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Activist Groups Urge Obama to Reject Boy Scout Honor
From Fox News:
Activist groups, including Scouting for All, urge President Obama not to accept the honorary Presidency of the Boy Scouts of America until they stop discriminating.
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California Court Rules Same-Sex Couples Must Be Allowed To Marry
MECAMail - Marriage Equality California, a project of Equality California Institute
www.marriageequalityca.org and www.eqca.org
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"Marriage, Anything Less Is Less Than Equal"
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 14, 2005
Contact: Eddie Gutierrez, EQCA Communications Director (English and Spanish-language Interviews) Phone: (323) 217-8875
Email: eddie@eqca.org
Karen Boyd, NCLR Communications Director
Phone: (415) 577-4498 Email: boyd@nclrights.org
(NCLR Spanish-language interviews, call: Lena Ayoub, Staff Attorney (415) 392-6257 x326)
California Court Rules Same-Sex Couples Must Be Allowed To Marry
EQCA & NCLR Hail Decision as a Victory for Fairness and Equality
San Francisco, CA - A California state court ruled today that same-sex couples must be allowed to marry, a decision
that NCLR called a victory for fairness and equality. NCLR filed the lawsuit last year on behalf of
12 same-sex couples, Equality California and Our Family Coalition.
Here is the link to Download the Complete Ruling in PDF
The court ruled in the plaintiffs' favor on two central arguments: denying gay and lesbian couples the right to
marry is impermissible gender discrimination and violates the fundamental right to marry.
"I am so happy that my parents can finally get married," said Ericka Sokolower-Shain, the fifteen-year-old
daughter of plaintiffs Karen Shain and Jody Sokolower. "My parents have been together for over 30 years. They
have been together so long they can practically read each others' minds. It is only right they should be able to
get married."
"Couples who have made a commitment in life deserve the legal commitment to match," said Shannon Minter,
NCLR's Legal Director. "This historic ruling affirms the state constitution's promise of equality and fairness
for all people. The court recognized that when the government denies lesbians and gay men the right to marry, it
is treating them unequally."
"We are overjoyed by today's ruling," said Stuart Gaffney and John Lewis, two other plaintiffs in the
lawsuit. "Fifty years ago, the California courts paved the way for my mom and dad to get married when they
struck down the state law barring interracial couples from marriage," said Stuart. "Today, the court
ruled that the California Constitution protects my right to marry my partner John. We've been a loving and committed
couple for over 17 years. We've waited long enough to be able to marry."
"Today we are one giant step closer to true equality for all California families," said Geoffrey Kors,
Executive Director of Equality California. "The court recognized that the government has no business putting
obstacles in the path of people who are seeking to care for their loved ones. Today's ruling affirms that lesbian
and gay couples have the same need for the legal protections of marriage, and the same right to equal protection
and dignity under the law. This is a landmark ruling, and we call on Governor Arnold Schwartzanegger and California
legislators to enact AB 19, The Religious Freedom and Civil Marriage Protection Act."
Plaintiffs Corey Davis and Andre Lejeune were elated by news of the decision. "As African American gay men,
we joined this lawsuit to lift the mantle of discrimination and inequality perpetuated by the state of California
through its outmoded marriage laws," Corey stated. "Years from now, when marriage for gays and lesbians
is legal nationwide, our children will study this issue in school and wonder ”just as the white kids in my generation
did about those so violently opposed to the co-mingling of the races and ending legal segregation ”they' ll wonder
and secretly pray that their relatives weren't any of those people perpetuating discrimination against gays and
lesbians."
Shannon Minter, NCLR's Legal Director, is NCLR's lead attorney on the case. NCLR was joined by co-counsel Lambda
Legal, the ACLU, the Law Office of David C. Codell, and the law firms of Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe and
Steefel, Levitt & Weiss.
San Francisco City Attorney Dennis Herrera also filed an action challenging the constitutionality of excluding
same-sex couples from the right to marry. The two actions ”Woo v. Lockyer and CCSF v. Lockyer ”were consolidated
last year. California is the only state in which a municipality has joined with same-sex couples in seeking marriage
equality.
Judge Richard Kramer was appointed by former Republican Governor Pete Wilson in 1996 and took the bench in January
1997. During his eight-year tenure as a San Francisco Superior Court judge, Kramer has handled the civil and criminal
cases. Prior to becoming a jurist, Judge Kramer specialized in bank litigation for 25 years. He was born in Massachusetts
and raised in California.
Legal briefs and other information about NCLR's case are available at www.nclrights.org.
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