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Showing 137 results for "detailspages biography details emily conley"
- … In another case in Albemarle County, ADF is representing Emily Mais , a former assistant principal at Agnor-Hurt Elementary School. Emily believes that every person is made in the image of God … staff members were encouraged to “speak their truth.” Yet Emily saw how white staff members who wanted to participate …
- ADF’s clients have faced laws that threatened their constitutional rights. Those rights are worth defending.
- ADF attorneys represent creators of custom artwork in challenge to Phoenix ordinance
- State high court receives briefs in support of Phoenix artists challenging law that threatens jail time for abiding by their beliefs
- Poll of 3,000+ employees highlights need for companies to protect employee civil rights as outlined in Viewpoint Diversity Score Business Index
- Two Phoenix artists will appeal a court ruling released Wednesday that allows a sweeping Phoenix ordinance to stand even though it uses the threat of jail time and fines to silence their desired speech and forces them to create custom artwork expressing messages that violate their core beliefs.
- ADF attorneys represent Lexington printer Hands On Originals
- ADF attorneys represent political consultants who sued to protect their First Amendment freedoms
Legislators, publisher, religious groups voice support for artistic freedom at Arizona Supreme Court
Arizona state legislators, a publisher, and a variety of religious groups filed friend-of-the-court briefs with the Arizona Supreme Court on Friday in support of preserving artistic and religious freedom.- Lexington, Ky., printer Blaine Adamson of Hands On Originals declined to print expressive shirts promoting the Lexington Pride Festival, hosted by the Gay and Lesbian Services Organization, because he did not want to convey the messages printed on the shirts. He nevertheless offered to connect the organization to another printer that would produce the shirts for the same price that he would have charged. Unsatisfied, GLSO filed a complaint with the Lexington-Fayette Urban County Human Rights Commission and alleged illegal discrimination despite eventually obtaining the shirts for free from another printer.