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			 Florist Barronelle Stutzman was sued by both the state Attorney 
			General Bob Ferguson and the couple, Robert Ingersoll and Curt 
			Freed, in 2013. 
			 
			The pair were longtime customers of Stutzman's Richland business, 
			Arlene's Flowers, and asked her to provide decorations for their 
			wedding following the state's legalization of same-sex marriage. 
			 
			Stutzman maintained that her Christian beliefs prevented her from 
			selling flowers for the same-sex wedding, "because of (her) 
			relationship with Jesus Christ," according to court documents. 
			 
			"Confirming the enactment of same-sex marriage, there would 
			eventually be a direct and insoluble conflict between Stutzman's 
			religiously motivated conduct and the laws of the state of 
			Washington," Benton County Superior Court Judge Alexander Ekstrom 
			said in his 60-page opinion. 
			
			  "For over 135 years, the Supreme Court of the United States has held 
			that laws may prohibit religiously motivated action, as opposed to 
			belief," Ekstrom added, according to a copy of the document 
			published online by the Los Angeles Times. 
			 
			Alliance Defending Freedom attorney Kristen Waggoner, who is 
			representing Stutzman, said in a statement, "You put your home, your 
			family business, and your life savings at risk by daring to defy a 
			government mandate that forces you to promote views you believe are 
			wrong." 
			 
			Attorneys for the group will appeal the ruling, the statement said. 
			 
			Ingersoll and Freed, who filed the suit with the help of the 
			American Civil Liberties Union of Washington State, hailed the 
			ruling. 
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			"We were hurt and saddened when we were denied service by Arlene's 
			Flowers after doing business with them for so many years," Freed and 
			Ingersoll said in a statement. 
			 
			"We respect everyone's beliefs, but businesses that are open to the 
			public have an obligation to serve everyone," they added. 
			 
			Ekstrom deferred ruling on fines and damages sought by the couple to 
			a later date. 
			 
			(Reporting by Curtis Skinner in San Francisco; Editing by Richard 
			Pullin) 
			
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