Lorie Smith, the Christian web designer who recently secured a victory in a landmark First Amendment Supreme Court case, told the Daily Caller News Foundation in an interview that the ruling makes ...
Lorie Smith, the Christian web designer who recently won a Supreme Court victory because she argued that Colorado’s anti-discrimination law made her too afraid to make heterosexual wedding websites ...
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg is suggesting the web designer involved in a Supreme Court decision sought to spark the case. During an appearance on CNN Sunday, Buttigieg discussed the case ...
DENVER - A Colorado web designer who the U.S. Supreme Court ruled Friday could refuse to make wedding websites for gay couples cited a request from a man named Stewart, who confirmed to media outlets ...
After the Supreme Court upheld Christian graphic designer Lorie Smith's legal challenge to Colorado's anti-discrimination law last week, the media seized on reports that a customer requesting a ...
The federal appeals court based in Denver issued a brief order on Thursday returning the case of Christian web designer Lorie Smith to a trial judge, two months after the nation's highest court sided ...
The Supreme Court on Friday ruled in favor of an evangelical Christian web designer from Colorado who refuses to work on same-sex weddings. The justices, divided 6-3, said that Lorie Smith, as a ...
The Supreme Court last week ruled in favor of a Christian web designer who argued that having to make wedding websites for same-sex couples would violate her First Amendment rights. The decision was ...
The state of Colorado will reportedly pay more than $1.5 million in legal fees to an anti-LGBTQ+ web designer who won the right to discriminate in the landmark Supreme Court case 303 Creative v.
Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg on Sunday said the Supreme Court’s recent decision to side with a Christian web designer who rejected the creation of same-sex wedding websites as an example of ...
Last week the Supreme Court issued its landmark decision that Lori Smith, a Colorado-based Christian graphic artist and web designer, did not have to create content that violated her beliefs. In ...