Judge strikes down gay marriage ban, stays ruling

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DENVER (AP) — A federal judge in Denver declared
Colorado’s gay marriage ban unconstitutional on Wednesday, but he issued
a temporary stay of the ruling to give the state until next month to
seek an appeal.
Judge Raymond P. Moore’s ruling was in response to
a lawsuit filed July 1 by six gay couples who asked the court for an
injunction ordering that the state’s ban no longer be enforced.
Colorado
Republican Attorney General John Suthers and Democratic Gov. John
Hickenlooper had requested a stay so the issue could eventually be
decided by the U.S. Supreme Court — though both agreed the state ban
should be declared unconstitutional.
The couples filed the lawsuit
after the 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Denver ruled against
Utah’s gay marriage ban but put the ruling on hold pending an appeal.
Moore
said in his ruling that Colorado’s attorneys "have not met their
burden" for a stay because they did not oppose the injunction. He’s
giving them until Aug. 25 to seek a stay from the 10th Circuit Court of
Appeals in Denver or the U.S. Supreme Court.
Shortly after the ruling, Suthers filed a notice of appeal to the 10th Circuit.
The
matter of the injunction was never in question, only whether there
would be a stay. Moore indicated as much during a hearing Tuesday.
Moore
said the U.S. Supreme Court has signaled that it may take up the
constitutionality of gay-marriage bans, citing a decision last week
granting a stay in the Utah case. The Supreme Court said state officials
don’t have to recognize the marriages there until their appeal is
heard.
"There is a fuse that has been lit that is burning across
federal courts, and all of the district courts that have looked at the
issue seem to be pointing in a single direction," Moore said during the
hearing. "But not withstanding that, it seems as if with wet fingers the
Supreme Court has put its finger on that fuse and perhaps said, ‘Wait.’
"
The fight to legalize gay marriage began in earnest after the
U.S. Supreme Court struck down part of the Clinton-era federal Defense
of Marriage Act last year. The majority ruled that it was
unconstitutional for the law to deny federal benefits to same-sex
married couples.
Same-sex marriage now is legal in 19 U.S. states,
including several socially conservative ones. Recent polls show a
majority of Americans support gay marriage.
Colorado voters banned gay marriage in 2006, though civil unions became legal in 2013.
The
couples’ federal lawsuit alleged the state’s same-sex marriage ban
violates due-process and equal-protection rights guaranteed by the U.S.
Constitution.
Although some of the couples in the lawsuit have
civil unions in Colorado, the lawsuit called them unequal and an
inadequate substitute to marriage.
Gay-rights activists argued against a stay in the case and called for the marriage ban to be lifted
immediately.
Suthers’
office said the question of gay marriage should be resolved by the U.S.
Supreme Court. Hickenlooper also said the legal process should play
itself out, but he has reiterated his support for same-sex marriage.

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