Orange County Register
ORANGE, Calif. — A model dines on more expensive jail fare because of a Festivus requirement.
Festivus may only come around once a year - more often if you watch “Seinfeld” reruns - but longtime county inmate Malcolm Alarmo King was able to celebrate it three times a day while locked up at the Theo Lacy Facility in Orange.
King’s quest for a more healthful eating option while behind bars ended with a county lawyer forced to research the origin of Festivus and its traditions and a Superior Court judge recognizing the holiday - which lodged its place in pop culture in a “Seinfeld” episode - as a legitimate religion.
Theo Lacy’s menu selection apparently didn’t please King, 38, when he was booked into the jail on drug charges in April.
They serve salami there. And that didn’t quite fit in with the fitness buff/gym clothes model’s lifestyle.
So King, who is also suspected of being in the country illegally from Liberia, asked for kosher meals.
That was not because of his religion, but because they were healthier, and the 5-foot-8-inch, 180-pound King wanted double portions to maintain his physique, said his attorney, Fred Thiagarajah.
Judge Derek G. Johnson signed off on the high-protein double-portion kosher meals for King.
That didn’t sit well with the Sheriff’s Department, which pays for the food. Kosher meals are more expensive than the regular jail fare and reserved for those with a religious need.
The Sheriff’s Department interviewed King about his religious leanings in May. When asked what his religion was, he said “healthism.”
“He’s healthy, so he said health and added an ‘ism,’” said Thiagarajah, who acknowledged to the county and to a judge and to The Watchdog that it was a farce.
When sentencing day came, King pleaded guilty to the sale or transport of a controlled substance - a felony. Two other felonies were thrown out.
But King still wanted his non-salami meals.
Johnson pulled King’s lawyer and the prosecutor aside and said he needed a religion to put down on the order to make it stick, explained Thiagarajah.
“I said ‘Festivus,’” said Thiagarajah. The order was granted: three non-salami meals a day.
County counsel researched Festivus, arguing that writer Dan O’Keefe created the holiday to celebrate his first date with his wife in 1966. The holiday was introduced to the world by his son Daniel, a screenwriter for “Seinfeld,” who wrote it into the show.
“Seinfeld” celebrated Festivus with an aluminum “Festivus pole” instead of a tree and traditions such as the “Airing of Grievances” and “Feats of Strength.” Easily explainable events were “Festivus miracles.”
“Festivus for the rest of us!” was the pseudoholiday’s motto.
Still, the judge’s order stood: No salami.
King was released from county jail Oct. 5 and turned over to Immigration and Customs Enforcement. He is awaiting deportation, according to ICE spokeswoman Lori Haley.
No word if Festivus celebrations are allowed in ICE detention.
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