Sheryl Gordon McCloud

[3] In February 2017, Justice McCloud authored the unanimous court's opinion in the Arlene's Flowers lawsuit, finding that the First Amendment to the United States Constitution gave the florist no right to refuse to provide services for a gay wedding, writing "this case is no more about the access to flowers than civil rights cases were about access to sandwiches.

"[4] In September 2017, McCloud dissented when, by a vote of 5–3, the court upheld the child pornography trafficking conviction of a seventeen-year-old boy for sexting a picture of himself to an adult woman.

[5][6] In October 2018, McCloud joined the majority when the court abolished the state's death penalty because they found its racist imposition violated the Constitution of Washington.

[7][8] In February 2021, McCloud authored the 5-4 majority opinion in State v. Blake, which ruled that the statute criminalizing simple possession of controlled substances was unconstitutional.

[9] The statute did not require prosecutors to prove someone knowingly possessed drugs, and McCloud argued that criminalizing passive, unknowing conduct is unconstitutional.