Supreme Court holds strict scrutiny applies to race-based prison regulations
/In a decision handed down Wednesday
morning, the US Supreme Court has ruled that state prisons cannot
temporarily segregate inmates by race, except in the most extraordinary
circumstances. In Johnson v. California, the court heard an Equal
Protection challenge to the California Department of Corrections'
[official website] policy of racially segregating prisoners in double
cells for up to 60 days when they enter a new correctional facility.
The court rejected CDC's argument that the policy's constitutionality
should be reviewed under a deferential standard used for prison
regulations and instead held that strict scrutiny is the proper
standard of review because the CDC policy is "immediately suspect" as
an express racial classification. The case was remanded for review of
whether the CDC policy fails to satisfy the strict scrutiny standard. [more]