adopt legal protections for non-believers.
- A Bible carried by a WWII veteran was removed from a memorial at the Manchester Veterans Affairs Medical Center following complaints from the Military Religious Freedom Foundation.
- Georgia state legislators have introduced a religious liberties bill, which mirrors the federal Religious Freedom Restoration Act, after former Gov. Nathan Deal vetoed a similar, more expansive bill in 2016.
- The Vatican announced that it will be investigating the case of Australian Cardinal George Pell, who was found guilty of sexually abusing children when he was archbishop of Melbourne.
- A Missouri GOP state Representative proposed a ban on anonymous church-state separation lawsuits, which he claims allow outside groups to threaten people of faith.
- The Washington Post, amid a $250 million defamation lawsuit regarding its coverage of the Covington Catholic students, issued an editor’s note Friday explaining that accounts in its initial coverage were challenged by ensuing developments.
- A report from the Turkish Association of Protestant Churches revealed a sharp rise in hate crimes against the country’s small Protestant community following the arrest, jailing, and two-year trial of American Pastor Andrew Brunson.
- An Israeli court has ordered the Ben Yehuda 2 Pizzeria in Jerusalem to pay a gay American rabbinical student $4,500 for denying him service because of his sexual orientation.
- A federal judge granted California’s motion for summary judgment in a lawsuit claiming the state treats Hinduism unfavorably in its educational standards and curriculum.
- The Diocese of Sioux City (IA) released a list of 28 priests who have been credibly accused of sexually abusing minors.
- The head of an 800-year-old mummy believed to be the remains of a Crusader was stolen from the crypt at St. Michan’s Church in Dublin, Ireland.
- Former Argentine President Carlos Menem was cleared of involvement in a cover-up of the 1994 bombing of the Argentine Israelite Mutual Association in Buenos Aires.
- Two Florida GOP lawmakers have proposed fetal heartbeat bills, which seek to ban abortions once the baby’s heartbeat is detected.
- Kentucky’s House of Representatives passed a bill that seeks to ban abortions based on the baby’s gender, race, or disability.
- Kentucky’s Senate voted in favor of a bill that would require physicians and other medicals to do everything possible to save the life of a baby born alive after a failed abortion attempt.
- House Democrats are demanding President Trump justify his administration’s new gag rule, which bars federally funded family planning clinics from making abortion referrals.
- The Rhode Island House Judiciary Committee will vote this Tuesday on legislation that would codify a women’s right to an abortion, while limiting late-term abortions.
- Missouri’s House of Representatives passed the Missouri Stands for the Unborn Act, which includes bans on abortions once a fetal heartbeat is detected, once a fetus can feel pain, and for selective reasons based on the baby’s race, gender, or diagnosis of Down Syndrome.
- The Utah Legislature passed a bill that, if signed by Gov. Herbert, would prohibit abortions based solely on a baby’s Down syndrome diagnosis.
- Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp is urging state lawmakers to pass a “trigger law” abortion ban that would prohibit most abortions if Roe v. Wade is overturned.
- New Mexico’s House of Representatives passed a bill to repeal a law that criminalizes abortions as a fourth-degree felony.