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Louisville to Pay $800,000 in Settlement With Christian Wedding Photographer Over Same‑Sex Ceremony Law

The city of Louisville, Kentucky, has agreed to pay $800,000 in attorneys’ fees to settle a federal lawsuit brought by Christian wedding photographer Chelsey Nelson, who challenged a local nondiscrimination ordinance she said would force her to photograph and blog about same‑sex weddings against her beliefs. The settlement, filed Tuesday in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Kentucky, follows a Sept. 30, 2025 ruling in which the court, relying on the Supreme Court’s 303 Creative LLC v. Elenis decision, barred the city from enforcing its ordinance against Nelson in the context of her custom wedding work and online statements about marriage. Alliance Defending Freedom, which represented Nelson, says the ordinance had threatened to compel her to create speech celebrating a view of marriage she rejects, while Louisville officials now face a substantial bill for pursuing an enforcement theory the court found unconstitutional. The case joins a growing line of First Amendment challenges where creative professionals argue that public‑accommodations laws cannot be used to force them to produce expressive content that conflicts with their religious or moral views, even as civil‑rights advocates warn such carve‑outs could erode protections for LGBTQ customers. Legal commentators online are already treating the payout as a warning to other cities that trying to stretch nondiscrimination rules into compelled speech could prove both legally and financially costly.

Courts and First Amendment LGBTQ Rights and Religious Liberty

📌 Key Facts

  • Louisville agreed to pay $800,000 in attorneys’ fees to resolve Chelsey Nelson’s federal lawsuit.
  • A September 30, 2025 ruling held that, under the Supreme Court’s 303 Creative decision, Louisville could not enforce its nondiscrimination ordinance to compel Nelson’s wedding photography and blogging for same‑sex ceremonies or bar her from stating her beliefs.
  • Alliance Defending Freedom represented Nelson and framed the settlement as vindication of her First Amendment right not to create speech she does not believe.

📊 Relevant Data

In 2020, 51.3% of same-sex couples in Kentucky were married.

2020 Census Snapshot: Kentucky — Williams Institute

In 2024, 11% of LGBTQ+ couples who had a wedding in Los Angeles County reported experiencing discrimination.

Marriage equality improved security, stability, and life satisfaction for same-gender couples — Williams Institute

As of 2025, support for legal same-sex marriage varies by religious group: 88% among Hindus, 87% among Buddhists, 82% among Jews, and 80% among religiously unaffiliated Americans, with lower support among some Christian denominations.

Religion & views on LGBTQ issues, abortion in the US — Pew Research Center

In 2024, 69% of Americans support marriage between same-sex couples being legal.

Same-Sex Relations, Marriage Still Supported by Most in U.S. — Gallup

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