Vegetarian inmate says he was told fish isn't meat

HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) - A vegetarian prison inmate in Connecticut has a beef with his prison diet, saying the state is feeding him seafood three times a week and justifying it by telling him that fish is not meat.

Howard Cosby, who was sentenced in 2004 to 191⁄2 years in prison for sexual assault and other crimes, has enlisted the help of an animal rights group in his quest to receive a vegetarian diet at the Corrigan-Radgowski Correctional Institution in Uncasville as a practicing Buddhist.

In a letter to People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals, the 35-year-old Cosby said his administrative complaints were dismissed by prison officials, who told him that his diet is classified as vegetarian because the department does not consider fish to be meat.

"Clearly fish is meat," said Jeff Kerr, an attorney for PETA. "They have thoughts. They have interests. They have a central nervous system. They are not swimming vegetables."

The organization sent a letter to warden Scott Erfe on Tuesday asking that fish be removed from Cosby's diet under the federal Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act. The law, passed in 2000, requires that prisons avoid imposing substantial burdens on inmates' religious exercises.

Not all Buddhists are vegetarians, but Kerr said Cosby practices vegetarianism as part of a Buddhist lifestyle of nonviolence, and that is enough to meet the requirements under the federal law.

Correction Department spokesman Andrius Banevicius said the issue is currently being reviewed by the Department of Correction's Religious Issue Review Committee.

The department's directives include a requirement that an inmate's diet meet "all nutritional requirements as determined by a Department of Correction licensed dietitian, without the presence of food items forbidden by religious dogma."

Kerr said several inmates across the country have won similar disputes with prison officials over their diets, and was hopeful Cosby's complaint could be resolved without having to take it to court.

"We can't imagine they would want to make a federal case out of this," he said. "It seems so simple to just comply with his request, as the federal law requires them to do."

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