OFFICIAL WHO PENALIZED
'SWEETCAKES' ACCUSED OF VIOLATING CONSTITUTION, Bakery
owners punished with $135,000 fine for refusing to violate Christian faith, by
Bob Unruh, 4/30/16
An Oregon state official and his agency violated the U.S. Constitution in multiple ways when they assessed a $135,000 penalty against Sweetcakes by Melissa bakery owners Aaron and Melissa Klein for refusing to violate their Christian faith by creating a wedding cake for a lesbian duo, according to a new appeal filed in the long-running case.
“In America, you’re protected by the
Constitution, and you’re also innocent until proven guilty,” said Kelly
Shackelford, president of First Liberty Institute, which is working on the
Kleins’ case.
“Commissioner Brad Avakian decided
the Kleins were guilty before he even heard their case. This is an egregious
violation of the Kleins’ rights to due process. We hope the Oregon Court of
Appeals will remedy this by reversing or dismissing the government’s case against
the Kleins.”
Boyden Gray, former ambassador to
the European Union and founding partner of Boyden Gray and Associates, noted
the Constitution “guarantees the rights of free exercise of religion, free
speech, and due process for every American.”
Gray also has joined in the Kleins’
case.
“We hope the Oregon Court of Appeals
will defend the Kleins’ rights in accordance with state and federal law,” he
said.
The case was prompted by the Kleins’
decision in 2013 not to make a cake for a lesbian duo. The couple had sold
products to the women before and said they would again but declined to provide
the cake because its message violated their religious beliefs.
Oregon’s Bureau of Labor and
Industries responded with a lengthy and wide-ranging attack on the couple,
ordering them to pay the $135,000 penalty and not to say “certain things about
their religious faith.”
Officials overseeing the case even
stated publicly that people with such beliefs need to be “rehabilitated,”
according to court records.
Paul Kengor, Ph.D., has written “Takedown: From
Communists to Progressives, How the Left has Sabotaged Family and Marriage,” to
explain the influence of “extreme-left radicals” on the American family. The Kleins eventually closed their bakery.
Now they have appealed
to the Oregon Court of Appeals,
arguing the state violated their constitutional rights to religious freedom,
free speech and due process.
Avakian, for example, before hearing
the case against the Kleins, “made numerous public comments on social media and
in media interviews revealing his intent to rule against them,” according to
the brief.
“He stated that the Kleins had
‘disobeyed’ Oregon law and needed to be ‘rehabilitated.’ By failing to recuse
himself from the case, while harboring a bias against the Kleins, Commissioner
Avakian deprived the Kleins of their right to due process with a fair hearing
before an impartial tribunal.”
The brief also contends the $135,000
penalty was gratuitous and excessive and that the agency order violates Oregon
law, the state constitution and the U.S. Constitution. The complaint asserts
the state agency violated constitutional prohibitions against compelled speech,
free speech, due process and limits on the exercise of their religion.
Avakian did not respond to WND email
and telephone requests for comment.
“This case addresses a BOLI final
order misinterpreting Oregon’s public accommodations law, ORS 659A.403, which
requires business to sell their goods and services to all persons, regardless
of protected characteristics like sexual orientation. BOLI’s misapplication of
Oregon law violates both the Oregon and United States Constitutions,” the brief
argues.
“It unlawfully compels two law-abiding
Oregon citizens, the Kleins, to devote their time and talents to create art
destined for use in expressive events conveying messages that contradict their
deeply and sincerely held religious beliefs,” it says.
The dispute, the brief says, “is about
“the state forcing business owners to publicly facilitate ceremonies, rituals,
and other expressive events with which they have fundamental and often, as in
this case, religious disagreements. BOLI says the Kleins’ refusal to create
custom-designed cakes for same-sex weddings tells complainants that ‘there are
places they cannot go, things they cannot be.”
“The Kleins, however, have no power
over where the complainants go, what they can be, or whether their identities
are worthy of recognition. BOLI, of course, does have those powers over the
Kleins and others like them. And its final order sends a clear message that
their identity as a religious people is not worthy of state recognition and
that they cannot operate a business in Oregon unless they facilitate same-sex
weddings.” The state said its ruling was about how “people in a free society
should choose to treat each other.”
“BOLI’s charge is to fairly and
impartially enforce the law, not to use it to bring about its vision of a free
society, compelling people to engage in speech that violates their consciences
in the name of rehabilitating religious dissenters,” the brief says.
It points out that refusing to do
“gay weddings” is not the same as refusing to sell services to “gay” people. Under
the agency’s standard, the brief points out, a feminist photographer could be
forced to facilitate fraternity initiations with pictures and an atheist store
manager could be forced to provide bread for Wiccan rituals.
Citing Thomas Jefferson’s statement
that compelling a man “to furnish contributions of money for the propagation of
opinions which he disbelieves and abhors” is “tyrannical,” the brief argues
that the people of Oregon have given BOLI certain powers, but not the authority
“to determine how people in a society should treat each other, compelling
speech and running roughshod over sincere religious beliefs.”
It also explains there were
significant problems with the evidence that the state agency accepted,
including the claim from Cheryl McPherson, the mother of complainant Rachel
Cryer, that Aaron Klein called her an “abomination.”
What actually happened was that she
went to the bakery to “confront” the Kleins about their beliefs and instruct
them that she believed the Bible to be silent about “same-sex relationships.”
Aaron Klein listened to her, then
responded with a verse from Leviticus: “You shall not lie with a male as one
lies with a female; it is an abomination.”
McPherson left and reported that
Klein had called her an “abomination,” a variation of the evidence that was not
addressed by the state agency’s ruling, the brief explains.
The agency also repeatedly rejected
the Kleins’ attempts to obtain a fair evaluation by restricting witnesses they
could question regarding the evidence and refusing their requests to disqualify
certain components.
The Kleins’ brief cites a recent
ruling from a parallel agency in Colorado that ruled homosexual advocates who
are bakers legally could refuse to produce a cake with a biblical message on
it.
“There is no basis, however, in law
or logic for forcing some bakers to associate with expressive events (same sex
weddings) while exempting others from associating with expressive messages
(Bible passages),” the brief argues.
WND
previously reported that Samaritan’s Purse CEO
Franklin Graham, who also is CEO of the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association,
called the ruling against the Kleins a travesty for the First Amendment. Graham reacted on his
Facebook page to the Oregon ruling against
the Kleins.
He wrote: “This is unbelievable! …
Brad Avakian, Oregon’s Bureau of Labor & Industries Commissioner, upheld
[the previous] ruling that the Kleins have to pay the lesbian couple $135,000
for a long list of alleged damages including: ‘acute loss of confidence,’ ‘high
blood pressure,’ ‘impaired digestion,’ ‘loss of appetite,’ ‘migraine
headaches,’ ‘pale and sick at home after work,’ ‘resumption of smoking habit,’
‘weight gain,’ and ‘worry.’ Give me a break. In my opinion, this couple should
pay the Kleins $135,000 for all they’ve been through!”
He continued: “Even more outrageous
is that Avakian has also now ordered the Kleins to ‘cease and desist’ from
speaking publicly about not wanting to bake cakes for same-sex weddings based
on their Christian beliefs. This is an outright attack on their #freedomofspeech. A senior attorney with the The Heritage
Foundation was absolutely right when he said, ‘It is exactly this kind of
oppressive persecution by government officials that led the pilgrims to
America.'”
On Monday, WND
reported four members of the Colorado
Supreme Court, including a justice who boasts on
a state website of being a homosexual-rights advocate, refused to intervene in
a case in the state that is similar to the Kleins’. There, a state agency
ruling is forcing a Colorado baker to violate his Christian faith by baking a
cake for a homosexual duo.
The court on Monday issued
a terse statement denying a petition for review. It said that Chief Justice Nancy Rice and Justice Nathan
Coats would have reviewed the case because of the important constitutional
questions it raises. But four other justices, including Monica
Marquiz, who boasts of winning the
Colorado GLBT Bar Association’s 2009 Outstanding GLBT Attorney Award, joined
with a growing social movement that insists homosexual rights trump the
religious rights protected by the Constitution.
For Rice and Coats, the issues that
need to be reviewed include whether the Colorado Anti-Discrimination Act (CADA)
“requires Phillips to create artistic expression that contravenes his religious
beliefs about marriage,” whether “applying CADA to force Phillips to create
artistic expression that contravenes his religious beliefs about marriage
violates his free speech rights under the United States and Colorado
Constitutions” and whether “applying CADA to force Phillips to create artistic
expression that violates his religious beliefs about marriage infringes his
free exercise rights under the United States and Colorado Constitutions.” The
other three justices joining the campaign were Brian
Boatright, William
Hood III and Richard
Gabriel..
Colorado’s antagonism to Christians
was apparent when
Diann Rice, a member of the state civil rights
commission, which reviewed the allegations, said: “I would also like to
reiterate what we said in the hearing or the last meeting. Freedom of religion
and religion has been used to justify all kinds of discrimination throughout
history, whether it be slavery, whether it be the Holocaust, whether it be – I
mean, we – we can list hundreds of situations where freedom of religion has
been used to justify discrimination. And to me it is one of the most despicable
pieces of rhetoric that people can use to – to use their religion to hurt
others.”
Hear
a recording of Rice’s statement:
http://www.wnd.com/2016/04/official-who-penalized-sweetcakes-accused-of-violating-constitution/
Comments
The US
Congress has not passed any Amendment to the Civil Rights Act that includes
LBGT citizens as a protected class.
Colorado State Law may have included homosexuals in their own
Anti-discrimination laws. If this is the
case, the “bakery case” fine may be reversed because Colorado didn’t allow for
“due process”.
I’m
surprised that Colorado businesses have allowed this in their state. States should repeal their own versions of
the US Civil Rights Act and not get ahead of the federal on this issue.
The laws
that allow predatory law suits need to be repealed as anti-business. The Community Reinvestment Act 1993 and HUD
anti-discrimination rules caused the 2008 Meltdown and haven’t been repealed. Continuing to include unqualified borrowers
as a protected class is suicidal. US Law
needs to draw a line in these anti-discrimination laws when they endanger the
economy or unduly violate everybody else’s rights.
The gay
marriage opinion by the Supreme Court needs to be reversed by the
Congress. The Courts should not be
passing new laws in violation of the Constitution.
Norb
Leahy, Dunwoody GA Tea Party Leader
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