The Star Malaysia

Unlawful exchange

US Supreme Court rejects bizarre wife swap case. >25

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The US Supreme Court has let stand a Louisiana sheriff ’s firing of two of his deputies for swapping wives and families, refusing to review lower court rulings in a case that raised eyebrows.

Brandon Coker and Michael Golden, who worked in the southern state’s Bossier parish, found love in the arms of the other’s wife.

After consultati­on with their fam- ilies, the men proceeded to simply swap homes – and wives: Golden moved in with Coker’s wife, and Coker made his life with Golden’s wife. Neither couple divorced.

In late October 2014, their employer, Chief Deputy Sheriff Charles Owens, was shocked to discover the divorce-less swap.

Owens told Coker and Golden that their actions violated the Sheriff ’s Code of Conduct barring “illegal, immoral or indecent conduct” and placed both of them on administra­tive leave.

If they refused to return to their own homes until their divorces were final, they would be “considered to have terminated employment voluntaril­y”, according to court documents.

Coker and Golden paid heed to their hearts and ignored their boss.

They soon filed a lawsuit for unlawful terminatio­n.

The men claimed that the Sheriff ’s Code of Conduct violated the First Amendment of the US Constituti­on, which guarantees freedom of expression and “the right of the people peaceably to assemble”.

However, both a district and an appeals court backed their employer.

“Sexual decisions between consenting adults take on a different colour when the adults are law enforcemen­t officers,” the New Orleans-based Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals said in its ruling in May.

The law “does not create ‘rights’ based on relationsh­ips that mock marriage,” the ruling read.

By declining to examine the case on Monday, the US Supreme Court effectivel­y upholds that ruling. — AFP

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