'Crime Against Nature' Challenge Laws Forbid Private, Non-Commercial, Adult Consensual Sex Justices Hear Today that Privacy is Guaranteed by Constitution |
Compiled By GayToday
New Orleans, Louisiana--As state courts nationwide continue striking down laws that criminalize private, non-commercial, sexual intimacy between consenting adults, the Louisiana Supreme Court will hear arguments today on whether the state's "crime against nature" law violates the right to privacy guaranteed in the Louisiana Constitution. Last year, a state appellate court struck down Louisiana's 195-year-old sodomy law, which makes oral and anal sex between consenting adults felonies punishable by up to five years in prison. The ACLU filed a friend-of-the-court brief with the Supreme Court of Louisiana."In our society, few matters are considered more private than sexual relations between consenting adults," the ACLU brief says. "When considering a public morality justification for [the sodomy statute], it is important for the Court to recall that prohibitions on interracial marriage, and the segregation of races generally, were values deeply imbedded in the social morality of many areas of the United States and were values that invoked both God and nature. But appeals to natural or theological ethics cannot constitutionally be used to legitimate laws whose sole function is to give effect to private citizens' prejudice or conviction."
In urging the state's highest court to uphold the appellate court's ruling, the ACLU noted that, "during the past decade, state court after state court has struck down sodomy statutes like [Louisiana's], holding that private, non-commercial sexual activity between consenting adults is entitled to constitutional protection and no governmental interest justifies denying this protection." In recent years, the ACLU's Lesbian and Gay Rights Project has successfully worked to overturn sodomy laws in Maryland (1999), Georgia (1998), Montana (1997), Tennessee (1996) and Kentucky (1993). The ACLU's challenge to Puerto Rico's sodomy statute continues. In 1961, every state in America had a sodomy law. Today, 13 states and Puerto Rico have sodomy laws that apply to heterosexuals and homosexuals (like Louisiana's sodomy statute). Another five states have sodomy laws that apply only to homosexuals. In its brief in Louisiana, the ACLU said a decision by the state Supreme Court to strike down the sodomy statute as a violation of the state constitution's privacy guarantee "rather than plowing new ground, will be consistent with the overwhelming trend in this country's courts and legislatures." |