This blog post was co-authored by Nancy Marcus, Law and Policy Project Senior Staff Attorney, and Jennifer C. Pizer, Senior Counsel and Law and Policy Project National Director.
Lambda Legal has filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the Oregon Court of Appeals in a case of an Oregon bakery that refused to bake a wedding cake for a lesbian couple.
Laurel and Rachel Bowman-Cryer had been together ten years and were foster parents to two girls when they decided to get married. In January 2013, Rachel went with her mom to a wedding cake tasting at “Sweetcakes by Melissa” in the Portland suburb of Gresham, co-owned by Melissa and Aaron Klein. When he heard the wedding was for a lesbian couple, Aaron said, “We don’t do same-sex weddings.” He then called the couple’s relationship an “abomination.”
The Kleins have claimed their religious beliefs prevent them from providing the same services to same-sex couples that they offer to different-sex couples. However, Oregon has a law that makes discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation by commercial businesses illegal.
Laurel filed an Oregon Justice Department complaint that night, based on the discrimination they had faced in violation of the Oregon Public Accommodations Law. Aaron Klein then posted the complaint on his Facebook page and went on a right-wing talk show to justify their rejection of Rachel and Laurel. The couple started receiving death threats, which continue to this day. News crews stalked their apartment.
“Can’t wait to see you die and go to hell,” one message said.
“I am buying up my ammo right now you filthy, ugly, disgusting, fat, stupid, cruel, anti-Christian piece of liberal scum,” a Facebook message read. “I am getting ready for the war so I hope you have a good hiding place, you sick, disgusting, miserable, piece of degenerate lesbian scum.”
For the Bowman-Cryers, this began three and a half years of hell. Though their home address and other contact information had been made public, they tried to escape public view. They did not respond to media requests, changed jobs, and largely stopped socializing outside their home.