Chattanooga Times Free Press

Judge: Gay couple’s child born in England is a U.S. citizen

- BY KATE BRUMBACK

ATLANTA — A federal judge in Atlanta has ruled that the daughter of a married gay couple in Georgia who was born via surrogate in England has been an American citizen since birth, and ordered the State Department to issue a U.S. passport for her.

U.S. District Judge Michael Brown wrote in an order issued Thursday that the girl is not required to be biological­ly related to both of her U.S. citizen parents to be eligible for citizenshi­p.

The State Department, which has appealed similar orders in other cases, is aware of the ruling and is reviewing it with the Department of Justice, according to an agency spokespers­on.

Derek Mize and Jonathan Gregg filed a lawsuit in July 2019 after the State Department refused to recognize their daughter Simone as a U.S. citizen. Simone was born in July 2018, three years after the couple married.

Both Mize and Gregg are U.S. citizens and are listed as her parents on the birth certificat­e, but the State Department treated her as if she was born outside of marriage, since only one of them has a biological connection to her, and that triggered additional conditions for the recognitio­n of citizenshi­p.

The State Department’s policy treats married same-sex couples as if their marriages do not exist, treating them differentl­y from married straight couples in violation of the law and the Constituti­on, the lawsuit said.

Mize was born and raised in Mississipp­i, while Gregg was born in

London to a U.S. citizen mother and British father and was raised in London with dual citizenshi­p.

The couple met in 2014 in New York, married in 2015 and moved to Georgia in 2017.

A close friend in England agreed to be their surrogate and both men were present for Simone’s birth. It was when the couple tried to get a Social Security number to claim her as a dependent when filing their taxes in 2019 that they ran into problems.

Since she’s the child of two men and not biological­ly related to both, the State Department treated her as if she was born “out of wedlock.” And because Gregg hadn’t lived in the U.S. for five years prior to Simone’s birth, the State Department determined Simone was not a U.S. citizen.

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