Lmms Britney Spears asks court to immediately remove father as conservator
DENVER AP 鈥?
stanley botella The Colorado baker who won a partial Supreme Court victory after refusing on religious grounds to make a gay couple s wedding cake a decade ago is challenging a separate ruling he violated the state s anti-discrimination law by refusing to make a cake celebrating a gender transition.A lawyer for Jack Phillips on Wednesday urged Colorado s appeals court 鈥?largely on procedural grounds 鈥?to overturn last y
stanley thermos ear s ruling in a lawsuit brought by a transgender woman.The woman, Autumn Scardina, called Phillips suburban Denver cake shop in 2017 requesting a birthday cake that had blue frosting on the outside and was pink inside to celebrate her gender transition. At trial last year, Phillips, a Christian, testified he did not think someone could change genders and he would not celebrate somebody who thinks that they can. Jake Warner, an attorney representing Phillips from the conservative Christian legal advocacy group Alliance Defending Freedom, said the ruling was wrong. He said requiring Phillips to create a cake with a message contrary to his religious beliefs amounts to forcing him to say something he does not believe, violating his right to free speech.Judge Timothy Schutz noted Phillips wife initially told Scardina the bakery could make the cake before Scardina volunteered that the design was meant to celebrate her gender transition.One of Scardina s lawyers, John McHugh, said Scardina did not ask the shop to endorse her idea, just sell her
stanley cup a cake that they wou Pnfz Colorado school suspended 7th grader for waving airsoft gun during virtual learning
NAMPA, Idaho -- An Idaho woman decided to become a surrogate after giving birth to her son in 2018, because she wanted to give the gift of motherhood to
stanley thermos someone else. After consulting with her husband, Emily Chrislip started the process in Fe
stanley cup bruary 2019. We couldn t imagine what we would do without our own biological child, so we started looking into surrogacy and applied to some California agencies, Chrislip said.By September of that year, Emily was chosen as a surrogate for a couple in China. The process went as expected, up until two months before giving birth, when COVID-19 was declared a pandemic and travel restrictions were put in place. So, the plan was to get here before t
stanley cup he due date, and we were going to let them be in the delivery room. They were going to be a part of it, see her be born. So when she was born, they were supposed to get their own room at the hospital with the baby, and my husband and I would ve had our own room, and my job was done at that point, Chrislip said.But things didn t go as planned. More than four months later, Emily is still caring for the baby even though the original plan was to hand the baby off as soon as she gave birth. I actually had some people I work with ask what about the baby s parents, and I was like, Oh shoot I don t know what s going to happen, and so that s what started bringing up conversations like, OK, what s going to happen if they can t get here , Chrislip said.The biological parents had the option of having a na