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Christian baker sued for refusing gender-transition cake says Supreme Court ruling puts law on his side

EXCLUSIVE – Jack Phillips, owner of Masterpiece Cakeshop in Colorado, is hoping the Supreme Court’s latest decision dealing with private business owners and their First Amendment freedoms finally releases him from more than a decade of legal wrangling. 

In 2012, Phillips was catapulted into the center of a national controversy when he was sued by the State of Colorado after he declined to create a custom wedding cake for a gay couple. Phillips argued that he would always serve LGBTQ customers, but would decline work that compelled him to celebrate or express specific messages he disagreed with.

In a landmark, albeit narrow, victory in 2018, the Supreme Court ruled in favor of Phillips and said the state was hostile to his deeply held beliefs. 

But shortly after his victory at the high court, Phillips was asked to bake a gender transition celebration cake, which he declined, citing his religious beliefs. He was sued again, and has lost in two lower courts in Colorado. 

After 11 years in court, Phillips is hopeful that the Colorado Supreme Court will rule in his favor in light of the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision finding that the First Amendment protects creatives who want to decline work that asks them to further a particular message. 

“At Masterpiece Cakeshop, we serve everybody… we just can’t express every message that people want us to with our custom cakes,” Phillips told Fox News Digital in an interview. 

Jack Phillips decorating cake

Jack Phillips says he hopes the Colorado Supreme Court will rule in his favor in light of the 303 Creative decision at the U.S. Supreme Court.

LIBERAL THEORY TRYING TO DISMISS SUPREME COURT WIN FOR CHRISTIAN GRAPHIC DESIGNER SHOT DOWN BY LEGAL EXPERTS

Justice Neil Gorsuch in robes against red curtain

Associate Justice Neil Gorsuch wrote the majority opinion in the landmark 303 Creative case. (Erin Schaff/The New York Times via AP, Pool, File)

On Tuesday, Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), a nonprofit legal group that represents Phillips, filed a Petitioner’s Response to Supplemental Authority letter to the Colorado Supreme Court, essentially asking the tribunal to take up Phillips’ appeal and rule in his favor in light of the decision in 303 Creative.

“What’s critical now after 303 is the fact that this cake actually does communicate a message. The trial court found that this cake symbolizes the transition from male to female, and went into great detail about the symbolism of the cake. The court found that blue represents male and pink represents female and that this cake communicates a message given the context of how cake artists are often asked to create custom cakes,” Jake Warner, legal counsel for ADF, told Fox News Digital.

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