The John J. Moran Medium Security Facility at the Rhode Island Adult Correctional Institutions in Cranston, where Wolf Pawochawog-Mequinosh is serving a life sentence.
The John J. Moran Medium Security Facility at the Rhode Island Adult Correctional Institutions in Cranston, where Wolf Pawochawog-Mequinosh is serving a life sentence.
Christopher Shea/Rhode Island Current

Man Serving Life at ACI Can Wear Apache Headband After Court Settlement

Share
The John J. Moran Medium Security Facility at the Rhode Island Adult Correctional Institutions in Cranston, where Wolf Pawochawog-Mequinosh is serving a life sentence.
The John J. Moran Medium Security Facility at the Rhode Island Adult Correctional Institutions in Cranston, where Wolf Pawochawog-Mequinosh is serving a life sentence.
Christopher Shea/Rhode Island Current
Man Serving Life at ACI Can Wear Apache Headband After Court Settlement
Copy

Rhode Island’s Department of Corrections has agreed to let an Indigenous man incarcerated at the Adult Correctional Institutions (ACI) in Cranston wear a headband reflecting the religious practices of his tribe.

That largely resolves a federal lawsuit filed in January 2024 by the ACLU of Rhode Island and the Roger Williams University (RWU) School of Law Prisoners’ Rights Litigation Clinic. The suit accused the state prison system of violating inmate Wolf Pawochawog-Mequinosh’s right to freely exercise his religion under the federal Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act.

An example of a headband attached in the settlement agreement.
An example of a headband attached in the settlement agreement.
Screenshot

Pawochawog-Mequinosh and the state reached the agreement on April 30. Under the terms, the Department of Corrections will cover the $40,000 in legal fees and $405 in costs to the plaintiff’s lawyers, Jared Goldstein, director of the RWU Law legal clinic and ACLU cooperating attorney Lynette Labinger.

Pawochawog-Mequinosh, who is serving a life sentence at the ACI for two first-degree sexual assault convictions, sued the department in January 2024 after he claimed prison administrators repeatedly denied his request to wear a White Mountain Apache Tribe headband. Formerly known as Brian Brownell of Tiverton, he was sentenced in August 2023.

Prison officials denied the requests because his religion is designated as “Pagan/Wiccan” in the department’s data management system. The Department of Corrections did not offer a religious designation for those who follow Native American religious traditions, according to the lawsuit.

The settlement gives the Department of Corrections 120 days to establish a way for inmates whose religions are not explicitly recognized by the prison to request approval for religious items and services consistent with their beliefs.

The ACLU and the RWU Law legal clinic will have up to 30 days to determine if the settlement terms have been fulfilled.

“This case reflects a fundamental principle: People in prison may lose their liberty but they cannot be deprived of their humanity, and the free exercise of religion is a basic human right,” Goldstein said in a statement Wednesday.

Department of Corrections spokesperson J.R. Ventura did not immediately respond to request for comment.

This story was originally published by the Rhode Island Current.

A settlement paid by Barletta Heavy Division, Inc. for using contaminated fill while constructing Rhode Island’s Route 6/10 Connector project will fund pediatric dental clinics that serve low-income families.
For the Blackstone Valley Schools co-op, this season has been about grief, support and staying together — on and off the ice
Plastic products cost us, even after we’re done with them — That’s because municipal recycling is paid with taxpayer money. But could the companies that made these products be responsible for paying for them?
Keepers at Roger Williams Park Zoo slept on-site and adjusted routines to ensure animals stayed warm, fed and secure during Rhode Island’s latest storm
The longtime Valley Breeze editor discusses the stories that mattered most and why he decided it was time to step away
Reimbursement rate set by state law in 1979 woefully inadequate to cover car repairs, motorists and auto repair experts say