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Gemini Cricket 09-29-2006 10:10 AM

Decision Day at GLAD
 
Quote:

A Massachusetts Superior Court judge ruled on Friday that a lesbian couple from Rhode Island could marry in Massachusetts because Rhode Island does not have a law specifically banning it.
The same-sex couple would be the first from outside of Massachusetts to marry in the only U.S. state where gay marriage is legal, a step long-sought by gay rights advocates and opposed by Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney and conservative Christian groups.
Source

Amazing.

My office took this case to court. It's one happy day at GLAD.
:)

When court decisions are announced, it's a really big event in our office. Good or bad, it gets grand attention from us all.

Today is a good day.

Strangler Lewis 09-29-2006 10:23 AM

Congratulations!

JWBear 09-29-2006 12:47 PM

Yay!!!! Cool!!!!!

innerSpaceman 09-29-2006 02:10 PM

Huzzah.

sleepyjeff 09-29-2006 02:23 PM

Awesome for you GD:)

innerSpaceman 09-29-2006 02:40 PM

oh, yeah, and I suppose it's an ok day for those Rhode Island dykes, too.

Alex 09-29-2006 02:56 PM

Is this intended to create a legal challenge in Rhode Island under reciprocity? If so, I can see this have a negative backlash of hurrying other states into explicitly rejecting it rather than coming to terms with it on their own.

I have a feeling that it may eventually happen tha thte people of Wyoming are convinced to let their gays marry. I'm guessing they'll be much more resistant to a Massachussetts judge telling them that they have to let their gays marry. And once things get ensconced as state constitutional amendments it will be much harder to get them back out than the current situations in most states.

Strangler Lewis 09-29-2006 03:17 PM

Full faith and credit would be an issue even if married gay Massachusetts residents (or domiciliaries) went to Wyoming and sought some state right granted to married people. That said, I've read the article, and I don't understand who was on the other side. Is there a law in Massachusetts that said you have to be a resident to get married in Massachusetts? If so, why didn't it apply? I don't understand the language about the fact that Rhode Island did not have a prohibition. It's generally assumed that if Roe/Casey falls and some states outlaw abortion, you would be able to go to any other state that permits it (absent some constitutionally questionable federal restriction). So, details please.

Ghoulish Delight 09-29-2006 03:20 PM

If you click the "Next Article" link, then got to page 2 of that article, you'll find...

"Friday's case was focused on a law passed in 1913 that bars out-of-state couples from marrying in Massachusetts if their own states fail to recognize the union."

Strangler Lewis 09-29-2006 05:39 PM

Sounds like a bad old law targeted at accommodating anti-miscegenation laws.


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