Albuquerque Journal

Court takes wedding cake suit

Denver baker turned away same-sex couple

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DENVER — A Colorado clash between gay rights and religion started as an angry Facebook posting about a wedding cake but now has big implicatio­ns for anti-discrimina­tion laws in 22 states.

Baker Jack Phillips is challengin­g a Colorado law that says he was wrong to have turned away a samesex couple who wanted a cake to celebrate their 2012 wedding.

The U.S. Supreme Court said Monday it will consider Phillips’ case, which could affect all states. Twenty-two states include sexual orientatio­n in anti-discrimina­tion laws that bar discrimina­tion in public accommodat­ions.

Phillips argues that he turned away Charlie Craig and David Mullins not because they are gay, but because their wedding violated Phillips’ religious belief.

After the couple was turned away in 2012, they complained about Masterpiec­e Cakeshop on Facebook, then filed a complaint with the Colorado Civil Rights Commission. The state sided with the couple.

“It solidified the right of our community to have a right to public accommodat­ions, so future couples are not turned away from a business because of who they are,” Mullins said Monday.

Phillips says that artisans cannot be compelled to produce works celebratin­g an event that violates the artist’s religion. A lawyer for Phillips pointed out that another Denver-area baker was not fined for declining to bake a cake with an anti-gay message.

“The government in Colorado is picking and choosing which messages they’ll support and which artistic messages they’ll protect,” said Kristen Waggoner of the Alliance Defending Freedom, which took the baker’s case.

The decision to take on the case reflects renewed energy among the high court’s conservati­ve justices, whose ranks have recently been bolstered by the addition of Justice Neil Gorsuch.

The Colorado case could settle challenges from at least a half-dozen other artists in the wedding industry who are challengin­g laws in other states requiring them to produce work for same-sex ceremonies.

Those cases include a Washington state florist who has been fighting a lawsuit filed after she refused to provide services for a gay wedding in 2013.

And earlier this month, owners of a Phoenix calligraph­y studio filed suit against a city anti-discrimina­tion ordinance that could lead to jail time if the Brush & Nib Studio denied service for a same-sex union.

In another case, the Supreme Court ruled Monday that churches have the same right as other charitable groups to seek state money for new playground surfaces and other nonreligio­us needs.

But the justices stopped short of saying whether the ruling applies to school voucher programs that use public funds to pay for private, religious schooling.

By a 7-2 vote, the justices sided with Trinity Lutheran Church of Columbia, Mo., which sought a state grant to put a soft surface on its preschool playground.

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Jack Phillips

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