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“DOMA is a recipe for a violation of equal protection guaranteed by the U. S. Constitution: It targets a particularly disliked group, impacts important personal interests, and represents a one-time departure from the usual process of allocating federal rights and benefits.”

Organizacja Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) oraz Lambda Legal złożyły dziś pismo przyjaciela sądu w sprawie Stany Zjednoczone przeciwko Windsor urging the U.S. Supreme Court to affirm the decision by the U.S.Second Circuit Court of Appeals declaring Section 3 of the federal so-called Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) unconstitutional.

“DOMA is a recipe for a violation of equal protection guaranteed by the U. S. Constitution: It targets a particularly disliked group, impacts important personal interests, and represents a one-time departure from the usual process of allocating federal rights and benefits,” said Susan Sommer, Lambda Legal Senior Counsel and Director of Constitutional Litigation.  “DOMA is a perfect storm with multiple elements all of which call for careful judicial review. Its passage was accompanied by unambiguous and overt statements of moral disapproval of gay people, indicating its very purpose was discriminatory. It is precisely the sort of statute that should fail rational basis scrutiny.  Indeed, it’s harder to imagine a clearer example.”  The brief argues that, although laws such as DOMA that discriminate based on sexual orientation should be subjected to heightened scrutiny – a more rigorous standard of constitutional review – DOMA does not even pass the less strict, rational basis standard. Drawing on the Supreme Court’s ruling in Romer v.Evans, Lambda Legal’s historic 1996 case, the brief argues that DOMA fails this less strict standard because it heaps upon married same-sex couples disadvantages that defy credible connection to any legitimate purpose.  DOMA amended more than 1,000 federal laws and regulations ranging from tax policy, federal employee benefits, rights under private pension plans and conflict-of-interest rules.

Mary L. Bonauto, GLAD’s Civil Rights Project Director, commented, “DOMA is akin to so many of the anti-gay laws still plaguing gay people in many States. In addition to showing why DOMA fails, the point of this brief is to demonstrate that under the most basic equal protection framework, anti-gay laws are indefensible.”

Windsor is one of multiple recent cases where federal courts have found Section 3 of DOMA unconstitutional.  Those cases include Lambda Legal’s Golinski v. U.S. Office of Personnel Managementin the Ninth Circuit and GLAD’s Gill et. al. v. Office of Personnel Management in the First Circuit and Pedersen przeciwko Biuru Zarządzania Personelem in the Second Circuit.  Stany Zjednoczone przeciwko Windsor is also out of the Second Circuit and was brought by the ACLU and the law firm of Paul Weiss Rifkind Wharton & Garrison LLP.

In addition to the Lambda Legal/GLAD brief, over forty other friend-of-the-court briefs are being filed urging the Supreme Court to affirm the Second Circuit Court of Appeals ruling in Windsor, including one joined by 278 businesses and municipalities. In addition to Sommer and Bonauto, other lawyers on the brief include: Paul M. Smith, Luke C. Platzer and Melissa A. Cox of Jenner & Block LLP who teamed up with GLAD on its DOMA litigation; Jon W. Davidson, Tara L. Borelli, and Shelbi D. Day, of Lambda Legal; and Gary Buseck, Vickie L. Henry, and Janson Wu of GLAD.

Read the brief filed today here.

Information about Gill v. OPM is available Tutaj.

Information about Pedersen v. OPM is available Tutaj.

Information about Golinski v. OPM, Lambda Legal’s DOMA challenge, is available at www.lambdalegal.org

Aktualności

More than 45 briefs from religious leaders, members of Congress, retired military generals, children’s advocacy groups, civil rights groups and others will be filed today in support of Edith “Edie” Windsor’s challenge before the U.S. Supreme Court to the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA).

After the death of her legal spouse, Thea Spyer, Windsor was forced to pay more than $360,000 in estate taxes — money she would not have had to pay had she been married to a man instead of a woman. Windsor sued the federal government for failing to recognize her marriage. She is represented by attorneys from Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison LLP; the American Civil Liberties Union; the New York Civil Liberties Union and the Stanford Law School Supreme Court Litigation Clinic.

One of the briefs to be filed is from 40 current U.S. senators and 172 representatives. A second brief to be filed from former U.S. senators who initially voted for DOMA – Bill Bradley, Tom Daschle, Christopher Dodd and Alan Simpson – acknowledges that much has changed since 1996.

The brief explains: “As Senators, and then as citizens, we have watched over the past seventeen years as the assumptions that led to the passage of DOMA have proven unfounded and as the nation’s understanding of what equality requires has evolved. That experience has convinced us that DOMA is unconstitutional—a statute badly out of step not only with emerging realities, but with America’s enduring commitment to equal protection of the law.”

“You either believe in equality or you don’t. There are military families who are being treated differently and that’s wrong,” said Patrick J. Murphy, Iraq war veteran and former U.S. representative (PA-8). “No soldier should be discriminated against when it comes to housing, healthcare or survivorship benefits. We can’t allow DOMA to divide married troops any longer. It’s hurting the backbone of our military – the military family.”

In September, a federal appeals court ruled in Windsor’s favor that section three of DOMA unconstitutionally discriminates against married same-sex couples. More than 270 businesses and municipal leaders filed a brief in support of Windsor’s case earlier this week.

In addition to the congressional briefs, some of the groups filing in support of Windsor include:
• Religious organizations and leaders, such as: the Jewish Theological Seminary of America; Bishops of the Episcopal Church; and Manhattan Conference of the Metropolitan New York Synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.
• Former high-ranking officers of the Army, Navy and Marine Corps.
• NAACP Legal Defense & Educational Fund
• Donna Shalala and other former cabinet secretaries, commissioners and other senior administrative agency officials.
• Children’s rights organizations, mental health associations (including the American Psychological Association) and the American Sociological Association.
• Historians, political scientists, demographers, constitutional scholars, and other content experts.

“The fact that such a wide-range of individuals and organizations are supporting Edie based on their experience and expertise shows that there is no defensible argument for DOMA,” said Mary Bonauto, civil rights project director at Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders who coordinated the amicus effort. “It is critical that so many groups stand with Edie in bringing an end to this discriminatory law that hurts so many legally married same-sex couples.”

In December, the Supreme Court agreed to hear Windsor’s case, as well as a challenge to California’s ban on marriage for same-sex couples. Arguments in Windsor’s case will be heard on March 27.

A full list of parties filing briefs can be found Tutaj.

For more information on this case, please visit www.aclu.org/edie.

Aktualności

Departament Sprawiedliwości prezydenta Obamy – w przełomowym wniosku złożonym 28 lutego – przyłączył się do wysiłków sądowych na rzecz wolności zawierania małżeństw, składając do Sądu Najwyższego Stanów Zjednoczonych pismo „przyjaciela sądu”, w którym argumentuje, że kalifornijska propozycja 8 jest niezgodnym z konstytucją naruszeniem klauzuli równej ochrony zawartej w Konstytucji Stanów Zjednoczonych.

„Jesteśmy głęboko wdzięczni, że Stany Zjednoczone zajęły stanowisko przeciwko Propozycji 8” – powiedział Lee Swislow, dyrektor wykonawczy organizacji Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders (GLAD). „Poparcie prezydenta dla wolności par jednopłciowych do wyrażania miłości i oddania poprzez małżeństwo nie mogło być bardziej znaczące”.

W piśmie poruszono kwestię konstytucyjności Propozycji 8, a nie przepisów innych stanów, które zabraniają parom jednopłciowym zawierania małżeństw. Pytanie skierowane do Sądu Najwyższego brzmi: „Czy Klauzula Równej Ochrony Czternastej Poprawki zabrania stanowi Kalifornia definiowania małżeństwa jako związku mężczyzny i kobiety”, a odpowiedź administracji brzmi „TAK”.

Według Mary L. Bonauto, prawniczki GLAD, „chociaż w piśmie poruszono kwestię nieważności Propozycji 8, to wyraźnie widać, że czyni to w sposób, który może wpłynąć na debatę prawną poza Kalifornią”. Na przykład:

Departament Sprawiedliwości argumentuje, że przepisy rozróżniające ze względu na orientację seksualną zasługują na ścisłą kontrolę sądową ze względu na „większe ryzyko, że klasyfikacja [orientacji seksualnej] wynika z niedopuszczalnych uprzedzeń lub stereotypów”. Chociaż Departament po raz pierwszy zajął takie stanowisko w sprawach kwestionujących federalną ustawę „Obrona małżeństwa”, jest to pierwszy raz, gdy dotyczy ona prawa do zawarcia małżeństwa. Większość ludzi zgadza się, że przepisy stanowe odmawiające rządowym licencjom małżeńskim parom tej samej płci nie przetrwałyby tak wzmożonej kontroli.

W piśmie zwrócono uwagę na fakt, że Propozycja 8 odebrała prawo do małżeństwa gejom i lesbijkom w Kalifornii, ale pozostawiła system zarejestrowanych związków partnerskich, zapewniający te same prawa i obowiązki, ale w ramach odrębnego systemu prawnego wyłącznie dla par tej samej płci. Pismo dobitnie argumentuje, dlaczego nie ma uzasadnienia dla uznania, że pary tej samej płci zasługują na taką ochronę, a jednocześnie nalega, aby zostały umieszczone w odrębnym systemie prawnym. Chociaż pismo nie odnosi się do prawa 7 pozostałych stanów, które obecnie posiadają zarejestrowane związki partnerskie lub równoważne prawa dotyczące związków cywilnych, zawarte w nim argumenty dotyczące prawa kalifornijskiego silnie sugerują, jakie stanowisko zajęłaby administracja wobec każdego z tych pozostałych stanów.

Wreszcie, nawet jeśli Sąd Najwyższy nie podejmie kwestii wzmożonej kontroli i nie zastosuje racjonalnej oceny, siła i logika argumentów departamentu wskazują, że nie ma prawnie uzasadnionych powodów, aby odmawiać równego traktowania osobom homoseksualnym i ich rodzinom. Zręcznie obala argumenty dotyczące tradycji, odpowiedzialnej prokreacji i wychowania dzieci, ostrożności, demokratycznego samorządu oraz ochrony dzieci przed nauczaniem o małżeństwie par jednopłciowych w szkołach.

Dyrektor prawny GLAD, Gary D. Buseck, skomentował: „Pisemko skupia się na dwóch kwestiach: odmowa zawarcia małżeństwa parom jednopłciowym szkodzi tym parom; oraz że nie ma większego dobra publicznego w odmawianiu parom jednopłciowym zawierania małżeństw. To z pewnością stanowi podstawę do dalszego zaangażowania administracji, jeśli zajdzie taka potrzeba, w nadchodzących latach”.

Prezydent Obama jest obecnie na czele listy wpływowych zwolenników, a co za tym idzie, także wyznań religijnych, amerykańskich przedsiębiorstw, Republikanów oraz grup broniących praw człowieka i obywatela, które złożyły w Sądzie Najwyższym pisma sprzeciwiające się Propozycji 8.

Sprawa Propozycji 8 zakończyła się 28 lutego, a sprawa DOMA 1 marca. GLAD złożył własne pisma amici, do których dołączyła Lambda Legal, w obu sprawach. Pismo amici można znaleźć w wersji angielskiej. Tutaj i raport DOMA Tutaj.

Aktualności

Over 40 friend-of-the-court briefs were filed today in the U.S. Supreme Court by parties including Members of Congress, the NAACP, Labor, Military Leaders, Service Members and Families, Former Cabinet Members, Child Welfare Experts and Faith Leaders, all asking the Court to overturn Section 3 of the federal Defense of Marriage Act.

Earlier this week, 278 Businesses and Organizations Representing Employers also filed a brief calling for the Court to strike DOMA.

The briefs were filed in Windsor przeciwko Stanom Zjednoczonym, brought by the ACLU, and can all be found at www.gladlaw.org/doma/documents. Briefs were also filed in the California Prop 8 case, which the Court will consider this month as well.  For information on the briefs in that case, visit www.afer.org.  More information on both cases can also be found at www.scotusblog.com.

Highlights from the Windsor briefs include:

Members of Congress

DOMA does not serve, but instead undermines, the federal laws and programs that it affects.

DOMA is also unlike most other Acts of Congress in another critical respect: A clearly stated purpose for its enactment was to express moral disapproval of a disfavored minority group.

[T]he evidence is clear… that DOMA harms children raised in the households of married same-sex couples.

Before DOMA, Congress never found it necessary to override differences in state marriage rules.

NAACP Legal Defense and Education Fund

By virtually any measure, gays and lesbians have been subjected to systemic discrimination throughout our nation’s history, resulting in their ongoing subordination as a class.  And DOMA’s express purpose is to create and perpetuate a hierarchy that dis-advantages gay people based on their sexual orientation.

By categorically excluding gay people from “more than a thousand” federal protections and obligations that come with marriage, DOMA treats gays and lesbians as legally and socially inferior.

DOMA’s denial of marital benefits under federal law to gays and lesbians subordinates them within the institution of marriage. 

Labor

The Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA),  by intention and design, ensures that workers with same-sex spouses earn less money, pay higher taxes on their wages and benefits, and have available to them fewer valuable benefits than their counterparts with different-sex spouses.

DOMA deprives married gay and lesbian working people and their children of significant benefits associated with employment. Because most Americans obtain health insurance through their own employer or through their spouse’s employer, DOMA prevents or substantially restricts access to spousal healthcare benefits. DOMA also denies married gay and lesbian couples important protections and benefits provided to other married couples when one spouse suffers a workplace injury or illness. DOMA also impinges on the ability of married same-sex couples to plan and provide for retirement. Finally, DOMA unfairly eliminates opportunities for married gay and lesbian couples to work and remain lawfully in the United States.

DOMA forecloses the option of immigration through family sponsorship for married bi-national gay and lesbian couples.

Retired Military Leaders

Based on their experience leading, overseeing and analyzing the military, amici are confident that discriminating against certain servicemembers and their families in this manner is contrary to the military’s best interests and therefore undermines national security.

DOMA infringes on the military’s core value of equality and requires that the military violate its most sacred promises to its servicemembers.

DOMA unquestionably stands as a substantial impediment to the military’s post-DADT recruiting and retention initiatives. 

Because DOMA injures morale, readiness, cohesion and performance, there is no constitutional justification, let alone military rationale, that weighs in favor of permitting these threats to today’s military and our national security to continue.

Service Members and Families

In the military context, the denial of equal benefits for equal service and equal sacrifice is more than a fairness issue.  The military consistently has emphasized that providing benefits to military spouses improves morale and is critical to national security.  These benefits address an important source of worry for service members, allowing them to focus on the tasks at hand.  A Marine who is ordered to kick down a door or to take a hill in the midst of incoming gunfire should not have to worry about what would happen to his or her spouse if the Marine were to die in battle.  The military knows this and has explicitly made that point to Congress in seeking spousal benefits in the past. 

“The death of Staff Sergeant Donna Johnson illustrates the real-world impact of DOMA.  While on her third deployment in Afghanistan, Sgt. Johnson was killed in October 2012, along with two other married soldiers, when a Taliban suicide bomber drove a motorcycle packed with explosives into their patrol.  Because of DOMA, the military did not notify Sgt. Johnson’s wife of her death, but instead notified Sgt. Johnson’s mother.  Sgt. Johnson’s wedding ring was not returned to her wife, but was given to her mother along with her personal effects.  The flag that draped Sgt. Johnson’s coffin was handed to her mother, not to her spouse.  And her spouse was denied the spousal death benefits and support services that opposite-sex spouses of fallen soldiers are entitled to receive, including the opposite-sex spouses of the other soldiers killed in the same attack.” 

“[The President and Secretary of Defense have made clear there is no military interest served by discriminating against the families of gay and lesbian service members, and they have sought to equalize benefits where possible.” 

“Gay and lesbian service members often report to OutServe-SLDN that they are considering leaving the military for the private sector to obtain spousal benefits, particularly health care.  In contrast to the military, a substantial and increasing number of private employers provide benefits to same-sex spouses and domestic partners.” 

Faith Leaders

Eliminating discrimination in civil marriage will not impinge upon religious doctrine or practice. 

More than three thousand clergy from numerous faiths have endorsed an open letter by the Religious Institute, Inc. calling for marriage equality.

Eliminating DOMA’s unconstitutional distinction between lawfully married couples solely based on sexual orientation would not change, mandate, control, or interfere with any other party’s religious practices. The religious freedoms embodied in the Constitution guarantee that diverse religious traditions and beliefs, including the sole right to define who can marry religiously, will flourish regardless of changes in civil marriage laws. 

While amici respect all fellow faiths, including those that embrace different religious views on marriage, it is constitutionally impermissible to impose religious views through civil law to curtail the right of same-sex couples to civilly marry.

American Sociological Association (Child Welfare)

The social science consensus is both conclusive and clear: children fare just as well when they are raised by same-sex parents as when they are raised by opposite-sex parents.  This consensus holds true across a wide range of child outcome indicators and is supported by numerous nationally representative studies.

Decades of methodologically sound social science research, especially multiple nationally representative studies and the expert evidence introduced in the district courts below, confirm that positive child wellbeing is the product of stability in the relationship between the two parents, stability in the relationship between the parents and child, and socioeconomic stability.  Whether a child is raised by same-sex or opposite-sex parents has no bearing on a child’s wellbeing.

Whether a child is raised by same-sex or opposite-sex parents has no bearing on a child’s wellbeing.

[S]tudies reveal that children raised by same-sex parents fare just as well as children raised by opposite-sex couples across a wide spectrum of child-wellbeing measures: academic performance, cognitive development, social development, psychological health, early sexual activity, and substance abuse.

[T]he studies relied on by BLAG, the Proposition 8 Proponents, and their amici examine child outcomes within the context of opposite-sex relationships, and do not address the impact of same-sex parents on child wellbeing.  These studies do not undermine the social science consensus, supported by the most reliable studies available, that children raised by same-sex parents fare just as well as children raised by opposite-sex parents across a broad spectrum of indicators.

Aktualności

A broad bipartisan coalition of organizations filing briefs with the Supreme Court as “friends of the Court,” in support of the plaintiffs in the landmark cases challenging the so-called federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) and California’s Proposition 8 held a joint press conference today. Briefs are being filed in the Proposition 8 case, Hollingsworth v. Perry, today, and in the DOMA case, Stany Zjednoczone przeciwko Windsor, on Friday.

Among the speakers at today’s press conference were Valerie Long of the SEIU, Kim Keenan of the NAACP, Congressman Patrick Murphy, Retired U.S. Navy Captain Joan Darrah, religious leaders and families.

“As a military veteran, there is no question that the Defense of Marriage Act, or DOMA, discriminates against certain legally married service members, veterans, and their families. The impacts of DOMA are real and this discriminatory law injures morale, readiness, cohesion and performance. There is no constitutional justification, let alone military rationale, that weighs in favor of permitting these threats to today’s military and our national security to continue.” – Congressman Patrick Murphy.

“DOMA discriminates against same-sex legally married servicemembers, veterans, and their families. Not only does it discriminate but it also unquestionably stands at odds with the military’s core value of equality and has hampered progress the military has tried to make post-DADT.  By striking down DOMA, the military will be able to uphold its promises to its servicemembers.” – Captain Joan Darrah, US Navy (Ret).

“Working people are standing alongside millions of other Americans in this fight for marriage equality because we believe in fairness and equality and don’t think federal or state law should penalize people simply because of who they love. The Court should uphold the Court of Appeals rulings striking down DOMA and Proposition 8 and affirm the fundamental rights of all Americans to recognition of their families.”  – Valarie Long, Executive Vice President, SEIU.

“DOMA and other civil laws that purposefully infringe on the rights of gay people create and perpetuate a discriminatory societal division. By categorically excluding gay people from federal protections and obligations that come with civil marriage, DOMA intentionally segregates citizens on the basis of status. DOMA must be struck down because it denies Americans equal protection under the law based solely on sexual orientation.” – Kim Keenan, General Counsel, NAACP.

“My wife and I are devout Christians, and marriage means so much to us that when our son Lee came out as gay we wanted to make sure that his love was recognized the same as ours. Lee and his husband David are entitled to a marriage full of life, love and family – and we want that for all couples.” – Mike Neubecker, a PFLAG brief signer in support of the freedom to marry.

“Our position on same-sex marriage is derived from our religion that emphasizes equality and compassion. Our country is founded in equality and discriminating against same-sex couples runs in opposition to the core principals of our nation and my religion. We strive for equality and we urge that it be extended to all couples, regardless of sexual orientation.” – Sandy Sorensen, Director of Washington Office, Justice and Witness Ministries, United Church of Christ.

“I believe in the Christian principles of justice, compassion, inclusivity and, most importantly, love. All loving couples deserve to make a vow of lifetime commitment to one another and to have that marriage celebrated and protected.” – Rev. Scott Slater, Chief of Staff, Episcopal Diocese of Maryland.

Aktualności

Organizacja Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) oraz Lambda Legal złożyły dziś pismo przyjaciela sądu w sprawie Hollingsworth przeciwko Perry'emu wzywając Sąd Najwyższy Stanów Zjednoczonych do potwierdzenia historycznej decyzji Sądu Apelacyjnego Dziewiątego Okręgu Stanów Zjednoczonych, uznającego dyskryminującą Propozycję 8 w Kalifornii za niezgodną z konstytucją.

„Propozycja 8 narusza wyraźne postanowienie federalnej Klauzuli Równej Ochrony” – powiedział Jon Davidson, dyrektor prawny Lambda Legal. „Propozycja 8 dodała podpunkt do klauzuli równej ochrony zawartej w Konstytucji Kalifornii, zmieniając ją w sposób wyraźny, wykluczając lesbijki i gejów z gwarancji równości w małżeństwie. Propozycja 8 spowodowała, że kalifornijska karta praw chroni wszystkich poza osobami homoseksualnymi przed nierównością w małżeństwie – chroniąc nawet osoby skazane za zabójstwo byłego małżonka. W efekcie Propozycja 8 przekształciła stanową klauzulę równej ochrony w klauzulę nakazującą nierówną ochronę”.

W uzasadnieniu GLAD i Lambda Legal argumentują, że „Propozycja 8 wymagała od państwa zapewnienia lesbijkom i gejom mniejszej ochrony przed nierównością niż komukolwiek innemu, co dosłownie narusza nakaz federalnej Klauzuli Równej Ochrony”.

W piśmie argumentuje się również, że chociaż przepisy takie jak Propozycja 8, które dyskryminują ze względu na orientację seksualną, powinny podlegać wzmożonej kontroli – bardziej rygorystycznemu standardowi kontroli konstytucyjności – Propozycja 8 nie spełnia nawet mniej rygorystycznego standardu racjonalnej podstawy. Dzieje się tak, jak wyjaśnia pismo, ponieważ Kalifornia uznała, że pary jednopłciowe znajdują się w podobnej sytuacji jak pary różnopłciowe, jeśli chodzi o cele małżeństwa, a relegowanie par jednopłciowych do niższego statusu związków partnerskich stygmatyzuje i szkodzi im oraz ich rodzinom. W piśmie argumentuje się, że ponieważ Propozycja 8 nie miała innego celu ani skutku niż uznanie par jednopłciowych i ich związków za gorsze, narusza ona federalną równą ochronę nawet w przypadku kontroli na podstawie racjonalnej podstawy.

„Możliwość zawarcia małżeństwa z ukochaną osobą jest niezwykle ważna i nie powinna być odbierana kochającym, zaangażowanym parom jednopłciowym” – powiedział Lee Swislow, dyrektor wykonawczy GLAD. „Traktowanie tych par inaczej niż par różnopłciowych w celu zawarcia małżeństwa podważa bezpieczeństwo ich rodziny w każdym aspekcie życia i śmierci. Nasza Konstytucja nie zezwala na takie nierówne traktowanie”.

Lambda Legal, GLAD i inne organizacje działające na rzecz praw obywatelskich i praw osób LGBT walczą o prawo par jednopłciowych do zawierania małżeństw od dziesięcioleci – odnosząc pierwsze zwycięstwo w Kalifornii w 2008 roku. GLAD wygrała pierwszą decyzję sądu stanowego o równości małżeńskiej w Massachusetts w 2003 roku, a następnie w Connecticut w 2008 roku i przyczyniła się do uzyskania wolności małżeńskiej we wszystkich stanach Nowej Anglii z wyjątkiem jednego. Lambda Legal po raz pierwszy walczyła o równość małżeńską na Hawajach prawie 20 lat temu, uzyskała jednogłośną decyzję Sądu Najwyższego stanu Iowa w sprawie małżeństwa w 2009 roku i prowadzi obecnie sprawy małżeńskie w New Jersey, Illinois i Nevadzie.

Oprócz Davidsona w sprawie biorą udział również prawnicy: Mary Bonauto i Gary Buseck z GLAD oraz Jennifer Pizer, Hayley Gorenberg, Susan Sommer i Camilla Taylor z Lambda Legal.

Streszczenie można przeczytać Tutaj.

Aktualności

 

278 businesses, legal and financial firms, professional and trade organizations, and cities and towns filed a brief of amici curiaewith the United States Supreme Court today saying that Section 3 of the federal Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) creates complications for employers and employees and should be overturned.

The brief, który można przeczytać tutaj, was filed in the case Windsor przeciwko Stanom Zjednoczonym, which is challenging Section 3  of DOMA as unconstitutional. The list of signers can be found Tutaj.

Aktualności

Today lawyers for Edith Windsor filed a brief in United States Supreme Court asking the Court to find Section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) unconstitutional on the grounds that it violates Ms. Windsor’s “right to the equal protections of the laws as guaranteed by the Fifth Amendment.”

Ms. Windsor is challenging DOMA as discriminatory, in the case known as Windsor przeciwko Stanom Zjednoczonym, because the law requires her to pay taxes on the estate of her late wife, Thea Spyer, that a different-sex spouse would not be required to pay.

Read the brief, filed by Robbie Kaplan of Paul, Weiss and the ACLU, Tutaj.

Read more at the Washington Blade.

Aktualności

W złożonym dziś piśmie dotyczącym zasadności art. 3 Ustawy o ochronie małżeństwa (DOMA) administracja Obamy argumentowała, że przepis ten jest niezgodny z konstytucją i wezwała Sąd Najwyższy do jego uchylenia.

Pismo złożone w Windsor przeciwko Stanom Zjednoczonym, argumentuje:

 

„Artykuł 3 ustawy DOMA narusza fundamentalną konstytucyjną gwarancję równej ochrony. Ustawa pozbawia dziesiątki tysięcy par jednopłciowych, które zawarły legalne związki małżeńskie na mocy prawa stanowego, szeregu istotnych świadczeń federalnych, które przysługują legalnie zawartym parom różnopłciowym. Ponieważ tej dyskryminacji nie można uzasadnić jako istotnej realizacji jakiegokolwiek ważnego interesu rządowego, artykuł 3 jest niezgodny z konstytucją”.

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Aktualności

Nearly 200 lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) undocumented young people have either received or are in the process of receiving two-year work permits and reprieves

from the threat of deportation, thanks to a fund made possible by over three-dozen LGBT organizations. GLAD is proud to be a part of this effort. Late last summer, President Obama created the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program to enable people who came to the United States as children—commonly known as “Dreamers”—to apply for work permits and relief from deportation.

In response, the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR), the LA Gay & Lesbian Center, and the Evelyn & Walter Haas, Jr. Fund launched the “LGBT Dreamers Fund” at the Liberty Hill Foundation to help LGBT Dreamers pay the $465 in fees required to apply for relief under the DACA program (a list of organizations contributing to the fund appears at the end of this release). The $465 in fees poses a steep hurdle for most Dreamers because neither they nor their parents are able to obtain lawful employment due to their undocumented status.

“These young people are part of the LGBT community and we knew we had to find a way to give them a hand,” said NCLR Executive Director Kate Kendell, one of the fund’s co-founders. “We are thrilled that so many LGBT organizations across the nation stepped forward.”

“GLAD is committed to creating a world in which all LGBT youth have the opportunity to live out their dreams,” said Lee Swislow, GLAD’s Executive Director. “We were happy to be able to support the hard work and dedication of these young people by contributing to the Dreamers Fund.”

One of the recipients of aid from the fund, Jose Mendoza, recently received his work permit. Jose’s dream is to become a nurse and he is now taking classes that will allow him to apply to a nursing program. “Getting this kind of support and help means so much, and it’s great to see the gay community stepping in and saying that what I am doing is important,” he said.

Marco Quiroga, who wants to be a surgeon, said he was “thrilled” to have the support of the LGBT Dreamers Fund so that he could submit his DACA application. “Immigrant and LGBT issues have always been separate in my mind, and it is wonderful to see these two communities come together to work on a common cause,” he said. “Receiving these funds creates a sense of community with other gay immigrants who are in my situation.”

There is widespread agreement that the DACA program is only a temporary fix and that creating a direct pathway to citizenship for Dreamers is one of the key elements of comprehensive immigration reform. The framework for reform recently announced by President Obama as well as the one put forward by the bipartisan “Gang of 8” in the U.S. Senate specifically included Dreamers. On February 5, House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, who helped sink the federal DREAM Act in 2010, also endorsed citizenship for Dreamers.

To date, more than $100,000 has been raised and 160 LGBT Dreamers have received financial assistance from the LGBT Dreamers Fund. At least another 40 will get help from the fund. LGBT Dreamers who would like assistance may apply at www.LibertyHill.org/LGBTDreamersFund.

Jose Mendoza’s and Marco Quiroga’s stories, and those of other recipients of the LGBT Dreamers Fund is available at www.LGBTDreamersStories.com.

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