Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo

COVID-19 restrictions on churches that treat them differently than similarly situated secular entities are unconstitutional.

ReligiousLiberty.TV
February 26, 2026
0 min read
Cite This Case
Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo (U.S. 2021).
✓ Copied! Standard law review / practitioner format. Verify against current Bluebook edition (21st ed.).

⚠ No official reporter citation found for this case. Citation quality will improve once a reporter citation (e.g. 573 U.S. 682) is added to the case record.

Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo (U.S. Supreme Court, 2021). https://religiousliberty.tv/case-library/roman-catholic-diocese-of-brooklyn-v-cuomo/
✓ Copied! For legal scholarship in social science journals. Includes URL back to this case page.

⚠ No official reporter citation found for this case. Citation quality will improve once a reporter citation (e.g. 573 U.S. 682) is added to the case record.

Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo [U.S. Supreme Court, 2021] — COVID-19 restrictions on churches that treat them differently than similarly situated secular entities are unconstitutional. Source: ReligiousLiberty.TV (https://religiousliberty.tv/case-library/roman-catholic-diocese-of-brooklyn-v-cuomo/, accessed April 10, 2026).
✓ Copied! For general audiences, journalism, press releases, and non-legal writing.

⚠ No official reporter citation found for this case. Citation quality will improve once a reporter citation (e.g. 573 U.S. 682) is added to the case record.

Year: 2021 Court: U.S. Supreme Court
Holding: COVID-19 restrictions on churches that treat them differently than similarly situated secular entities are unconstitutional.
Uses AI to generate a structured summary. Takes ~10 seconds.

Official Documents

Coverage on ReligiousLiberty.TV

📎 Document links found in our articles: 📄 opinion

Roman Catholic Diocese of Brooklyn v. Cuomo is a Free Exercise case decided by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2021. The court held that cOVID-19 restrictions on churches that treat them differently than similarly situated secular entities are unconstitutional.