Celebrating 41 Years! Issue 2 Volume 43
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Sec 2 Pg. 1
Seattle Gay News SEATTLE’S LGBT NEWS & ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY
State can sue anti-Gay florist, judge says Reuters
Robert Ingersoll (l) and Curt Freed
Stutzman refused to provide flowers for the wedding of her longtime customer Robert Ingersoll to his now-husband Curt Freed, on the grounds that Gay marriages conflict with her Christian faith. Ingersoll complained to the state, and the Attorney General’s office wrote to Stutzman, demanding that she comply with the Consumer Protection Act (CPA) and the antidiscrimination statute. When she refused, Ferguson sued both the owner and her business, asking for a permanent injunction requiring compliance with the CPA. “[T]he clear language [of the consumer and anti-discrimination laws] supports both individual and corporate liability,” Ekstrom wrote in his decision. “As admitted by Stutzman, she not only participated in the conduct alleged, her personal actions [in defining corporate policy and in her interaction with Ingersoll] constitute the sum total of the conduct complained of by the plaintiffs,” Ekstrom continued. Ekstrom added that the Stutzman’s arguments “would completely deny the AG, the sole
government agency entitled to enforce the CPA, the ability to vindicate the public’s interest in ending discrimination … committed ‘in the course of trade or commerce.’” “It’s no accident that Judge Ekstrom’s ruling so closely mirrors our arguments, and we look forward to the decision on the remaining motions,” Attorney General Bob Ferguson said in a statement. “We believe Washington law is very clear that businesses in Washington cannot discriminate. If you serve opposite-sex partners, you must serve same-sex partners equally.” Two additional motions remain to be decided. First, Stutzman claims that the Attorney General’s Office and the individual plaintiffs lack legal standing to sue. Second, the Attorney General and the individual plaintiffs have asked for summary judgment in the case, on the grounds that the undisputed facts show that Stutzman violated the Consumer Protection Act and the Washington Law Against Discrimination.
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer
flower shop who refused to sell flowers to a Gay couple for their wedding, a judge said January 7. The state of Washington is entiBenton County Superior Court tled to sue the owner of a Richland Judge Alex Ekstrom ruled that state
Attorney General Bob Ferguson can sue Baronelle Stutzman and her business for violating the state Consumer Protection Act and the Law Against Discrimination.
Dueling Florida bishops:
Rod Hearne to run for Seattle City Council; takes on Kshama Sawant in Third District
One threatens to fire equality supporters, another says Gay marriage not a threat
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer
see Florida page 14
see Hearne page 9
www.liberalamerica.org
at any time, they risk losing their jobs, but the Bishop of St. Petersburg says that the church should not see Gay and Lesbian couples as a threat. In a January 5 letter from Archbishop Thomas Wenski, Miami church employees were warned that “certain conduct, inconsistent with the teachings of the Catholic Church, could lead to disciplin-
Rod Hearne, former Executive Director and current Board member of Equal Rights Washington, is running for Seattle City Council District Three. He announced on January 7. That puts him in competition with incumbent Council member Kshama Sawant, if she decides to run in the Third District. There was brief speculation, fueled by an erroneous report in The Stranger, that Sawant would challenge Sally Clark for one of the at-large Council seats, but she said later that she is “definitely running” for the Third District slot. The Third District takes in Capitol Hill, the Central Area as far south as the Mt. Baker neighborhood, Madrona, Washington Park, and Montlake. Beating Sawant, who, polling shows, has high name recognition in the district, will be a challenge, Hearne admits, but one he says is “absolutely necessary.” “Anything I’ve ever done – wheth-
Bishop Robert Lynch from St. Petersburg, Florida
by Mike Andrew SGN Staff Writer As Gay and Lesbian couples marry in all of Florida’s 67 counties, two of the state’s most prominent Roman Catholic bishops have issued contradictory statements on same-sex marriage. The Archbishop of Miami has warned its employees that if they support marriage equality in any way and
Rod Hearne