The Reporter (Vacaville)

Court: Son born abroad to gay couple is a US citizen

- By Brian Melley

LOS ANGELES >> A federal appeals court has ruled against the U. S. State Department in its quest to deny the citizenshi­p of one of two twins born abroad to a gay married couple.

The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Friday that a Los Angeles trial judge correctly concluded that 4-yearold Ethan Dvash-Banks was an American citizen despite being conceived with sperm of an Israeli father and born in Canada using a surrogate mother.

The boy’s other father is a U.S. citizen, and the law does not require a child to show a biological relationsh­ip if their parents were married at the time of their birth, a U.S. District Court judge ruled last year. The boy was granted a passport after the ruling, but the State Department appealed.

A three-judge panel ruled unanimousl­y that it was bound by precedent from previous decisions and issued a short memorandum without hearing arguments.

Andrew Dvash-Banks, the father who is a U.S. citizen, said he was thrilled by the ruling that affirms his son’s citizenshi­p and removes uncertaint­y that has hung over the family for nearly four years.

While the twins are still too young to understand what their parents have gone through, the fathers

set up email accounts to create a sort of digital journal the boys can read some day. Dvash-Banks said he planned to email them tonight with a copy of the ruling and thoughts on the latest developmen­t.

“We want both to know how much we love then and how much we fight for them,” he said. “The fact that they’re twins and not being treated equally, we want them to know that we did everything to make that right and we were successful.”

Before the boys were out of diapers, Ethan was a plaintiff in the unusual case that arose after the American consulate in Toronto denied his citizenshi­p after requiring DNA tests that showed he was the biological son of Elad Dvash

Banks, an Israeli citizen.

Ethan’s twin brother, Aiden, was given citizenshi­p because he was the biological son of Andrew Dvash-Banks.

The couple met when Andrew was studying in Israel. At the time, they couldn’t marry legally in the U. S. or Israel, so they moved to Canada and wed in 2010. The boys were born by a surrogate in September 2016 using sperm from each of the fathers and donor eggs.

The lawsuit filed on behalf of the toddler by Immigratio­n Equality, an LGBTQ immigrant rights group, sought the same rights for Ethan as his brother.

 ?? JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Ethan Dvash-Banks, left, and his twin brother, Aiden, play in the living room of their apartment in Los Angeles.
JAE C. HONG — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Ethan Dvash-Banks, left, and his twin brother, Aiden, play in the living room of their apartment in Los Angeles.

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