Posted on 04/10/2015 12:33:57 PM PDT by wagglebee
April 9, 2015 (LifeSiteNews.com) Joshua Feuerstein was just trying to make a point. Now, he may face legal action, as a bakery that refused to provide him with a cake opposing same-sex marriage threatens to sue him for taking their conversation public. The bakery owner is also threatening to press charges related to the recording of the phone call.
In the wake of heated national debate over whether business owners should have the right to refuse to participate in same-sex weddings that violate their religious beliefs, Feuerstein, an internet evangelist, decided to see if pro-gay business owners would give him the same deference as a Christian that homosexual activists are demanding Christian business owners give to same-sex couples, even if they disagreed with his worldview.
He made a tape of himself calling Florida-based bakery Cut the Cake and asking them to make a cake decorated with the words, We do not support gay marriage. As Feuerstein expected, the bakery which calls itself LGBT-friendly and advertises same-sex wedding services in gay publications refused and hung up the phone.
"We wanted to see if a pro-LGBT bakery would bake a cake for something that it was opposed to what they believed in, Feuerstein told Floridas WESH 2 News, and you know what, I actually believe that Cut the Cake has every right as an American to refuse to print that on a cake.
Feuerstein posted video of the phone call to YouTube with commentary explaining his position. Cut the Cake[s owner] refuses to make an anti-gay marriage cake, so it obviously violates her principles, and so she doesnt feel like she should be forced to make the cake, Feuerstein said in the video. And yet theres all of this hoopla going around because Christian bakeries think that they shouldnt be forced.
Look, this is not about discrimination, Feuerstein said. This is about them having the freedom.
But Cut the Cakes owner, Sharon Haller, didnt appreciate being made an example of by Feuerstein. She claims that as soon as Feuersteins video was posted, she began receiving dozens of phone calls from his fans and followers placing fake orders and telling her and the rest of her bakery staff to kill ourselves.
"I'm just afraid because of the type of calls that we were getting that someone is going to attack me in my home," Haller told News 13.
Feuerstein took down his video as soon as he became aware that Haller was receiving harassing phone calls. "I never asked people to call, be hateful or boycott them," Feuerstein told WKMG 6.
But Haller quickly reposted the video to YouTube, along with a description classifying Feuersteins phone call as an attack. She asked people to put a stop to people like Joshua Feuerstein by donating to her GoFundMe page, which has raised more than $14,000.
Haller is also threatening to press charges, saying Feuersteins recording of the phone call without her consent violates Florida law. She has reached out to the FBI and is considering pursuing a criminal case.
The fiasco echoes similar cases making news around the nation, as cake shops have become the front line battleground in the culture war over the definition of marriage.
In December, blogger Theodore Shoebat recorded himself calling 13 pro-gay bakeries to ask if they would make a cake with the words Gay marriage is wrong. Shoebat says all 13 bakeries refused to cooperate. Some simply hung up the phone as soon as he made his request. Others called him names and used obscenities when confronted by Shoebat over the perceived double-standard. Shoebat contrasted his own experience with that of a baker in Ireland who suffered tremendous loss to his business after resisting attempts by gay activists and the Irish state to force him to create a cake featuring the words Support Gay Marriage.
Christian bakeries that refuse to make pro-homosexual marriage cakes are getting sued left, right, and center, Shoebat wrote in a blog post explaining the motivation behind his videos, which he called a social experiment. They get fined, they get death threats, and they lose their businesses. This experiment proves beyond doubt that the gay agenda is not just about their freedom to practice a sexual orientation, but the suppression of free speech, he said.
Last year, Bill Jack filed a discrimination complaint against Denvers Azucar Bakery, claiming the owner violated his religious rights by refusing to decorate Bible-shaped cakes with the words God hates sin. Psalm 45:7" and "Homosexuality is a detestable sin. Leviticus 18:22. He also wanted one cake to feature an image of two men holding hands in front of a cross with a red X overlaid on the image.
The Colorado Civil Rights Commission rejected Jacks claim early this week, ruling that the bakery owner rejected his message because it violated an established policy of refusing to decorate cakes with "derogatory language and imagery, not because of his faith.
The heightened controversy over wedding cakes comes as several states are debating Religious Freedom Restoration Acts (RFRAs) to protect religious business owners right to refuse to provide goods and services that violate their deeply held beliefs. Homosexual activists have decried such laws, claiming they will be used as an excuse for people to discriminate against gays.
There might be one that has been categorically ignored for years except for use as part of a broader criminal investigation.
Shows like 60 Minutes and 20-20 routinely have segments where they secretly record phone calls with businesses, so do nearly all local news shows.
Moreover, the fact that the bakery owner REPOSTED the video is pretty much de facto consent to the recording.
How dare Mr. Feuerstein try to engage in the typical double standard of the left? Doesn’t he know that is only available for queers and other liberals?
Truly we conservatives are held to one higher standard while the mentally deranged leftists are free to engage in cheating, lying, deceit and hypocracy.
Didn’t she commit the same crime when she posted his video???????
There’s nothing I saw in the article to confirm that he did, in fact, violate the law. In many states, one party’s knowledge of the recording makes it legal. Perhaps Florida law does too. This “journalist” didn’t bother to provide that information.
Here is the Colorado law for consent to record conversations:
Colorado
Recording or intercepting a telephone conversation, or any electronic communication, without the consent of at least one party to the conversation is a felony punishable by a fine of between $1,000 and $100,000 and one year to 18 months in jail. Colo. Rev. Stat. § 18-9-303. Recording a communication from a cordless telephone, however, is a misdemeanor. Colo. Rev. Stat. § 18-1.3-401. Using or disclosing information obtained through illegal wiretapping is a felony, if there is reason to know the information was obtained illegally. Colo. Rev. Stat § 18-9-304.
However, nothing in these statutes shall be interpreted to prevent a news agency, or an employee thereof, from using the accepted tools and equipment of that news medium in the course of reporting or investigating a public and newsworthy event. Colo. Rev. Stat. § 18-9-305.
Additionally, a person may use wiretapping or eavesdropping devices on his own premises for security or business purposes, if reasonable notice of the use of such devices is given to the public. Colo. Rev. Stat. § 18-9-305.
The baker clearly has no legal claim.
I smell a false flag.
You mean the fags and leftest have been reading the koran?
What a novel idea.
According to that great sage Hiram King Williams (Sr.), if you mind your own business you’ll stay busy all the time.
I just noticed that there’s also no indication of his location when he made the call. Interstate calls may be subject to federal rather than either state’s laws.
Way too late. Unfortunately.
Except this bakery is in Florida.
She(bakery owner) can try to sue...but since she then took the recording and reposted publically after it was taken down(thereby increasing the chances of harassment by her own actions)...she is tacitly “agreeing” to the recording by airing it publically. She should have consulted a lawyer first before reposting the recording!
It’s true he set himself up...but when he took the recording down and the bakery owner put the recording back up...the bakery owner is signaling tacit approval of the recording by airing it publically. This case is over before it starts!
That may not be the case. In this instance http://www.schiffhardin.com/File%20Library/Publications%20%28File%20Based%29/HTML/lit_080106index.html California state law was held to be applicable, and not federal or Georgia’s laws.
If the call originated in Colorado, then the caller is pretty safe, although there are some cases that have allowed the person who was called to claim the protection of their state’s statute. The decisions go both ways, just like this baker, so it depends on Florida law and what judge hears it.
In Colorado, yes.
I find it amusing that people still think the law matters. All that matters is being on the side of the elites. Nothing else matters. Nothing.
No, those laws are not categorically denied. Shows like 60 Minutes and 20-20 routinely have secret recordings, yes, but they are careful to do so only in states that permit such recordings (”one-party consent” states). Florida is a “two-party consent” state, meaning that both parties to a conversation must consent to the recording of the conversation. News agencies are well versed in what they can and cannot do in various states; activists like this guy ought to get themselves caught up as well.
Hell hath no fury like a bitchy little faggot scorned.
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