Shareef Childs, an inmate at Stanley Correctional Institution in Central Wisconsin, is a practicing Muslim and prays five times a day at precise times. The prison chaplains printed and distributed prayer schedules out of courtesy to the inmates, but were not obligated by the state to do so. However, Childs noticed that the prayer schedule was inaccurate and led to prayer times being off by several minutes because of the prison chaplains entering the wrong location into an online tool. While the chaplains corrected the schedule for meal deliveries during Ramadan, they did not distribute the revised prayer schedules to the inmates because of a policy that prohibits the use of government funds to purchase religious items for inmates. Childs eventually received an accurate schedule through a donation, but was unsatisfied that the prison had failed to provide him with a revised prayer schedule.
After navigating the internal grievance procedures without any success, Childs sued the correction staff in the United States District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin, where he alleged violations of the Religion Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA) and the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment. The district court, in its initial findings, declared that the error in the prayer schedule was not a deliberate or malicious constitutional violation. Additionally, the district court determined that neither RLUIPA nor the Free Exercise Clause required prison officials to purchase religious materials for prisoners with the use of government funds.
On March 4, 2026, the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit reviewed the district court’s summary and found that the inmate using their own funds to purchase a prayer schedule does not qualify as a substantial burden under RLUIPA. Furthermore, they found that RLUIPA does not require states to purchase religious items for inmates, which the district court declared in their summary as well. Finally, the court affirmed that the neutral prison policy did not violate the Free Exercise Clause. Ultimately, the main issue in this case is whether the correction staff at Stanley Correctional Institution is violating the rights of Shareef Childs that are supposed to be protected by RLUIPA and the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment.
Holt v. Hobbs (2015) and O’lone v. Estate of Shabazz (1987) relates to Childs v. Webster (2026) because they all deal with the issue of free exercise of religion of those incarcerated in the United States penal system. In Holt, Gregory Holt, also known as Abdul Maalik Muhammad, was a Salafi Muslim and asked for temporary relief from the enforcement of the Arkansas Department of Corrections’ grooming policy because he believed that growing a beard was necessary to practicing his religion. Holt believed that the grooming policy was a violation of RLUIPA, and his case eventually reached the Supreme Court, where the Court ruled, in a 9-0 majority, that the Arkansas Department of Corrections' policy on beards violates RLUIPA. Part of the majority decision was based on the fact that Holt met the standard for accommodation that was established in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby Stores Inc. (2014), where the accommodation needed to be based on a sincere religious belief.
However, in O’lone v. Estate of Shabazz (1987), the Court reached a different conclusion. In O’lone, two men, Ahmad Uthman Shabazz and Sadr-Ud-Din Nafis Mateen, sued New Jersey’s Leesburg State Prison over their workplace policies, which they believed violated their free exercise to religion that is protected under the First Amendment. The Supreme Court, in a 5-4 decision, ruled that the prison policies plausibly advanced the intended outcomes of maintaining security, order, and rehabilitation. Additionally, the majority opinion stated that while prisoners do not forfeit their rights after being convicted of a crime, the state is allowed to place necessary limitations on the rights of those incarcerated. In the dissenting opinion, the justices argued that the prison failed to properly demonstrate that the necessary restrictions placed on these inmates were needed to maintain security at the institution. Ultimately, both of these precedents are important because they provide valuable context for how the Supreme Court has decided on the issue of free exercise of religion in prisons.
From a constitutional standpoint, in Childs v. Webster (2026), I side with the United States Court of Appeals in their decision that the prison's decision not to purchase a revised prayer schedule does not violate RLUIPA or Child’s right to free exercise of religion. First, I believe that the inmate having to use their own funds to purchase a revised prayer schedule for a small fee is a minimal burden. The inmate is able to acquire a prayer schedule by their own means, so I believe the responsibility is on the inmate, not the prison, to obtain the correct prayer schedule; the prison is not restricting their right to free exercise of religion. As previously mentioned, RLUIPA does not require states to purchase religious items for inmates. Based on these facts, I believe the inmate is asking for preferential treatment rather than equal treatment. Additionally, I think O’lone v. Estate of Shabazz (1987) is the stronger and more applicable precedent to this case because of the key argument made in the Supreme Court majority opinion, which implies that the state is allowed to impose necessary limitations on the rights of incarcerated individuals. Incarcerated individuals choose to commit crimes and thus pose dangers to society, which provides the justification for the state to intervene and place necessary limitations on their rights in order to rehabilitate them and maintain safety within prisons and society as a whole. I believe courts should defer to prison administrators, like those at Stanley Correctional Institution, when it comes to their decisions about regulating prison life, as long as they provide reasonable explanations for these decisions and are not flagrantly violating the individual rights of prisoners. In the end, I think if this case were to reach the Supreme Court, the justices would reach the same opinion as the recent decision made by the United States Court of Appeals.
https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/appellate-courts/ca7/24-1817/24-1817-2026-03-04.html
https://www.oyez.org/cases/1986/85-1722
https://www.oyez.org/cases/2014/13-6827
