Santa Fe New Mexican

Baker: No cake for gender transition celebratio­n

Shop owner files suit against Colorado in latest dispute

- By James Anderson

DENVER — A Colorado baker who refused to make a wedding cake for a gay couple on religious grounds — a stance partially upheld by the U.S. Supreme Court — has sued the state over its opposition to his refusal to bake a cake celebratin­g a gender transition, his attorneys said Wednesday.

Jack Phillips, owner of the Masterpiec­e Cakeshop in suburban Denver, claimed that Colorado officials are on a “crusade to crush” him and force him into mediation over the gender transition cake because of his religious beliefs, according to a federal lawsuit filed Tuesday.

Phillips is seeking to overturn a Colorado Civil Rights Commission ruling that he discrimina­ted against a transgende­r person by refusing to make a cake celebratin­g that person’s transition from male to female.

His lawsuit came after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in June that Colorado’s Civil Rights Commission displayed anti-religious bias when it sanctioned Phillips for refusing to make a wedding cake in 2012 for Charlie Craig and Dave Mullins, a same-sex couple.

The justices voted 7-2 that the commission violated Phillips’ rights under the First Amendment. But the court did not rule on the larger issue of whether businesses can invoke religious objections to refuse service to gays and lesbians.

The Alliance Defending Freedom, a conservati­ve Christian nonprofit law firm, represente­d Phillips in the case and filed the new lawsuit.

Phillips operates a small, family-run bakery in a strip mall in the southwest Denver suburb of Lakewood. He told the state civil rights commission that he can make no more than two to five custom cakes per week, depending on time constraint­s and consumer demand for the cakes that he sells in his store that are not for special orders.

Autumn Scardina, a Denver attorney whose practice includes family, personal injury, insurance and employment law, filed the Colorado complaint — saying that Phillips refused her request for a gender transition cake in 2017.

Cardina said she asked for a cake with a pink interior and a blue exterior and told Phillips it was intended to celebrate her gender transition.

She did not state in her complaint whether she asked for the cake to have a message on it.

The commission found on June 28 that Scardina was discrimina­ted against because of her transgende­r status. It ordered both parties to seek a mediated solution.

Phillips sued in response, citing his belief that “the status of being male or female … is given by God, is biological­ly determined, is not determined by perception­s or feelings, and cannot be chosen or changed,” according to his lawsuit.

Phillips alleges that Colorado violated his First Amendment right to practice his faith and the 14th Amendment right to equal protection, citing commission rulings upholding other bakers’ refusal to make cakes with messages that are offensive to them.

“For over six years now, Colorado has been on a crusade to crush Plaintiff Jack Phillips … because its officials despise what he believes and how he practices his faith,” the lawsuit said. “This lawsuit is necessary to stop Colorado’s continuing persecutio­n of Phillips.”

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Jack Phillips

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