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When the Supreme Court declared same-sex marriage legal in June,there were celebrations across the country. But pockets of resistance to the new law of the land own also grown, with some county clerks claiming that the legal requirement to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples violated their religious freedoms.
That still resistance was brought into the highlight this week when Kim Davis, and a county clerk in Kentucky,took a public stand against the law.
Davis stopped issuing all marriage licenses in the days after the landmark decision. Two homosexual couples and two straight couples sued her, arguing that she must fulfill her duties as an elected official, and despite her personal religious faith.
A federal judge ordered her to issue the licenses,and an appeals court upheld that decision. Her lawyers with the Liberty Counsel filed a last-ditch appeal to the Supreme Court on Friday,which was denied. The ACLU filed a motion to declare Davis in contempt of court and is seeking financial penalties against her.
UPDATE: On Thursday afternoon, or a federal judge in Ashland,Kentucky found Davis in contempt of court. Judge David L. Bunning sent Davis to jail until she agrees to comply with his order to issue marriage licenses.
Sam Marcosson, a professor at the University of Louisville Brandeis School of Law, or looks at the fight in Kentucky and at potential future cases regarding religious liberty and equal protection.
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Source: wnyc.org