Indiana and Wisconsin Ask Supreme Court To Review Challenges to Gay Marriage Bans, Plaintiffs Agree

Indiana and Wisconsin Ask Supreme Court To Review Challenges to Gay Marriage Bans, Plaintiffs Agree

6a00d8341c730253ef01a73e0b48f0970d-250wiAttorneys General from Indiana and Wisconsin filed petitions with the Supreme Court Tuesday, asking the Court to hear each state’s defense of their respective gay marriage bans that were both struck down by the 7th Circuit Court of Appeals. Notably, the 3 panel judge on the 7th Circuit ruled unanimously in favor of equality and against the bans—the first time such a decision was unanimous. The decision was written by Judge Richard Posner, whose pithy quips garnered media attention after he gutted the anti-equality arguments put forth by Indiana and Wisconsin. Now, the Supreme Court will have a chance to review Posner’s ruling. Chris Geidner from BuzzFeed reports:

6a00d8341c730253ef01a3fcd57649970b-250wiThe petitions are the sixth and seventh petitions seeking a writ of certiorari, which is the technical way the Supreme Court announces that it is taking a case.

Indiana presents a somewhat different case in practical terms — although it has not, thus far, made a difference in the legal analysis — in that the state has no constitutional ban on such marriages. It only has a state law banning them.

Quickly after the states filed their petitions, and as expected, the plaintiffs responded to the two states’ petitions, similarly urging the Supreme Court to grant the writs of certiorari:

6a00d8341c730253ef01a511ee26c6970c-200wiLambda Legal and the ACLU, representing the couples in the Indiana case, responded to Indiana’s certiorari petition, stating that the same-sex couples they represent “agree that the Court should grant review in this case because the issue is of fundamental importance to [the couples] and the country as a whole.”

The ACLU, representing the couples in the Wisconsin case, responded to Wisconsin’s petition on Tuesday as well.

Among the arguments put forth by both Indiana and Wisconsin, the most absurd assertion may have been that put forth by Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoller who, as Joe.My.God points out, argues,

“The court does not, and cannot, justify the assertion that Indiana’s definition of marriage targets homosexuals. The statue itself makes no mention of sexual orientation, and as the case record in this case amply demonstrates, homosexuals often do marry members of the opposite sex in Indiana.”


Sean Mandell

www.towleroad.com/2014/09/indiana-and-wisconsin-ask-supreme-court-to-review-challenges-to-gay-marriage-bans-plaintiffs-agree-r.html

Immoral, Infamous, Scandalous and Notoriously Disgraceful

Immoral, Infamous, Scandalous and Notoriously Disgraceful
Charlie Baker to “show cause.”

The letter was shocking and gobsmack-humiliating. It laid out the most private and intimate details of his sex life. Worse, the government sent the letter to him at his parents’ house where he was staying. Thank God, his parents did not open this letter, thought the gay twenty-two year old, a clerk/typist at the National Bureau of Standards, now the National Institute of Standards and Technology in Gaithersburg, Maryland. He never showed the letter to his parents.

Charles “Charlie” W. Baker returned to Washington last month to confront this obscene government letter he received at his parents’ home more than forty years ago.

“Dear Mr. Baker”, the 1971 letter from the Civil Service Commission began, “Your appointment as a Clerk-Typist GS-2, National Bureau of Standards, was made subject to investigation… because of acts of caressing, kissing, mutual masturbation, anal intercourse, and rubbing your bodies together (with four named males on various occasions) to obtain sexual climax. ” In addition,” the letter continued, the investigation was conducted because of Baker’s “frequent visits to public establishments where persons with homosexual tendencies tended to congregate.” The letter to Charlie Baker concluded with the boilerplate language for sexual “perverts” that the federal government typically included at that time: “In view of the above described immoral, infamous, scandalous and notoriously disgraceful conduct, you are invited to show cause why you should not be disqualified from Federal Employment.”

2014-08-27-BakerLtr4.jpg
Source: Kameny Papers, Library of Congress

The Civil Service Commission, the predecessor to today’s Office of Personnel Management and the agency that sent Baker this outrageous letter in 1971, had obtained the information from Baker’s Navy discharge papers. Baker had self-reported that he was gay to the Navy and was required to undergo interviews with a lawyer and a psychiatrist as part of his discharge process. Naïve and scared, Baker told them everything. He was asked deeply personal questions such as “Off duty, what did you do in bed and with whom?”, and “What is your relationship like with your Father?” The Naval discharge report containing answers to such questions would follow him for years chastising him for his sexual conduct as a gay man, until the government-enforced persecution and shaming were forgotten — as if nothing had ever happened.

But something did happen. A young man was wrongfully terminated from his job with the federal government. And his termination was not based on poor performance; on the contrary, his evaluations demonstrated that Baker was an exemplary employee. Rather, Charlie Baker was fired from his job with the NBS simply because he was gay. Nothing more. And being gay in 1971 meant the federal government did not want you regardless of qualifications or talent.

Ordered by the government to prove he was not homosexual, Baker was clueless as to how to proceed. That is, until he heard on the underground network of gay federal employees: “go see a man by the name of Dr. Franklin E. Kameny.” Baker heeded this advice. True to form, Kameny convinced Baker to stand and fight through the courts “up to and including the Supreme Court.” As Baker’s personal counsel, Kameny thundered, “Does the National Bureau of Standards actually believe in this intellectual drivel?” Dr. Kameny wrote to the NBS’ physicist Director, Dr. Lewis Branscomb, “Do you actually believe the employment of a homosexual clerk/typist (or a homosexual physicist, for that matter) is going to inhibit the ability of the NBS in the performance of its mission?”

Notwithstanding the support of his co-workers and superiors at the NBS, Bakers’ Appeal to the Civil Service Commission was denied in 1973. In a letter to Baker, the NBS wrote: “Dear Mr. Baker, this is to advise you that you are to be removed from your position in accordance with the attached letter of instruction from the Civil Service Commission.”

Baker and Kameny fought the case of Baker’s unlawful termination for three years at the Commission level and then again in federal court thanks to the generous and fearless pro bono attorneys from Covington & Burling; and Hogan and Hartson (now Hogan Lovell). The legal team was led by Ralph J. Temple of the American Civil Liberties Union, a civil rights lawyer who had worked for Thurgood Marshall. On behalf of Baker, the attorneys’ goal was to enjoin the federal government from firing government employees solely because they were gay. Baker’s case had morphed into the federal District Court matter of Baker v. Hampton, the first class action lawsuit seeking relief for all homosexuals threatened by the Commission’s most intrusive and disgusting personnel investigations.

In 1973, U.S. District Court Judge June L. Green ordered the NBS to reinstate Baker with back pay, but she would not enjoin the Civil Service Commission from further investigations and firings of gays across the board. In fact, Judge Green said the discriminatory terminations could continue if the Commission could show “particular circumstances… which may justify dismissal on charges relating to homosexual conduct.” Judge Green ruled for Baker, the individual, but she miserably failed the test of history, by allowing federal discrimination to remain an institutionalized practice for years to come.

With the support of his family and his partner of thirty-five years, Charlie Baker returned last month to Washington. The obscene “show cause” letter is now in the Library of Congress as a piece of historical evidence of the animus and discrimination faced by LGBT Americans by the country’s largest employer, the federal government. Baker remains young enough in spirit to embark on a mission of his own: he intends to “show cause” why LGBT Americans can still be fired for being who they are in the workplace. And he intends to “show cause” why it is imperative that Congress finally pass the Employment Non-Discrimination Act (ENDA).

Charlie Baker has come full circle, this time represented by a new Mattachine Society of Washington and a team of pro bono legal counsel from the international law firm McDermott, Will & Emery. Mattachine and McDermott are conducting original archival research to rescue the deleted political pasts of men and women like Baker. Baker is picking up where the ACLU and his former pro bono lawyers left off decades ago. With life experience and maturity behind him, he now stands on the shoulders of civil rights leaders such as Dr. Kameny who taught him how to fight.

“Before returning to Washington”, Baker says, ” I shared the Civil Service Commission letter with my niece who is a lesbian and was a child when all of this happened. Even now, it is hard for any of us to comprehend. Something needs to be done to prevent this hatred and bigotry from ever happening again.” Baker’s niece, Linda Sampson, writes: “The battle Uncle Charlie won in his generation made life that much easier for my generation. I am tremendously proud of him.”

The National Institute of Standards and Technology could help move things along for the next generation with a note apologizing to Charlie Baker for what was done to him. And Congress should listen to what people like Charlie Baker and his niece have to contribute. It would make passage of ENDA a lot easier for all Americans to understand and support when they hear what has happened to good, responsible people for no reason other than their sexual orientation.

www.huffingtonpost.com/charles-francis/immoral-infamousscandalou_b_5722982.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Benedict Cumberbatch Wants A Gay President, Even Though “Gays Are Always The Biggest Homophobes”

Benedict Cumberbatch Wants A Gay President, Even Though “Gays Are Always The Biggest Homophobes”

tumblr_inline_mricrbNsOr1qz4rgpEnglish actor Benedict Cumberbatch knows a thing or two about running a country and “fulfilling Obama’s legacy,” apparently.

The 38-year-old is playing WWII codebreaker Alan Turing in The Imitation Game, a film premiering at the 2014 Toronto International Film Festival this week. Turing, in case you’re culturally inept, was the openly gay Englishman who helped defeat Germany during WWII by intercepting and cracking coded Nazi messages, only to be chemically castrated for being gay.

So in the grand tradition of Press Not Being Able To Separate Characters From Celebrities, The Daily Beast has asked the actor some hard-hitting questions about how to tackle homophobia in the U.S. and how we’re supposed to feel about ISIS in pop culture. You know, things he’s qualified to talk about.

Aside from proclaiming that “gays are always the biggest homophobes,” Cumberbatch uses the interview to lay out a foolproof 16-year plan for American politics:

TDB: There’s still a lot of homophobia in the U.S., as well.

Benedict Cumberbatch: Oh, the Christian far right? Yes. Very homophobic. You need to have a female president next, and then after that, a gay president. That’s the full journey from Obama’s legacy onwards. There’s a great Morrissey lyric from “America Is Not the World” from You Are the Quarry that goes, “In America, the land of the free, they said / And of opportunity, in a just and truthful way / But where the president is never black, female or gay, and until that day / You’ve got nothing to say to me, to help me believe.” It’s quite an old song from before Obama took office, but you’ve done black, then you need to do female, then the next, gay.

Listen up, Congress! This guy’s got all the answers here. We’ve “done black,” and now we have to “do” female and gay.

Intrigued? You can also hear about the painful homophobia this straight man endured as a child in the same interview.

Matthew Tharrett

feedproxy.google.com/~r/queerty2/~3/EkhlQyQVQk0/benedict-cumberbatch-wants-a-gay-president-even-though-gays-are-always-the-biggest-homophobes-20140909

Ninth Circuit Panel Eviscerates What's Left of Anti-Equality Arguments: A Summary and Analysis

Ninth Circuit Panel Eviscerates What's Left of Anti-Equality Arguments: A Summary and Analysis

BY ARI EZRA WALDMAN

BerzonA soft-spoken attorney representing Idaho started his state’s anti-marriage equality argument by suggesting that allowing gays to marry violates the “bonding right” of children that they will be raised by their biological mothers and fathers. It took Judge Marsha Berzon just 15 seconds to ask her first question: “What is that word you’re using before ‘right'”? Judge Berzon can hear just fine; it’s just that she had never heard anyone make such a ridiculous claim before today. The rest of the hearing followed similarly.

Judge Stephen Reinhardt, a Carter-appointee and liberal leader of the appellate courts, was joined by Judge Berzon, a sharp-minded progressive appointed by President Clinton, and Judge Robert Gould, another Clinton appointee, in a nearly two-hour long interrogation of attorneys from Idaho and Nevada that may not have been as bombastic as Judge Posner’s treatment of attorneys from Wisconsin and Indiana in the Seventh Circuit, a hearing which resulted in a marvelous unanimous victory (“Go figure!”), but was every bit as damaging to the forces opposed to marriage equality.

It also brought marriage equality full circle. Judge Reinhardt was the judge that wrote the first decision from a federal appellate court on marriage equality, affirming District Judge Vaughn Walker’s pioneering rejection of California’s Prop 8. We all know how that case turned out.

And we know what’s happened since: a Supreme Court decision in United States v. Windsor striking down the Defense of Marriage Act and a long streak of pro-marriage equality decisions from the lower federal courts, including several appellate courts.

Yesterday’s hearing reminded us how far we have really come. Some of the arguments and much of the tone were different this time around. The judges’ questioning was direct and they expressed a similar, though less visible, frustration with the misdirection and misleading statements from the anti-equality attorneys as Judge Posner. The tone of the hearing suggested that marriage equality supporters are finally out of the closet, following a tidal wave of an emerging consensus of the legitimacy and morality of marriage freedom for all.

A summary and analysis follows AFTER THE JUMP…

ReinhardtThis is not the first time marriage equality came before the Ninth Circuit. In fact, it was Judge Reinhardt (right) who, along with two other judges, heard the appeal of the Prop 8 decision and after a delay involving the Supreme Court of California, issued a narrow decision affirming Prop 8 unconstitutional. The decision was limited to California because it argued that the reason why Prop 8 was unconstitutional was not because banning gays from marrying in general violated the Equal Protection or Due Process Clauses, but rather because the taking away of rights, as Prop 8 did after the California Supreme Court mandated equal marriage in In re Marriage Cases, violated the rights of gay Californians. The decision’s narrowness was based on pretzel-like reasoning, but makes sense in context: as I argued before, Judge Reinhardt wanted to offer the Supreme Court a way to support marriage equality without going too far ahead of public opinion.

Today, there is no such concern. It makes sense that the argument–and the decision–would sound different.

Judge Berzon asked the most direct questions, sifting through the muck of Idaho’s nonsensical argument about children needing to be raised by their biological parents.

“But heterosexual men and women aren’t going to enter into same-sex marriages. So, what’s the issue?” she asked. Indeed. Idaho was trying to avoid the reality that what the state wants to do is not really create a situation where kids are raised by their biological moms and dads, but just ban gays from marrying. These are two very different and clearly unrelated things.

But the message of the man-woman marriage is that we need to create a stable bond that is in the best interests of the child, argued the Idaho attorney. Huh, Judge Berzon wondered. How is it, she asked, supportive of stable marriages and a benefit to children to have them raised outside of supportive same-sex marriages rather than inside supportive same-sex marriages?

After several agonizing stutters: The worst thing the state can do to undermine the message of stability is to create something new–namely, “genderless marriage.”

With that, Judge Berzon had it. She called out Idaho on its argument that man-woman marriages provide the added benefit of complementary parenting styles and skills, an argument that is not only sexist and based on traditional notions that women nurture and men discipline, but also a completely unconstitutional basis for discrimination.

She also called Idaho out on its back-handed and insulting suggestion that “we hope the studies that show equal outcomes” of children raised in same-sex and opposite-sex households are valid, even though “Idaho remains skeptical,” by noting that Idaho’s policy of banning gays from marrying quite literally makes children of same-sex couples worse off by denying them benefits and the protection of marriage.

The greatest, and most revealing, line came during Idaho’s rebuttal, in which Judge Berzon brought up the parallel of Loving v. Virginia, the 1967 case that outlawed bans on interracial marriage. As we all know, similar arguments were raised by Virginia: we just don’t know what will happen, we worry for the children of mixed-race couples, those households will be unstable, the verdict is out on whether they are good parents, and the state has debated and made the decision, though the democratic process, to ban the prospect. Idaho’s attorney denied that those debates ever happened, suggesting that the state never advanced a legitimate justification for banning interracial marriage. Judge Berzon reminded him how wrong he was. The level of willful blindness, ignorance, and pure distaste for gays that this attorney must have had to have the balls to misstate history like that is just beyond belief.

This was the first difference: Judges are willing to call out the anti-equality side on their bald lies and misleading statements.

BorelliTara Borelli, of Lambda Legal, took the podium on behalf of Nevada’s same-sex couples (Deborah Ferguson, a private attorney, represented the Idaho plaintiffs and did a fine job) and delivered the arguments with which we have become quite familiar. The difference between Ms. Borelli’s arguments before the Ninth Circuit and the last arguments before the circuit on a gay marriage case from Ted Olson and David Boies was that Ms. Borelli had Windsor at her disposal. She referenced the Supreme Court decision many times, ultimately noting that the decision wipes away every state rationale for the ban.

Ms. Borelli also had a classic line, typical of our post-Windsor world. When Judge Reinhardt asked her to respond to Idaho’s argument that a pro-equality decision would send a message to children that men (or women) aren’t necessary for a stable household, Ms. Borelli stated flatly: “That’s not even a legitimate interest in any state.” Boom.

Judge Gould highlighted the third difference between this argument and the last Ninth Circuit argument. If you recall, the Ninth Circuit SmithKline case, which I wrote about here, mandates heightened scrutiny for antigay discrimination. Olson and Boies didn’t have that at their disposal. Heightened scrutiny makes these state protestations that it is legitimate to prefer heterosexual unions all pointless. No one can make a heightened scrutiny case: that is why Nevada Governor Brian Sandoval was forced to drop his defense of the gay marriage ban. 

In the end, this was a rough day for those opposed to marriage equality. Three progressive judges, though more muted in their questioning than Judge Posner was at the Seventh Circuit, were no less skeptical of the homophobic, ahistorical, misleading, misdirected arguments against allowing gays to marry. The hearing was a testament to how far we have come since the last time marriage equality was before Judge Reinhardt. The 2 to 1 decision in the Prop 8 case was an exercise in caution, an attempt to give the Supreme Court a way to support marriage equality without jumping ahead of too much of country. But at that time, we didn’t have Windsor, we didn’t have several other appellate courts declare bans unconstitutional, and we didn’t have an emerging consensus written down in appellate and district court opinions. At that time, we had only a handful of marriage equality states; today, we have 19 states and the District of Columbia with equal marriage, covering more than 44 percent of the population. Today’s hearing will result in an opinion with none of the hedges and narrowings of Perry. It will likely be unanimous and another sign that this debate is nearing its end.

Watch the full hearing HERE.

***

Follow me on Twitter and on Facebook. Check out my website at www.ariewaldman.com.

Ari Ezra Waldman is a professor of law and the Director of the Institute for Information Law and Policy at New York Law School and is concurrently pursuing his PhD at Columbia University in New York City. He is a 2002 graduate of Harvard College and a 2005 graduate of Harvard Law School. Ari writes weekly posts on law and various LGBT issues.


Ari Ezra Waldman

www.towleroad.com/2014/09/ninth-circuit-panel-eviscerates-whats-left-of-anti-equality-arguments-a-summary-and-analysis.html

The Carnage Continues: Catholic Schools Are Still Firing Gay Teachers

The Carnage Continues: Catholic Schools Are Still Firing Gay Teachers
It is September. The days grow a little shorter. There is that hint of fall crispness in the air. And, of course, it is back-to-school season.

And if it is back-to-school time, then it must also be time for that very sad, very sorry, and utterly needless ritual that we all wish would stop happening. I am talking about the Catholic schools that continue to fire gay teachers. These annual firings are tragic, pointless, and inflict great harm. The discharged teachers, of course, are the most seriously injured, but so are all the people associated with the schools — students, graduates, parents, and staff. The Catholic school system is diminished in the eyes of the public. And the church as a whole is made to suffer.

Motherhood and mortgages — these are the classic symbols of quiet suburban domesticity. Yet they were also the triggering events that led to the firing of lesbian teachers in Detroit and St. Louis, respectively. Barbara Webb is 33 years old and a trained chemist. She could have pursued “lucrative private-sector opportunities” but felt the calling to teach and to awaken young minds to the joys of science. In a world that is shaped increasingly by science and technology, she seems like the sort of teacher every school district would want.

And, in fact, she was quite successful at her chosen career. In her nine years at Marian High School in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan, she “taught advanced placement and honors chemistry,” “coach[ed] volleyball and softball, and moderat[ed] student government.” She has been in a same-sex marriage for two years and became pregnant this summer by “nontraditional” means. She has asserted that her pregnancy was the reason for her discharge: “That you can’t hide a pregnancy from the public is why I was terminated.”

Students and graduates have expressed support. As one student put it, “I think the bigger thing everyone is feeling is that we have been taught this whole time to live a Christian life and be accepting of other people and yet we go and fire one of our favorite teachers?”

News accounts suggest that support for Barbara Webb is growing. A change.org petition has been launched in support of her cause. I’ve signed it. I hope others do too.

Some 500 miles to the southwest, in St. Louis, a similar set of tragic events are playing themselves out. Over the summer, it seems, a young married couple did what newlyweds routinely do all over the nation: They applied for a home mortgage. Olivia Reichert and Christina Gambaro, however, are in a same-sex union, and they are employed by Cor Jesu High School.

When the school learned of the mortgage application, the two teachers were terminated. Anger at Cor Jesu’s decision has been steadily growing since. Students and alumnae have organized Facebook pages and engaged in other acts of protest. Graduates from as long ago as the 1970s have spoken out against the administration’s decision. And alumnae have threatened what is always the most effective form of protest: They have promised to withhold contributions.

That these events are occurring in Detroit and St. Louis should perhaps not be surprising. Both archdioceses are led by veteran culture warriors who have long expressed hostility to same-sex marriage. In April 2013 Archbishop Allen Vigneron advised Detroit Catholics who supported same-sex marriage that they should not receive Holy Communion — a position effectively answered by Francis de Bernardo of New Ways Ministry.

Archbishop Robert Carlson, who now heads the St. Louis archdiocese, has a culture-war pedigree that stretches back many years. While serving as Bishop of Sioux Falls, South Dakota, in the early 2000s, he reportedly told Sen. Tom Daschle to stop identifying himself as Catholic — something Daschle refused to do. As the archbishop of St. Louis, Carlson has spoken out against same-sex marriage as recently as this summer. Infamously, Carlson also testified under oath this past June that as the chancellor of the Twin Cities archdiocese in the early 1980s, he failed to report allegations of sex abuse to the police and wasn’t even sure the acts were criminal.

Both archdioceses are experiencing demographic crises. Vigneron and Carlson both assumed their present offices in 2009. Vigneron has seen infant baptisms plunge by around 30 percent during his tenure as archbishop. The numbers under Carlson are not as catastrophic, but they are bad enough: Infant baptisms are down a little more than 12 percent in a territory that is growing in population. Do you think that these two men might come to realize that a faith of inclusion, not exclusion, might help reverse these trends? I hope so.

What I wish both Marian High School and Cor Jesu might also recognize is that our knowledge of same-sex attraction has shifted dramatically over the last couple of decades. Indeed, it is now fair to say that a scientific consensus has emerged that holds that same-sex attraction is a naturally occurring and totally benign variation in human sexuality. In light of this new consensus, the prudent course for school administrators is to withhold harsh judgment of these teachers’ obviously rich and fruitful relationships. Certainly, they should not have been terminated from their positions.

Significantly, Catholic leaders in other nations are now adopting this cautious, do-no-harm approach. I have in mind particularly Bishop Nunzio Galantino, the newly appointed secretary-general of the Italian Bishops’ Conference, who has called for the acceptance of gays “without taboo.” The American Catholic laity seem to agree with Galantino: Over half of American Catholics now support same-sex marriage. Modesty, prudence, the realization that science now counsels acceptance and support of gay relationships, not their suppression, should suggest that these firings must stop. Now. At once.

www.huffingtonpost.com/charles-j-reid-jr/the-carnage-continues-cat_b_5781450.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices