The Mysterious Case of the Fake Gay Marriage Website, the Real Straight Man, and the Supreme Court [View all]
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The Mysterious Case of the Fake Gay Marriage Website, the Real Straight Man, and the Supreme Court
In filings in the 303 Creative vs. Elenis case is a supposed request for a gay wedding websitebut the man named in the request says he never filed it.
Melissa Gira Grant/June 29, 2023
SCOTUS PUZZLE
The Mysterious Case of the Fake Gay Marriage Website, the Real Straight Man, and the Supreme Court
In filings in the 303 Creative v. Elenis case is a supposed request for a gay wedding websitebut the man named in the request says he never filed it.
Long before the Supreme Court took up one of the last remaining cases it will decide this sessionthe 303
Creative v. Elenis case, concerning a Colorado web designer named Lorie Smith who refuses to make websites for same-sex weddings and seeks an exemption from anti-discrimination lawsthere was a couple named Stewart and Mike. According to court filings from the plaintiff, Stewart contacted Smith in September 2016 about his wedding to Mike early next year. He wrote that they would love some design work done for our invites, placenames etc. We might also stretch to a website. Stewart included his phone number, email address, and the URL of his own websitehe was a designer too, the site showed.
This week, I decided to call Stewart and ask him about his inquiry.
The Supreme Court is expected to deliver its opinion in a case in which Stewart plays a minor role, a case that could be, as Justice Sonia Sotomayor stated by way of a question at oral argument in December, the first time in the Courts history
[that] a commercial business open to the public, serving the public, that it could refuse to serve a customer based on race, sex, religion, or sexual orientation. It took just a few minutes to reach him. I assumed at least some reporters over the years had contacted him about his website inquiry to 303 Creativehis contact information wasnt redacted in the filing. But my call, he said, was the very first time Ive heard of it.
Yes, that was his name, phone number, email address, and website on the inquiry form. But he never sent this form, he said, and at the time it was sent, he was married to a woman. If somebodys pulled my information, as some kind of supporting information or documentation, somebodys falsified that, Stewart explained. (Stewarts last name is not included in the filing, so we will be referring to him by his first name throughout this story.)
I wouldnt want anybody to
make me a wedding website? he continued, sounding a bit puzzled but good-natured about the whole thing. Im married, I have a childIm not really sure where that came from? But somebodys using false information in a Supreme Court filing document.
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