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Prominent Wyo. lawyers speak out in support of marriage equality

Prominent Wyo. lawyers speak out in support of marriage equality

CHEYENNE, Wyo. — More than 50 Wyoming lawyers, including a former state Attorney General, are expressing support for a group’s effort to change state law to allow same-sex couples to marry.

The LGBT advocacy group Wyoming Equality is challenging the state prohibition against same-sex marriage in state court in Cheyenne.

WyomingWyoming Equality Chairman Jeran Artery said Wednesday that he hopes the lawyers’ support helps spark a statewide debate on the issue.

“I think any time we can have a professional group of well-respected attorneys sign on and say ‘hey, now’s the time for the freedom to marry,’ I would hope it carries a lot of weight with public opinion,” Artery said.

Wyoming Equality and four same-sex Wyoming couples filed a lawsuit earlier this year challenging the state law that defines marriage as existing only between a man and a woman.

The Wyoming Attorney General’s Office last month filed a response, asking District Judge Thomas Campbell of Cheyenne to dismiss the lawsuit. The state denies its refusal to allow same-sex couples to marry violates the Wyoming Constitution.

Attempts to reach Wyoming Attorney General Peter Michael and a lawyer in his office handling the state’s response to the lawsuit were not immediately successful Wednesday.

Speaking at a news conference earlier this month, Gov. Matt Mead said his administration will defend the state law. “The law in Wyoming is clear that it’s between a man and a woman,” he said. “We’ll defend it, that law.”

The Wyoming Legislature has defeated repeated efforts to change state law to allow same-sex marriage. It appears, however, that the issue ultimately will be decided by the federal courts.

A three-judge panel of the U.S. 10th Circuit Court of Appeals earlier this month heard an appeal from the state of Utah over a federal judge’s ruling that overturned that state’s same-sex marriage ban.

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While the appeals court’s ultimate decision in the Utah case will cover Wyoming, an appeal to the U.S. Supreme Court is likely either way. Other legal challenges to bans on same-sex marriages are heating up in federal courts around the country.

Artery said that if his group is successful in challenging the law in Wyoming, a very conservative state, it could help to send a message when the U.S. Supreme Court ultimately hears the issue.

Former Wyoming Attorney General Pat Crank is among the lawyers voicing support for changing state law to allow same-sex marriage.

In a column earlier this week published in the Wyoming Tribune-Eagle, Crank said he’s baffled why Wyoming continues to fight the issue. He noted that many in the state fight to keep government out of their business, away from their guns, health care and private lives.

“Yet, when it comes to allowing same-sex couples to marry, apparently this is an appropriate place for the government to intrude,” Crank wrote.

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