Lawyers Await Rulings on Challenges to Mississippi LGBT Law

Emily Wagster Pettus READ TIME: 2 MIN.

Attorneys who sued to try to block a Mississippi gay-marriage law hope a federal judge will hand down rulings in their lawsuits Thursday, the final day before it's set to take effect.

The law says clerks could cite religious objections to recuse themselves from issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples.

It also would protect merchants and others who refuse services by citing three specific beliefs: That marriage should only be between a man and a woman, that sex should take place only inside such a marriage and that a person's gender is determined at birth and is unchangeable.

In addition to marriage licenses, the law could affect adoptions and foster care, business practices and school bathroom policies.

Opponents say it unconstitutionally establishes preferred religious beliefs and creates unequal treatment for gay people.

State attorneys say it provides reasonable accommodations for people who believe gay marriage is wrong.

Republican Gov. Phil Bryant in April signed House Bill 1523 , one of several bills filed by state lawmakers around the U.S. in response to last summer's U.S. Supreme Court ruling that legalized gay marriage nationwide.

Four federal lawsuits by civil-liberties and gay-rights groups have sought to block the Mississippi bill from becoming law.

U.S. District Judge Carlton Reeves on June 20 declined to block the law in one of the suits, saying the plaintiffs - two gay men who plan to marry each other within the next three years - can't prove they would face immediate harm.

In another of the lawsuits, Reeves extended his previous order that overturned Mississippi's ban on same-sex marriage by saying clerks who issue marriage licenses must provide equal treatment for all couples, gay or straight. The effect is that the state can't enforce the portion of the religious-objections law dealing with clerks.

The two remaining lawsuits seek to strike down the entire law.

Roberta Kaplan, who filed the 2014 challenge to Mississippi's same-sex marriage ban and one of the remaining suits against the religious-objections law, said Reeves' Monday ruling was an "appetizer," and she expects his rulings in the remaining two cases to be more far-reaching.

Attorneys have said no matter what Reeves decides, the losing side is expected to appeal.


by Emily Wagster Pettus

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