The Department of Defense has been ordered to outline in detail how service members can apply for religious exemptions to its COVID-19 vaccine mandate, as well as how officials decide whether to approve or deny such requests.
The Pentagon must file the details by Nov. 12.
In addition, military officials must give “a precise statement of the number of requests in each branch for a religious exemption from receiving a COVID-19 vaccine; the number of requests granted, denied, and pending; the number of people in the armed forces who are unvaccinated and who have submitted no request for exemption; the number of people whose application is resolved and who have received some change in the terms and conditions of their service, including separation of any kind; and the categories of results that have occurred and how many of each kind of result has occurred,” Merryday wrote.
Some of those details, including how many religious exemption requests have been granted and denied, haven’t been made public. The military has rejected requests to disclose those figures.
Liberty Counsel, a law group representing the plaintiffs, says that means defendants, including Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin, are in violation of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. Plaintiffs are also claiming that the Religious Freedom Restoration Act and the First Amendment are being violated.
Plaintiffs include members of the Army, Navy, Marines, Air Force, and Coast Guard.
“In addition to addressing these claims, defendants’ memorandum will also address numerous threshold constitutional questions of jurisdiction under Article III, none of which were addressed by plaintiff,” they wrote.
A hearing in the case is scheduled for Nov. 15 at the federal courthouse in Tampa, Florida.