Court
weighs overturning gay marriage bans in three southern states
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[January 10, 2015]
By Jonathan Kaminsky
NEW ORLEANS (Reuters) - A U.S. federal
appeals court on Friday appeared receptive to arguments in favor of
striking down same-sex marriage bans in the conservative southern states
of Texas, Louisiana and Mississippi.
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Two of three judges on a 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel
in New Orleans expressed skepticism over the bans, with Judge
Patrick Higginbotham noting a "sea change" on opinion over gay
rights in recent decades and questioning why states wanting to
incentivize procreation would allow sterile opposite-sex couples but
not same-sex couples to marry.
After it was noted that Mississippi was unlikely to change its
position on gay marriage in the near future, Higginbotham, an
appointee of President Ronald Reagan, appeared to reference that
state's history of racism.
"The words 'will Mississippi change its mind?' have resonated in
these halls before," he said.
Judge James Graves, an appointee of President Barack Obama, also
expressed discomfort with the bans in pointed questions to attorneys
defending them, while Judge Jerry Smith, a Reagan appointee, cited
precedent guiding the court to uphold the bans despite the
likelihood of some people being harmed by them.
Four regional federal appeals courts have struck down gay marriage
bans following a Supreme Court decision in June 2013 expanding
federal recognition of same-sex marriages, while the
Cincinnati-based 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in November
upheld bans in four states.
That ruling created a split among appeals courts and increased the
likelihood the U.S. Supreme Court will take up the matter during the
current term ending in June.
The Supreme Court met privately on Friday and took no action on five
pending cases that could lead to an overarching ruling on whether
states may ban gay marriage. The high court could still decide to
hear the cases in the current term.
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Proponents of the bans argue that states have the right to decide
who can marry and that it is in the states' interests to promote
marriage between a man and a woman.
U.S. district judges in Texas and Mississippi last year ruled those
states' bans on gay marriage unconstitutional because they denied
the couples equal protection under the law. Enforcement of those
decisions are on hold pending the appeals.
In September, a U.S. district judge upheld Louisiana's gay marriage
ban.
(Reporting by Jonathan Kaminsky; Additional reporting by Colleen
Jenkins; Editing by Bill Trott and Eric Beech)
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