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same-sex marriages because of the city's antidiscrimination ordinance.
Coeur d'Alene City Attorney Mjke G1idley wrote in an email to The Press that the stay was requested in order to allow both parties time to attempt to resolve the
Hitching Post suit delay sought Attorney for Cd'A files motion, city wants dismissal By KEITH COUSINS
kcousins@cdapress.com COEUR d'ALENE The lawsuit which put the city of Coeur d'Alene at the center of the national debate on same-sex marriage could be moving toward a resolution. Attorneys for the city filed a motion Monday in federal court asking for proceedings in the lawsuit -filed in October against the city by The Hitching Post - to be delayed. The motion was filed by Kirtlan Naylor, a Boise-based attorney representing the city in the case. Lawyers with U1e Alliance Defending Freedom - a Christian rights legal advocacy organization - filed the suit on behalf of Don and Evelyn Knapp, the owners of the Hitching Post. The civil rights lawsuit claims the Knapps are being forced to violate their religious beliefs and perform see LAWSUIT, A6
issue outside the courtroom. He added that the city wants the case dismissed. Jeremy Tedesco, senior legal counsel al Alliance Defending Freedom, also told The Press that the parties needed time to reach a settlement. But, Tedesco added that the ADF is seeking a formal clarification to the city's anti-discrinunatio11 ordinance. "The city has stated multiple times - orally and in writing, publicly and privately - that forprofit businesses such as the Hitching Post are subject lo the ordinance and would likely be prosecuted under it," Tedesco wrote. "Alliance Defenrung Freedom is requesting that the city honor the Knapps' fundamental freedoms and include a clear exemption covering for-profit businesses that are operated according to U1e owner's religious beliefs."
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