Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ALABAMA BAN overturned.

AG to seek stay on U.S. judge’s ruling

- KIM CHANDLER

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Alabama became the latest state to see its ban on gay marriage fall to a federal court ruling Friday.

U.S. District Judge Callie Granade ruled in favor of two Mobile women who sued to challenge Alabama’s refusal to recognize their marriage performed in California. Alabama was among just 14 U.S. states where gay couples were still barred from legally marrying.

Judges have struck down such bans recently in several other Southern states, including the Carolinas, Florida and Virginia. The bans have been upheld in Kentucky and Tennessee in two cases that will be heard by the U.S. Supreme Court in April.

In the Alabama case, plaintiffs Cari Searcy and Kimberly McKeand said that they had been a couple for more than a decade and had a child together with the help of a sperm donor. A court refused to recognize Searcy as the child’s adoptive parent, however, because state law did not recognize the couple as spouses.

“They are ecstatic. They are over-the-top happy about the ruling,” said Christine Cassie Hernandez, a lawyer representi­ng the couple.

Granade said both an Alabama statute and 2006 amendment to the Alabama Constituti­on banning gay marriage were in violation of the equal-protection clause of the U.S. Constituti­on.

A spokesman for Alabama Attorney General Luther Strange issued a statement expressing disappoint­ment in the decision and saying the state would seek to put a hold on the decision.

“We expect to ask for a stay of the court’s judgment pending the outcome of the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling which will ultimately decide this case,” spokesman Mike Lewis said.

Granade, who was nominated to the bench by President George W. Bush, enjoined Strange from enforcing the laws and did not put a stay on the decision as has happened in some other states.

Hernandez said that meant same-sex couples could begin applying for marriage licenses Monday. She said McKeand and Searcy plan to refile adoption papers asking that they both be recognized as parents of their 8-year-old son.

The U.S. Supreme Court will hear cases asking it to overturn gay-marriage bans that lower courts have upheld in Kentucky, Tennessee, Michigan and Ohio. The appeals from gay plaintiffs are also asking the high court to declare that same-sex couples have a constituti­onal right to marry everywhere in the U.S.

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