Albuquerque Journal

Justices won’t hear case of anti-gay marriage florist

- BY GENE JOHNSON ASSOCIATED PRESS

SEATTLE — The U.S. Supreme Court ordered Washington state courts Monday to take a new look at the case of a florist who refused to provide services for a same-sex wedding, in light of the justices’ recent ruling in a similar case involving a Colorado baker.

The order means the Supreme Court is again, for now, passing on the key issue in both cases: whether business owners citing their faith can refuse to comply with anti-discrimina­tion laws that protect LGBT people.

The 73-year-old florist, Barronelle Stutzman, appealed after Washington’s Supreme Court ruled unanimousl­y last year that she broke the state’s anti-discrimina­tion law by refusing on religious grounds to provide flowers for the wedding of a customer at her Richland shop, Arlene’s Flowers, in 2013.

Early this month, the Supreme Court issued a limited ruling in favor of Jack Phillips, the proprietor of Masterpiec­e Cakeshop in Lakewood, Colo.

In an opinion by Justice Anthony Kennedy, the 7-2 majority found that comments by a member of the Colorado Civil Rights Commission displayed an anti-religious bias — depriving Phillips of the respect and considerat­ion his beliefs deserved. The commission­er had said that “religion has been used to justify all kinds of discrimina­tion throughout history,” including slavery and the Holocaust.

Kennedy wrote that such disputes “must be resolved with tolerance, without undue disrespect to sincere religious beliefs, and without subjecting gay persons to indignitie­s when they seek goods and services in an open market.”

Washington courts will now review the florist’s case for similar issues, but it’s unclear whether their analysis will change. The state’s high court held in its ruling that floral arrangemen­ts do not constitute protected free speech and that providing flowers to a same-sex wedding would not serve as an endorsemen­t of same-sex marriage.

Both Washington Attorney General Bob Ferguson and Stutzman’s attorneys said the U.S. Supreme Court’s action was appropriat­e in light of the Masterpiec­e Cakeshop decision.

“The Washington State Supreme Court now has the job of determinin­g whether the U.S. Supreme Court ruling affects this case,” Ferguson said in a written statement. “I am confident they will come to the same conclusion they did in their previous, unanimous ruling upholding the civil rights of same-sex couples in our state.”

But Stutzman’s attorney, Kristen Waggoner, senior counsel at the religious liberty law firm Alliance Defending Freedom, said the Masterpiec­e Cakeshop decision should prompt an overturnin­g of Stutzman’s case. She cited what she described as the attorney general’s “unpreceden­ted measures to punish Barronelle not just in her capacity as a business owner, but also in her personal capacity.”

“The Washington attorney general’s efforts to punish her because he dislikes her beliefs about marriage are as impermissi­ble as Colorado’s attempt to punish Jack,” Waggoner said.

Waggoner said Stutzman had sold the customer, Rob Ingersoll, flowers for nearly a decade and knew he was gay, but that his marriage did not comport with her beliefs and she could not provide services for it.

The American Civil Liberties Union of Washington represents Ingersoll and his husband, Curt Freed.

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Barronelle Stutzman

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