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Inmates Are Free to Practice Black Supremacist Religion, Judge Rules
The New York Times ^ | August 18, 2003 | PAUL von ZIELBAUER

Posted on 08/18/2003 8:04:26 AM PDT by aculeus

Until two weeks ago, Intelligent Tarref Allah, a 27-year-old Brooklyn native convicted of murder in 1995, was just a gang member in prison asking for special treatment.

For years, New York State prison officials would not allow Mr. Allah — who is known to inmates and guards by his new legal first name, Intelligent, or Intel — to openly practice what he describes as his religion, central tenets of which encourage self-analysis, meditation and a black supremacist message.

Mr. Allah is a Five Percenter, part of a black militant group that broke from the Nation of Islam in the 1960's. The New York State prison system has long regarded it as a violence-prone gang, much as the system also regards the Latin Kings, Crips or the Aryan Brotherhood. The name derives from the concept that only 5 percent of the world's people break free from the worship of a false "mystery God" and become gods to themselves and their families.

But on July 31, Judge Naomi Reice Buchwald of Federal District Court in Manhattan ruled that Mr. Allah is entitled to the same religious freedoms as the thousands of practicing Jews, Muslims, Christians, Hare Krishnas and Wiccans incarcerated in New York State's prisons.

In the universe of prisoners' rights, the ruling was groundbreaking because it would force state prison officials to allow Five Percenters, whom observers see as an extremist group, to have access to the literature and carry out the rituals of what they say is their religion, the Nation of Gods and Earths.

Judge Buchwald also ordered state prison officials to report back to her within 60 days on their progress in accommodating Five Percenter requests for monthly "parliament" meetings; special prison dinner menus and post-sundown cafeteria schedules during periods of fasting; and special celebrations during Five Percenter holy days, including the birthdays of Elijah Muhammad, the Nation of Islam founder, and Clarence 13X Smith, the founder of the Nation of Gods and Earths.

"They have to accommodate all of their practices, and if they can't accommodate them, they have to show a compelling reason why they shouldn't," said Damore Viola, a lawyer with Sullivan & Cromwell, the prestigious Manhattan law firm that represented Mr. Allah in his lawsuit.

The spokesman for the New York State Division of Correctional Services, James B. Flateau, said on Friday that the department would have no comment on the ruling until the state attorney general's office, which defended the department in the suit, decides whether to appeal it.

Many state prison systems classify Five Percenters as gang members. Judge Buchwald's decision, though it does not compel other states to comply, could prompt inmates elsewhere to file similar civil rights lawsuits.

"This opinion will encourage others to make claims," said Douglas Laycock, a professor of constitutional law at the University of Texas Law School who specializes in religious freedom cases. But, he added, rulings in lawsuits filed by prisoners can vary widely, and one district court judge's decision does not always influence another judge presiding over a case involving different circumstances.

"Most of these guys are not going to find lawyers from Sullivan & Cromwell," Professor Laycock said of other Five Percenters who might want to follow Mr. Allah's lead into the federal courts. "And the case's persuasive value is limited."

In many states, prison officials track "security threat groups," as jailed members of a handful of gangs and supremacist organizations are commonly called. Five Percenters have challenged prison restrictions in other states with little success. In 1999, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit ruled that South Carolina's prison system was justified in treating Five Percenters as dangerous gang members. Last year, the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit upheld disciplinary rules in New Jersey that punish any prisoners possessing The Five Percenter, a Nation of Gods and Earths newspaper, or even discussing aspects of their beliefs.

Last year, a New Jersey state court ruled that state prison officials were justified in punishing several inmates caught standing in a circle, their hands clasped behind their backs, discussing the tenets of the Nation of Gods and Earths, according to the New Jersey Law Journal.

Courts have been reluctant over the years to force state prison officials to rethink disciplinary regulations, legal experts said. Mr. Allah's recent victory in New York and the failure of the Five Percenter lawsuits in New Jersey and South Carolina may not reflect a changing judicial ethos as much a weak legal defense of why similar regulations were necessary in New York's state prisons, Professor Laycock said.

"New York didn't put in much evidence that these guys were doing anything bad," he said in a telephone interview on Friday. In the lawsuits in South Carolina and New Jersey, defense lawyers produced evidence of Five Percenters attacking correction officers and fighting with other inmates. "If, in another state, the prison system put together a long list of violent acts committed by members of this group," Professor Laycock added, "it's easy for that judge to say, `If they're out there hurting people, I don't care if they're a religion or not.' "

What makes Five Percenter lawsuits more complex, Judge Buchwald noted in her 22-page ruling, is that members deny that their beliefs are a religion, rather a way of life.

Mr. Allah, born Rashaad Marria, is serving 19 years to life for killing a man who had testified against him in a murder trial in which he was later acquitted. He said the ruling had given him renewed hope for his remaining time in prison.

"I expect a sense of nationhood will come out of this decision, as opposed to just me living as an individual having knowledge of self," Mr. Allah said from his cell at Eastern Correctional Facility, in Ulster County, responding through his lawyer, Ms. Viola, to written questions.

"I feel like a cloak of anonymity has been removed," Mr. Allah went on, "and the D.O.C.S. officers and officials will be able to see that inmates that they think are upright are actually members of the Nation and this will change their perception of the Nation."

Copyright 2003 The New York Times Company


TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Front Page News; Government; US: New York; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: blackmanisgod; blacksupremacists; fivepercenters; noi; prisons; supremacist

1 posted on 08/18/2003 8:04:27 AM PDT by aculeus
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To: aculeus
I wonder how Justice Buchwald would rule if an inmate joined a made-up religion called First International Church of Murdering Justice Buchwald.
2 posted on 08/18/2003 8:10:54 AM PDT by wideawake (God bless our brave soldiers and their Commander in Chief)
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To: dighton; general_re; BlueLancer
Intelligent Tarref Allah

Profound social decision: Should we address him as (a) "Intelligent" or (b) "Allah"?

3 posted on 08/18/2003 8:32:50 AM PDT by aculeus
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To: aculeus
I expect a prison revival of the KKK. Nothing wrong with that, right? Maybe Senator Byrd could make an occasional appearance.
4 posted on 08/18/2003 8:33:11 AM PDT by ClearCase_guy (France delenda est)
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To: aculeus
Oh Cool! If David Duke and Sen. Robert Byrd started a prison ministry with a swastika as it's holy symbol and getting your head shaved like a Brownshirt as a weekly sacrament, would Justice Buchwald want to play along?
5 posted on 08/18/2003 8:33:25 AM PDT by .cnI redruM ("any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from magic." - Arthur C. Clarke)
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To: aculeus
But Buchwald, who was appointed by Clinton in 1999, appeared to agree with the prosecutors, citing concerns about sensationalism.

6 posted on 08/18/2003 8:40:12 AM PDT by dennisw (G_d is at war with Amalek for all generations)
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To: aculeus
The bitch was installed by bill clinton
7 posted on 08/18/2003 8:44:23 AM PDT by steplock (www.FOCUS.GOHOTSPRINGS.com)
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To: wideawake
Or how about the Christian Identity movement, which preaches white supremacy and holds that Jews are the descendents of Satan?
8 posted on 08/18/2003 9:30:17 AM PDT by SauronOfMordor (Java/C++/Unix/Web Developer === needs a job at the moment)
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To: aculeus
At 27 he's a convicted murderer, a jailbird, and a member of a racist prison gang.

I don't quite know the word for that, but "intelligent" ain't it!

9 posted on 08/18/2003 11:26:56 AM PDT by rogue yam
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To: aculeus
Ya gotta love those murderous inmates who suddenly find God or Allah or whomever they want to worship. I do wonder how many of these murderous inmates stick to there religion once they are out of prison. Does anyone know?
10 posted on 08/18/2003 12:03:36 PM PDT by Arpege92
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To: aculeus
...openly practice what he describes as his religion, central tenets of which encourage self-analysis, meditation and a black supremacist message...

One word: Multiculturaldiversitytolerance.

This is a bogus article, for as we all know, there ARE no such things as Black Supremacists.

(/mega-sarcasm)

11 posted on 08/18/2003 1:22:54 PM PDT by Old Sarge (Serving You... on Operation Noble Eagle!)
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To: Arpege92
I do wonder how many of these murderous inmates stick to there religion once they are out of prison?

Yeah I see that happen 1st hand.

At a past job I gave the owners son a ride to and from work for a while. He had been in about 5 yrs. but it wasn't for murder. He did "find God" while in prison and when he got out, and I 1st meet him, he was carrying a bible and swearing off ever drinking again.

This lasted a bit but it only took about 3 months and he started back drinking and he got in a bar fight and got stabbed, didn't die but almost did.

12 posted on 08/21/2003 2:23:56 PM PDT by OXENinFLA
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