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Same-sex couples marry in Alabama after U.S. Supreme Court refuses stay

by Reuters
Monday, 9 February 2015 18:22 GMT

A participant wears a rainbow tie during the annual Pride March on Christopher Street in the Manhattan borough of New York June 29, 2014. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri

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Alabama becomes the 37th state to allow same-sex couples to marry

(Adds some counties not granting marriage licenses)

By Sherrel Wheeler Stewart

BIRMINGHAM, Ala., Feb 9 (Reuters) - Same-sex couples began marrying in Alabama on Monday despite an attempt by the conservative chief justice of the state's Supreme Court to block judges from issuing marriages licenses to gay men and women in open defiance of a January federal court ruling.

Action by the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday helped clear the way for Alabama to become the 37th state to allow same-sex couples to marry. But gay rights advocates said numerous counties took steps to avoid granting marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

The high court refused a request by Alabama's Republican attorney general to keep such marriages on hold until the justices decide whether laws banning them are constitutional.

In Birmingham, dozens of same-sex couples married at the courthouse and an adjacent park, where they were greeted by supporters supplying cupcakes along with a handful of protesters bearing crosses and Bibles.

Wiping away tears, Eli Borges Wright, 28, said he was overjoyed to be marrying the man with whom he has been in a relationship for the past seven years. "After all of these years, I can finally say this is my husband," he said.

Alabama Supreme Court Chief Justice Roy Moore issued an order late on Sunday directing probate judges in his state not to provide marriage licenses to gay couples. Moore asserted that those judges were not bound by a federal ruling that last month struck down Alabama's ban on same-sex marriages.

Moore's order prompted some Alabama officials to delay issuing gay marriage licenses to same-sex couples, according to the Human Rights Campaign gay rights group.

Couples in at least 22 counties were denied or otherwise unable to get marriage licenses on Monday, with some counties refraining from issuing marriage licenses to any couples, gay or straight, the group said.

In Mobile, attorneys for same-sex couples filed a federal contempt motion against Probate Judge Don Davis over the county's marriage license division being closed.

This was not Moore's first foray into controversy. In 2003, he was removed from office after defying a federal order to take down a Ten Commandments monument he had erected in the state's judicial building. He was returned to his post by voters in 2012.

U.S. District Court Judge Callie Granade, an appointee of Republican President George W. Bush, ruled in January that Alabama's prohibition on same-sex marriage was unconstitutional but put her decision on hold until Monday.

Two of the U.S. Supreme Court's conservative justices, Clarence Thomas and Antonin Scalia, dissented from the court's decision not to further delay gay marriage in Alabama.

In a dissenting opinion, Thomas wrote that the high court's actions in allowing marriages to go ahead "may well be seen as a signal of the court's intended resolution of that question."

In April, the Supreme Court is set to hear oral arguments in cases concerning marriage restrictions in Michigan, Kentucky, Ohio and Tennessee. A ruling, due by the end of June, will determine whether state prohibitions on gay marriage violate the U.S. Constitution's guarantee of equal protection under the law and whether the remaining 13 state bans can remain intact. (Additional reporting by Lawrence Hurley in Washington; Writing by Colleen Jenkins; Editing by Jonathan Kaminsky and Will Dunham)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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