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Religious,
Civil Rights, and Child Advocacy Groups Support Same-sex Couples
in Legal Battle to Marry
California
NAACP, Mexican American Legal Defense and Educational Fund, Asian
Pacific American Legal Center, California Council of Churches,
and California District of the American Academy of Pediatrics
Are Among Groups Submitting Friend-of-the-Court Briefs in Landmark
California Supreme Court Case
SAN
FRANCISCO (September 26, 2007) In 30 amicus briefs submitted
today to the California Supreme Court, scores of religious, civil
rights, and child advocacy organizations, along with numerous
California municipal governments, bar associations, and leading
legal scholars, urged the court to put an end to state laws that
deny same-sex couples the protections of marriage.
We
are not treating all Californians equally if some can marry and
others cannot, said Alice Huffman, President of the California
Conference of the National Association for the Advancement of
Colored People. The law should protect all people equally,
and all Californians should have the choice to marry, she
said. I am honored to join other civil rights leaders in
calling on our state to end its ban on marriage for lesbian and
gay couples.
The
California NAACP joins more than 90 other civil rights organizations
in filing amicus briefs. The organizations brief asks the
Supreme Court to apply the Courts 1948 decision striking
down laws banning interracial marriage to this current case. Longtime
civil rights advocate Jon B. Eisenberg authored the NAACPs
brief. The NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund also filed an
amicus brief supporting same-sex couples, as did the Howard University
School of Law Civil Rights Clinic, in a brief comparing the arguments
used in the past to defend laws barring interracial marriage with
current arguments used to oppose marriage by same-sex couples.
In
another brief, the Mexican American Legal Defense and Education
Fund, the National Black Justice Coalition, and numerous other
civil rights organizations argued that California courts should
subject laws that discriminate on the basis of sexual orientation
to the strictest level of constitutional review. The Southern
Poverty Law Center and the Equal Justice Society also submitted
briefs urging the Court to strike down discriminatory marriage
laws.
More
than 60 Asian Pacific Islander groups, including the National
Asian Pacific American Bar Association, joined an additional brief
describing the long history of discrimination against API communities
with regard to marriage in California.
Briefs
supporting the freedom to marry for same-sex couples were also
filed by the cities of Los Angeles, San Diego, San Jose, Long
Beach, Oakland, as well as 14 other cities and counties.
The
City of San Francisco, represented by San Francisco City Attorney
Dennis Herrera, is a party in the case. I am proud to stand
with an unprecedented array of community, religious and legal
organizations to urge the court to strike down marriage laws that
unconstitutionally discriminate against gay and lesbian partners,
said Herrera. The marriage exclusion has denied too much,
to too many California families, for far too long. This broad
consensus proves that the time has come for this discrimination
to end.
Numerous
bar associations also submitted briefs urging the Court to rule
in favor of lesbian and gay couples, including the states
largest bar association, the Los Angeles County Bar Association,
and the Bar Association of San Francisco, the Santa Clara County
Bar Association, the Beverly Hills Bar Association, the California
Women Lawyers, and others.
The
American Psychological Association, the California Psychological
Association, the American Psychiatric Association, the National
Association of Social Workers (NASW), and the NASW California
Chapter submitted a brief on the three decades of social science
research that has consistently found that same-sex couples are
just as capable of being good parents as different-sex couples
and that their children are just as well adjusted.
A brief
by leading California family law professors explained why barring
same-sex couples from marriage harms families and violates the
California constitutions equal protection guarantee.
The
American Academy of Matrimonial Lawyers and the California District
of the American Academy of Pediatrics submitted a brief explaining
how the children of same-sex couples are harmed when their parents
are denied the ability to marry.
More
than 400 local, regional, and national religious organizations
and clergy also filed an interfaith brief arguing that the constitutional
principles of religious freedom and separation of church and state
require that same-sex couples must have equal access to civil
marriage. Groups joining the brief include the Unitarian Universalist
Association of Congregations, the General Synod of the United
Church of Christ, the Union for Reform Judaism, Soka Gakkai International-USA,
the Universal Fellowship of Metropolitan Community Churches, the
California Council of Churches, and California Faith for Equality.
The
Rev. Neil Thomas, Chair of California Faith for Equality, said
the brief bears witness to our highest religious values,
honoring love, equality and commitment in human relations. This
is an important day. We are telling the California Supreme Court
that many religious leaders and congregations in California and
across the country support equality of all persons before the
law.
Legal
Momentum, Equal Rights Advocates, and the California Womens
Law Center submitted a brief arguing that laws barring same-sex
couples from marriage are based on gender stereotypes and unfairly
discriminate based on sex.
Gay
& Lesbian Advocates and Defenders, the legal group that won
the Massachusetts marriage case, filed a brief on behalf of the
Equality Federation, a national coalition of state LGBT advocacy
groups, arguing that a victory for equality and fairness for same-sex
couples in California will improve the climate for LGBT people
nationwide. Other LGBT groups that filed amicus groups include
Children of Lesbians and Gays Everywhere (COLAGE), Parents, Family,
and Friends of Lesbians and Gays (PFLAG), Family Pride, the Human
Rights Campaign, Marriage Equality USA, Pride at Work, National
Lesbian and Gay Law Association, SacLEGAL, Bay Area Lawyers for
Individual Freedom, Lesbian & Gay Lawyers Association of Los
Angeles, and Tom Homann Law Association.
Other
briefs supporting the couples were filed by former California
Supreme Court Justice Joseph Grodin, UC Berkelely Law Professor
Jesse Choper, Stanford Law Professors Kathleen Sullivan and Pam
Karlan, Yale Law Professor Bill Eskridge, and University of Toronto
Professor Noah Novgorodsky. The Charles R. Williams Institute
on Sexual Orientation Law and Public Policy at the UCLA School
of Law also filed a brief describing the diversity of same-sex
couples in California, which is home to more lesbian and gay couples
than any other state.
The
California Supreme Court is hearing the States appeal of
the March 2005 decision by San Francisco Superior Court Judge
Richard Kramer, which held that Californias current statutory
ban on marriage of same-sex couples violates the California Constitution.
The California Court of Appeal reversed Judge Kramers decision
on October 5, 2006.
The
plaintiffs in the case are 15 same-sex couples, Equality California,
and Our Family Coalition, who are represented by lead counsel
National Center for Lesbian Rights, along with co-counsel Lambda
Legal, the ACLU, Heller Ehrman White & McAuliffe LLP, and
the Law Office of David C. Codell. The City of San Francisco is
also a plaintiff in the case, represented by City Attorney Dennis
Herrera and Deputy City Attorney Therese Stewart. The briefing
process concludes with responses to amicus briefs, which are due
in October. The Court will set oral arguments at the conclusion
of the briefing.
For
a complete list of organizations filing amicus briefs supporting
the right of same-sex couples to marry, visit www.nclrights.org
, http://www.aclu.org/,
http://www.lambdalegal.org/;
and at http://www.eqca.org/.
The
National Center for Lesbian Rights is a national legal organization
committed to advancing the legal and human rights of lesbian,
gay, bisexual, and transgender people and their families through
litigation, public policy advocacy, and public education.
Lambda
Legal is a national organization committed to achieving full recognition
of the civil rights of lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, transgender
people and those with HIV through impact litigation, education
and public policy work.
The
American Civil Liberties Union is America's foremost advocate
of individual rights. Its Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Project
fights discrimination and moves public opinion on LGBT rights
through the courts, legislatures and public education.
Equality
California is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, grassroots-based, statewide
advocacy organization whose mission is to achieve equality and
civil rights for all lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT)
Californians.
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