Oklahoma plates: The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit ruled that an Oklahoma license plate with a Native American image does not violate a Christian man’s First Amendment rights. Keith Cressman sued several Oklahoma Department of Public Safety officials in 2011, alleging that “he was forced to display the Native American image—and thereby communicate its allegedly pantheistic message—in violation of his free-speech, free exercise, and due-process rights under the First and Fourteenth Amendments,” the opinion says. The design on the license plate displayed a young Apache warrior and religious figure shooting an arrow towards the sky. In a prior appeal, the Tenth Circuit ruled that Mr. Cressman had alleged sufficient injury to prove that he had stated a plausible compelled-speech claim. But on remand, the Tenth Circuit affirmed that Cressman was not compelled to speak.