Tuesday, January 21, 2014

ACLU sues state of Utah for not recognizing gay married couples


The ACLU has filed suit with the state of Utah for not recognizing legally performed same-sex marriages that took place between the time a federal judge found the state's ban unconstitutional and when the US Supreme Court issued a stay on any further marriages while the case was under appeal.

The Governor of Utah announced at that time that the more than 1,300 marriages performed would be "put on hold" until the appeals worked their way through the legal system.

From The ACLU:

“These couples were legally married under Utah law and their unions must be treated the same as any other Utah marriage,” said John Mejia, legal director of the ACLU of Utah. “Even our attorney general said that the marriages were entitled to full recognition by the state at the time they were performed.  Regardless of what ultimately happens in the federal challenge to Utah’s marriage ban, the marriages that already occurred are valid and must be recognized now.”

 The lawsuit argues that once same-sex couples are legally married in Utah, they gain protections that cannot retroactively be taken away under the due process clauses of the Utah and United States Constitution.

 Some couples not only wanted to get married to demonstrate their commitment to each other, but also to ensure protection for their children. As a married couple, each parent can establish a legal connection to their children even if they’re not the biological parent or previously recognized adoptive parent. Otherwise, Utah law allows single parents to adopt, but forbids an unmarried partner from being recognized as a parent to the other’s biological or already-adopted children, which could have devastating legal implications.

Read more at the ACLU of Utah website.

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