1. Elane Photography
Elane Huguenin and her husband, Jon, run Elane Photography, a small business in Albuquerque, N.M.
Alliance Defending Freedom
Alliance Defending Freedom
Back in 2006, the couple declined a request to photograph a same-sex ceremony because of a difference in beliefs. Elane explained:
“The message a same-sex commitment ceremony communicates is not one I believe.”
Elane Photography never refused to take pictures of gay and lesbian individuals, but it did decline to photograph a same-sex ceremony. Meanwhile, other photographers in the Albuquerque area were more than happy to photograph the event — and Elane has no problem giving them that business.
Getty Images
Getty Images
But in 2008, the New Mexico Human Rights Commission ruled that the Huguenins had discriminated based on sexual orientation. The commission ordered them to pay $6,637.94 in attorneys’ fees.
At the end of 2013, the New Mexico Supreme Court upheld the Human Rights Commission. It concluded that under the state’s sexual-orientation and gender-identity law, “the First Amendment does not protect a photographer’s freedom to decline to take pictures of a same-sex commitment ceremony even when doing so would violate the photographer’s deeply held religious beliefs.”
Elane Photography has petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court for review of its case.
http://blog.heritage.org/2014/02/26...eliefs/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social
Elane Huguenin and her husband, Jon, run Elane Photography, a small business in Albuquerque, N.M.
Alliance Defending Freedom
Alliance Defending Freedom
Back in 2006, the couple declined a request to photograph a same-sex ceremony because of a difference in beliefs. Elane explained:
“The message a same-sex commitment ceremony communicates is not one I believe.”
Elane Photography never refused to take pictures of gay and lesbian individuals, but it did decline to photograph a same-sex ceremony. Meanwhile, other photographers in the Albuquerque area were more than happy to photograph the event — and Elane has no problem giving them that business.
Getty Images
Getty Images
But in 2008, the New Mexico Human Rights Commission ruled that the Huguenins had discriminated based on sexual orientation. The commission ordered them to pay $6,637.94 in attorneys’ fees.
At the end of 2013, the New Mexico Supreme Court upheld the Human Rights Commission. It concluded that under the state’s sexual-orientation and gender-identity law, “the First Amendment does not protect a photographer’s freedom to decline to take pictures of a same-sex commitment ceremony even when doing so would violate the photographer’s deeply held religious beliefs.”
Elane Photography has petitioned the U.S. Supreme Court for review of its case.
http://blog.heritage.org/2014/02/26...eliefs/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social