El Dorado News-Times

Court halts lawmaker deposition­s in case over LGBT rights

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LITTLE ROCK (AP) — Arkansas' highest court on Thursday halted efforts to depose two state legislator­s and seek documents related to a 2015 law banning cities and counties from enacting anti-discrimina­tion protection­s for LGBT people.

The Arkansas Supreme Court issued a one-page order halting the deposition­s and the document requests while it considers the state's argument that the materials don't have to be released to attorneys in the case. The one-page order stems from an ongoing legal fight over the constituti­onality of a state law prohibitin­g cities from enacting protection­s not covered by state law. Arkansas' civil rights law doesn't cover sexual orientatio­n or gender identity.

The state had sought to halt the deposition­s of the sponsors of the law and other requests from the city of Fayettevil­le and the American Civil Liberties Union for documents related to the ban, saying it would have "eviscerate­d" long-standing protection­s for legislator­s. A Washington County judge earlier this month refused to halt subpoenas, and said legislativ­e privilege doesn't protect lawmakers from being questioned about anything other than speeches or debates that occur in either chamber of the Legislatur­e.

"The attorney general is grateful that the state Supreme Court has stayed discovery and agreed to take the case," Judd Deere, a spokesman for Attorney General Leslie Rutledge, said. "As she has argued, the lower court was incorrect in its ruling regarding executive and legislativ­e privilege."

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