Houston Chronicle Sunday

Inmate wins battle over kosher meals

Convicted killer sought fare for Orthodox Jews living in Texas prisons

- By Tom Uhler

FORT WORTH — A Texas inmate has won a 12-year battle with the state over access to kosher meals in prison.

Inmate Max Moussazade­h dropped his federal lawsuit against the Texas Department of Criminal Justice after persuading the state to provide kosher food not only to him but to all Orthodox Jewish inmates in Texas.

The 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans dismissed the suit late last month, according to a news release from the Becket law firm of Washington, D.C., which represente­d the inmate.

Until now, Texas was among a declining number of states that refused to provide kosher meals to prison inmates, citing the cost.

In addition, the rules governing kosher foods have certain preparatio­n and storage requiremen­ts. For example, utensils that have come in contact with non-kosher food may not be used with kosher food; meat can’t be eaten with dairy; pork and shellfish is verboten. Separate cookware, utensils and flatware must generally be used.

“At least 35 states and the federal government have been providing a kosher diet for years,” Luke Goodrich, deputy general counsel at Becket, said in the news release after the court filing. “They have shown that the benefits of respecting religious freedom are worth far more than a few pennies per meal.”

Moussazade­h, who was serving time for a Houston murder, filed a grievance with the Texas Department of Criminal Justice in 2005 complainin­g that he was being forced to eat non-kosher foods. A lifelong Jew, he requested that he be given access to kosher meals to fulfill his religious duty.

Moussazade­h said that he was required by his faith to eat kosher foods and that not being allowed to do so forced him to go against his religious beliefs, for which God would punish him.

The TDCJ denied his request, so Moussazade­h sued the same year on the grounds that the state had violated the federal Religious Land Use and Institutio­nalized Persons Act and the Texas Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act.

The TDCJ eventually began offering kosher food at the Stringfell­ow Unit where it transferre­d Moussazade­h and other observant Jewish inmates, but the suit remained open because the state refused to guarantee that it would never deny Moussazade­h kosher meals. It provided kosher food in other units at the prison commissary where inmates had to buy it.

The case went back and forth in the courts, and Moussazade­h was transferre­d to another unit after committing infraction­s — bringing the kosher issue with him. It eventually landed back in the 5th Circuit which ruled in 2012 that the state had violated Moussazade­h’s faith and that the cost of providing kosher meals was minimal, “less than 0.005 percent of the food budget.”

Once the state began providing kosher food to all the state’s Orthodox Jewish inmates, Moussazade­h put the suit on hold until his release from prison. Finally, the 5th Circuit dismissed the case.

“Protecting religious freedom in prison is not only smart, but also the right thing to do,” Goodrich said “Allowing prisoners to practice their faith results in better behavior in prison and less crime after release — and it respects human dignity.”

“Protecting religious freedom in prison is not only smart, but also the right thing to do. Allowing prisoners to practice their faith results in better behavior in prison and less crime after release — and it respects human dignity.” Luke Goodrich, attorney

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