Here are some important law-and-religion news stories from around the web:
- The nineteen-year-old man accused of killing one worshipper and wounding three others in a shooting at a Chabad synagogue near San Diego (CA) this past weekend pleaded not guilty to murder and attempted-murder charges.
- Sri Lanka has issued a ban on all face coverings, including burqas and niqabs, following the Easter Sunday bombings that killed more than 250 people and wounded at least 500 others.
- A Muslim U.S. Army veteran was arrested for planning to plant a bomb at a Nazi rally in Long Beach (CA)—an act of revenge for attacks on mosques in New Zealand that killed fifty people last month.
- Texas’s Senate passed a bill that would codify an opinion issued by state Attorney General Ken Paxton that licensed handgun holders can carry weapons in churches, synagogues, and other houses of worship.
- The U.S. Supreme Court denied a petition for certiorari filed by the Universal Church, Inc., a group that was refused trademark protection on its name after a lower court ruled that it was merely a generic term.
- New Zealand’s major media organizations pledged not to promote white supremacist ideology when covering the trial of the man charged with killing fifty people at two mosques in Christchurch.
- Washington Gov. Jay Inslee signed into law a bill that requires institutions of higher education to provide academic accommodations to students who need extra time for religious observances.
- Rockland County Executive Ed Day and Commissioner of Health Patricia Ruppert are pushing for New York state lawmakers to pass legislation repealing religious and other exemptions from vaccination requirements for children.
- The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom issued a report documenting dozens of countries with significant religious freedom violations.
- Pastors of various Pentecostal churches in Uganda have vowed to challenge a proposed government policy that would require all ministers to obtain formal theological training from a recognized institution.
- Tennessee lawmakers delayed a proposed bill that would have allowed faith-based adoption agencies to refuse to place children with LBGT parents and other families because of their religious beliefs.
- Georgia’s Attorney General has launched an investigation to uncover allegations of child sex abuse by priests and other leaders in the Catholic Church.
- The Catholic Diocese of Sacramento released a list of more than forty priests credibly accused of sexually abusing roughly 130 victims over the past seventy years.
- A Milwaukee-area Sikh temple where a white supremacist fatally shot six parishioners in 2012 hosted Wisconsin Gov. Tony Evers Tuesday to speak about his proclamation marking April as Sikh Awareness and Appreciation month in the state.
- Police in Glasglow, Scotland, are investigating vandalism committed Monday at St. Simon’s parish, an attack the archdiocese described as “shameful.”
- Arson investigators were called to look into a fire that destroyed St. Joseph Catholic Church in northeast Phoenix (AZ).
- The Florida Senate unanimously passed a bill to address anti-Semitism in the state.
- The St. Ambrose Catholic Church in Brunswick (OH) was swindled out of $1.75 million after its email system was hacked and payments intended for a construction company were rerouted to a fraudulent bank account.
- Alabama’s House of Representatives approved a bill that if passed would criminalize abortion and classify it as a Class A felony, subjecting any doctor who performs an abortion to a possible ninety-nine-year prison sentence.
- North Carolina’s Senate voted to override Gov. Roy Cooper’s veto of a bill that would make it a felony for doctors to fail to perform life-saving measures on a baby born alive after a botched abortion.
- The Kansas legislature fell short in its attempt to override Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto of an abortion bill that would have required abortion providers to tell patients about a treatment to stop a medication abortion after it has been started.
- The Greene County Sheriff’s Department (MO) is facing criticism for an Easter Facebook post featuring a cross, which some say potentially violates the First Amendment.
- A pastor and five churchgoers were murdered by gunmen leaving their church in the West African nation of Burkina Faso on Sunday.