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		 Federal 
		judge allows gay marriages to begin across Florida 
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		[January 02, 2015] 
		By Bill Cotterell
 TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (Reuters) - A federal 
		judge in north Florida ruled on Thursday that county clerks statewide 
		must issue marriage licenses to all same-sex couples who request them 
		starting Jan. 6, the effective date of his decision to overturn 
		Florida's ban on gay matrimony as unconstitutional.
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			 The latest opinion by U.S. District Judge Robert Hinkle of 
			Tallahassee addressed questions raised among court clerks about the 
			reach of his previous ruling to legalize same-sex marriage, and 
			whether it applied beyond Washington County and the two men named as 
			plaintiffs in the case. 
 In a sharply worded four-page order, Hinkle said it was not the 
			injunction he issued more than four months ago against Florida's gay 
			marriage ban that compels statewide compliance, but the U.S. 
			Constitution.
 
 Ruling on the merits of the case on Aug. 21, Hinkle struck down a 
			2008 voter-approved amendment to the state constitution defining 
			marriage exclusively as the legal union of one man and one woman. 
			But he temporarily stayed his own ruling to give the state an 
			opportunity to appeal.
 
			
			 
			"The defendants did that. They lost," Hinkle wrote. The stay is due 
			be lifted Jan. 5, after which Florida will become the 36th state 
			where gay and lesbian couples are free to marry.
 
 The U.S. Supreme Court earlier this month declined to extend the 
			stay.
 
 Yet legal counsel to the clerks statewide interpreted the high 
			court's order as applying only to Washington County. Clerks who 
			married gay couples elsewhere in Florida were warned they risked 
			fines and even jail for violating the state ban.
 
 On Thursday the judge made clear his Aug. 21 ruling covered all 
			applicants statewide, warning that county clerks could be held 
			liable for civil damages, attorneys fees and court costs for 
			refusing to abide by his decision.
 
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			The law firm representing the clerks responded with a statement 
			advising them to "follow the judge's ruling for all marriage-license 
			applications or face the consequences."
 State Attorney General Pam Pondi said she welcomed the judge's 
			"additional guidance" and said her office "will not stand in the way 
			as clerks of court determine how to proceed."
 
 Gay rights proponents hailed the latest decision.
 
 "We look forward to Jan. 6, when couples who have waited for this 
			day can finally be married," said Equality Florida, a Tampa-based 
			gay advocacy group.
 
 (Editing by Steve Gorman and Sandra Maler)
 
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