East Bay Times

Same-sex couples updating legal status after abortion ruling

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BIRMINGHAM, ALA. >> Emails and phone calls from same-sex couples, worried about the legal status of their marriages and keeping their children, flooded attorney Sydney Duncan's office within hours of the Supreme Court's decision eliminatin­g the constituti­onal right to abortion.

The ruling last week didn't directly affect the 2015 decision that paved the way for same-sex marriage. But, Duncan said, it was still a warning shot for families headed by same-sex parents who fear their rights could evaporate like those of people seeking to end a pregnancy.

“That has a lot of people scared and, I think, rightfully so,” said Duncan, who specialize­s in representi­ng members of the LGBTQ community at the Magic City Legal Center in Birmingham.

Overturnin­g a nearly 50-year-old precedent, the Supreme Court ruled in a Mississipp­i case that abortion wasn't protected by the Constituti­on, a decision likely to lead to bans in about half the states. Justice Samuel Alito said the ruling involved only the medical procedure, writing: “Nothing in this opinion should be understood to cast doubt on precedents that do not concern abortion.”

But conservati­ve Justice Clarence Thomas called on his colleagues to reconsider cases that allowed same-sex marriage, gay sex and contracept­ion.

The court's three most liberal members warn in their dissent that the ruling could be used to challenge other personal freedoms: “Either the mass of the majority's opinion is hypocrisy, or additional constituti­onal rights are under threat. It is one or the other.”

That prospect alarms some LGBTQ couples, who worry about a return to a time when they lacked equal rights to married heterosexu­al couples under the law.

Many, fearful that their marital status is in danger, are moving now to square away potential medical, parental and estate issues.

Dawn Betts-Green and wife Anna Green didn't waste time shoring up their legal paperwork after the decision. They've already visited a legal clinic for families with same-sex parents to start the process of making a will.

“That way, if they blast us back to the Dark Ages again, we have legal protection­s for our relationsh­ip,” said Betts-Green, who works with an Alabama-based nonprofit that documents the history of LGBTQ people in the South.

As a White woman married to a Black transgende­r man, Robbin Reed of Minneapoli­s feels particular­ly vulnerable. A decision underminin­g same-sex marriage or interracia­l unions would completely upend Reed's life, which includes the couple's 3-month-old child.

“I have no expectatio­n that anything about my marriage is safe,” said Reed, a legal aide.

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