News
Catholic Bookstore files lawsuit challenging Jacksonville Law requiring it to speak against religious beliefs

A Catholic bookstore in Jacksonville, Florida, filed a federal lawsuit on Wednesday challenging a city law that requires it to speak against its beliefs and to silence its religious views to remain in business.
The Queen of Angels Catholic Bookstore sells books, crucifixes, and other Catholic resources.
Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), who is representing the bookstore, explained in a statement that “in everything it does, Queen of Angels and its owner Christie DeTrude strive to honor God and promote their Catholic beliefs, including through the store’s website and YouTube channel. The bookstore serves all customers and gladly sells its products to anybody but DeTrude and her bookstore staff cannot speak messages that violate their faith.”
The city passed a Human Rights Ordinance in 2017 that added sexual orientation and gender identity to the civil rights law.
“Thus, they affirm that men and women are different and cannot use pronouns or titles that don’t align with a customer’s sex,” the statement continued. “DeTrude also wants to explain this policy and her Catholic beliefs about gender and sexuality in her store and on the store’s website. However, doing so is illegal under Jacksonville’s Human Rights Ordinance, which forbids communications that could lead someone to feel ‘unwelcome’ based on various protected traits. The law threatens Queen of Angels with unlimited fines and damages if it doesn’t comply.”
The lawsuit was filed on Ash Wednesday in protest.
“Free speech is for everyone. Americans should be free to say what they believe without fear of government punishment,” said ADF Legal Counsel Rachel Csutoros. “Christie, owner of Queen of Angels Catholic Bookstore, gladly serves everyone, but she can’t speak messages that go against her religious beliefs. Yet Jacksonville is illegally mandating Queen of Angels abandon its religious beliefs—the very faith that motivates the store to open its doors to customers every day.”
The 52-page lawsuit states that “in effect, the law requires this Catholic bookstore to stop being fully Catholic.”
“Christie established Queen of Angels bookstore to serve the Jacksonville community and to share her Catholic beliefs, but city officials threaten her with unlimited fines if she does so,” said ADF Senior Counsel Hal Frampton. “This case is the latest example of government officials across the country using radical ideology to cancel those who disagree. Punishing someone because of their views not only runs afoul of the First Amendment, but it also has devastating consequences for free speech, working professionals, women, and children.”
-
People2 hours ago
Mother was left horrified after picking up her baby from childcare, ‘but wait until you hear what the doctors asked her’!
-
People2 hours ago
Babysitter heard noise upstairs, so ‘dad checked the hidden camera and saw a nightmare in his kitchen’!
-
People3 hours ago
Nurse wanted to be ‘sneaky’ when mom snaps photo letting everyone knew she saw what she did to her daughter!
-
People17 hours ago
19-year-old female driver dies in a car accident: 24 hours later, her mother finds the phone in the wreckage and realizes the heartbreak
-
People19 hours ago
Doctors saw something coming out of the baby’s neck; ‘when they find out what it was, it left them speechless’!
-
People6 hours ago
A nurse fell asleep in the barber’s chair – so the staff noticed her shoes and secretly took this picture
-
People9 hours ago
Boy was born with 180-degree bent neck; ‘but after getting life-changing surgery, something devastating happened’!
-
People21 hours ago
School Bus Driver Doesn’t Think Photo Of Her Holding Boy’s Hand Is A Big Deal Until Police See It