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Colo. Appeals Court Rules Against Baker Who Refused to Bake Cake for Gay Wedding

The Colorado Court of Appeals has held that a baker who refused to create a cake for a gay couple’s wedding based on his religious beliefs violated Colorado’s public accommodations law. So reports The New York Times.

Lawyers for the baker, Jack Phillips of Masterpiece Bakeshop in Lakewood, Colo., argued that Phillips’s objection to same-sex marriage was not the same as him discriminating against a gay person. They also argued that requiring Phillips to sell a cake to a gay couple so infringed on Phillips’s beliefs that the infringement on Phillips’s rights trumped the anti-discrimination law.

The Colorado appeals court held that no reasonable observer “would interpret Masterpiece’s providing a wedding cake for a same-sex couple as an endorsement of same-sex marriage, rather than a reflection of its desire to conduct business in accordance with Colorado’s public accommodations law.”

Read the full article from The New York Times.

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