USA TODAY International Edition

BAKED IN THE CAKE LEGAL BATTLES FOLLOW GAY- MARRIAGE RULING

Bakers, florists and bed and breakfast owners among those raising religious objections to catering to gay newlyweds

- Richard Wolf

DENVER Same- sex marriage is the law of the land, but that doesn’t mean the newlyweds always get their choice of wedding cakes. Or flowers. Or photograph­s. Or venues.

Just ask Jack Phillips, a “cake artist” who may represent the next legal hurdle for gays and lesbians seeking wedded bliss.

Phillips, 59, owns Masterpiec­e Cakeshop, a Lakewood, Colo., bakery that won’t design desserts for same- sex weddings. His case was heard this month by the Colorado Court of Appeals. If he loses, he plans to keep appealing — all the way to the Supreme Court.

“I feel that the Bible is clear — what God defines marriage as,” Phillips says as his daughter, Lisa, works on the latest confection­s. “For me to violate that would be for me to rebel against God, to take what he’s designed and say it doesn’t matter.”

The problem for Phillips is that Colorado, like 21 other states, bars discrimina­tion on the basis of sexual orientatio­n. His claim that the First Amendment protects his freedom of expression, based on his religious beliefs, fell short before the Colorado Civil Rights Commission last year.

Twenty- eight states have no such laws, so gays and lesbians freed to marry by the Supreme Court last month still can face discrimina­tion in employment, housing and public accommodat­ions.

Phillips, like Washington state florist Barronelle Stutzman, Kentucky printer Blaine Adamson, Illinois bed and breakfast owners Jim and Beth Walder and New York family farm owners Robert and Cynthia Gifford, says his religious objections are paramount. For now, rather than bake for same- sex weddings, Phillips has stopped making all wedding cakes — and says his revenue has dropped by about 40%.

The issue could head toward the Supreme Court in the coming years. Last year, the justices turned down a petition from the owners of a New Mexico photograph­y studio who lost a similar freedom- of- expression case over their refusal to work at a lesbian couple’s wedding. Several other cases, such as Phillips’, are making their way through state and federal courts.

Gay rights groups predict they will keep winning those lawsuits. “The courts have very consistent­ly held that this is not a free speech or religious freedom issue, that it is about discrimina­tion, and that discrimina­tion is a violation of state laws,” says Sarah Warbelow, legal director at the Human Rights Campaign, the nation’s leading gay rights group.

A recent poll conducted by the Newseum Institute found that only 38% of Americans say businesses providing wedding services should be required to serve same- sex couples despite their religious objections, down from 52% in 2013. The court often tends to follow public opinion.

The Supreme Court has sided with religious believers before, most recently by allowing an exception to the Affordable Care Act’s requiremen­t that most businesses offer health insurance coverage for contracept­ives that some equate with abortion.

“I think it’s crucial for the court to weigh in,” says Jeremy Tedesco, senior legal counsel at the conservati­ve Alliance Defending Freedom, who argued Phillips’ case in court. “I think there’s going to be a lot of litigation in this area, and inevitably there are going to be conflicts.”

FAITH ‘ IS EVERYTHING’

Phillips’ legal battle began three years ago, when Charlie Craig and David Mullins came in to order a cake for their wedding reception. Though the wedding was held in Massachuse­tts, where same- sex marriage had been legal since 2004, the celebratio­n was planned for Colorado.

Unfortunat­ely for the couple, an earlier incident in Phillips’ life made their brief exchange unappetizi­ng. It occurred in 1978, when Phillips — then working the night shift at a bakery and drinking beer after work at a bar — says he became a born- again Christian. His religion, he says, “is everything.”

Craig and Mullins filed a civil rights complaint and won, first before an administra­tive court judge, then before the full commission. It ruled that Phillips must serve same- sex couples, educate his staff and file quarterly reports for two years.

“It’s time we moved on from using religion as an excuse to discrimina­te,” Craig said after the latest hearing. “No one should be told they are less than anyone else, especially at a joyous time like a wedding.”

James Esseks, who directs gay rights issues for the American Civil Liberties Union, likens Phillips’ effort and those of other commercial businesses to posting a sign on the front door: “No wedding cakes for gay people.”

“That’s the kind of discrimina­tion that we’ve said is not acceptable in America,” Esseks says.

The Supreme Court passed up its first chance to hear a similar case in 2014 — eight years after Elaine Huguenin and her husband, Jonathan, told a lesbian couple that their Albuquerqu­e photo studio worked only “traditiona­l weddings.”

The Huguenins’ petition to the Supreme Court was based on their freedom of speech and expression, which they interprete­d as the right to decide what messages their photograph­y conveys. That’s the same principle cited by others around the country:

The former owners of Sweet Cakes by Melissa in Gresham, Ore., were ordered this month to pay $ 135,000 to a lesbian couple for emotional suffering after they were refused a wedding cake.

Arlene’s Flowers of Richland, Wash., was sued for refusing to create floral arrangemen­ts for a gay wedding. The florist lost and has asked the state Supreme Court to hear its appeal.

Hands On Originals, a Christian outfitter in Lexington, Ky., was sued for refusing to print T- shirts for a gay pride festival. The county human rights commission ruled against its owner, Blaine Adamson, but a county court reversed that decision this year. Kentucky has no anti- discrimina­tion law.

Liberty Ridge Farm in Schaghtico­ke, N. Y., was sued after owners Robert and Cynthia Gifford refused to host a lesbian couple’s wedding. The state Division of Human Rights ruled against the couple, and the case is before an appellate court in Albany.

‘ HARD QUESTIONS’

The Supreme Court’s ruling last month that states cannot deny marriage licenses to same- sex couples has motivated both sides to seek additional protection­s from state legislatur­es. The author of that opinion, Justice Anthony Kennedy, sees nothing wrong with religious believers seeking protection. “Religions, and those who adhere to religious doctrines, may continue to advocate with utmost, sincere conviction that, by divine precepts, same- sex marriage should not be condoned,” Kennedy wrote.

Quena Gonzalez, director of state and local affairs for the conservati­ve Family Research Council, said the ruling “clearly provides an increased sense of urgency to protect conscience protection­s on marriage, just like we do on other contentiou­s social issues like abortion.”

Twenty- two states have laws barring discrimina­tion based on sexual orientatio­n; 21 have laws protecting religious freedom. Two states, Indiana and Arkansas, enacted religious freedom laws this year. Michigan protected adoption agencies that deny gay couples for religious reasons. North Carolina protected magistrate­s and others who cite religious beliefs in refusing to marry same- sex couples.

In Congress, Sen. Mike Lee of Utah and Rep. Raúl Labrador of Idaho, both Republican­s, are sponsoring bills aimed at protecting individual­s and businesses opposed to same- sex marriage.

Since the high court’s decision, some state officials have taken steps to protect religious objectors. Kansas Gov. Sam Brownback was the first, blocking the state from penalizing religious groups that refuse to perform or recognize same- sex marriages.

On the flip side, gay rights groups vow a major push to win non- discrimina­tion laws in states that do not have them. Their latest conquest came this year in Utah. The battle was set to resume Thursday — when Democrats in Congress file legislatio­n that would ban discrimina­tion against gays and lesbians in federal law — and is likely to continue for years to come.

“It was never about the cake,” Charlie Craig’s mother, Deborah Munn, wrote on an ACLU blog site. “It was about my son being treated like a lesser person.”

“I feel that the United States Constituti­on guarantees me my freedom of religion, freedom of speech,” Phillips says. “It doesn’t say except for when you open your business. ... It’s not just relegated to Sunday morning.”

“It’s time we moved on from using religion as an excuse to discrimina­te. No one should be told they are less than anyone else, especially at a joyous time like a wedding.”

Charlie Craig

 ?? BRENNAN LINSLEY, AP ?? Masterpiec­e Cakeshop owner Jack Phillips decorates a cake at his Lakewood, Colo., store. Phillips, who refused to make a wedding cake for a gay couple, went before the Colorado Court of Appeals.
BRENNAN LINSLEY, AP Masterpiec­e Cakeshop owner Jack Phillips decorates a cake at his Lakewood, Colo., store. Phillips, who refused to make a wedding cake for a gay couple, went before the Colorado Court of Appeals.
 ?? BOB BRAWDY, AP ?? Arlene’s Flowers in Washington was sued for refusing to create floral arrangemen­ts for a gay wedding.
BOB BRAWDY, AP Arlene’s Flowers in Washington was sued for refusing to create floral arrangemen­ts for a gay wedding.
 ?? DOUG MCSCHOOLER, AP ?? Thousands of opponents of Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act protested outside the Statehouse in March.
DOUG MCSCHOOLER, AP Thousands of opponents of Indiana’s Religious Freedom Restoratio­n Act protested outside the Statehouse in March.
 ?? ALLIANCE DEFENDING
FREEDOM ?? Elaine Huguenin of Elane Photograph­y in Albuquerqu­e, tried to get the Supreme Court to consider her refusal to work a samesex wedding.
ALLIANCE DEFENDING FREEDOM Elaine Huguenin of Elane Photograph­y in Albuquerqu­e, tried to get the Supreme Court to consider her refusal to work a samesex wedding.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States