Free Exercise Challenges to Entheogen Prohibitions: Precedents, Principles, and Issues
Pace law review November 3, 2024 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.58948/2331-3528.2091 via OpenAlex
Summary
The paper discusses the potential for future legal challenges to bans on entheogens, substances that induce religious experiences, in light of the Free Exercise Clause and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. It argues that current judicial frameworks require balancing individual exemptions against state interests, a complex task for the Supreme Court. The analysis highlights how recent cases reflect a trend towards establishing clear standards amidst uncertainties in Free Exercise jurisprudence, suggesting that further clarification on entheogen use is needed.
Study at a glance
| Key finding | Future legal challenges to entheogen prohibitions may arise based on the evolving interpretation of the Free Exercise Clause under current judicial frameworks. |
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Abstract
This paper examines the conditions for the possibility of future challenges to prohibitions against the cultivation, distribution, and use of entheogens—substances which reliably induce religious experiences in their users—based on the Free Exercise Clause of the First Amendment. Smith no longer applies to federal prohibitions against entheogens, because of Religious Freedom Restoration Act (RFRA). Under the current Gonzalez framework, the Court is given the difficult task of evaluating the cost of the claimant’s exemption against the state’s interest in the general ban; including how the exemption would impact enforcement of the general ban. This is essentially predictive systems-theory and policymaking, something today’s Supreme Court majority would abhor in theory, but is the direction their Free Exercise jurisprudence is heading in general. What “The Pandemic Cases” (e.g., Newsom) illustrate is a Court impulse to impose a clear-and-quick objective standard upon all the subjective uncertainty and chaos surrounding the current Free Exercise analysis. However, this “most favored nation” approach also involves risk-reward calculations, just without the wiggle-room on the conclusion-front once the calculation has been made. Under this doctrine or classical strict scrutiny, the Court will eventually be forced to address certain tensions and open issues essential to clarifying the Free Exercise Clause’s protections regarding the use of entheogens, and more generally.