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Challenge to Gay Rights Law |
Compiled by GayToday
"This is a total victory for fairness," said Leslie Cooper, staff attorney at the American Civil Liberties Union's Lesbian & Gay Rights Project, which represented the local group that lobbied for passage of the civil rights law. "Yesterday's decision says that everyone has to obey civil rights laws." Dr. J. Barrett Hyman, a Baptist and local gynecologist, sued the city of Louisville and Jefferson County two years ago. He claimed that by barring him from discriminating on the bases of sexual orientation and gender identity in his medical business, the ordinances would punish him for his religious beliefs. Hyman was represented by Pat Robertson's American Center for Law and Justice, in a case that quickly became a national focal point in the debate over whether individual religious beliefs "trump" gay rights laws. Similar legal challenges were filed elsewhere, but courts dismissed them on technical grounds. Last summer, the U.S. Department of Justice filed a friend-of-the-court brief in the Kentucky case, siding with the ACLU and citing concerns that if Hyman prevailed, the government's ability to enforce a broad range of civil rights laws would be jeopardized.
Today's 34-page decision struck down every one of Hyman's claims under the U.S. Constitution and the Kentucky Constitution - including freedom of speech, religion and association claims. Hyman has not indicated whether he will appeal the decision to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. Wednesday morning, the Louisville Board of Aldermen, which passed the ordinance in 1999 after years of debate, will speak about the decision at City Hall in downtown Louisville. ACLU of Kentucky Executive Director Jeff Vessels and Dan Farrell, Coordinator of the Fairness Campaign, will also be available at that press conference. Links to Additional Information A comprehensive list of city, county and state civil rights laws: www.actwin.com/eatonohio/gay/gayri.htm The ACLU's brief in J. Barrett Hyman v City of Louisville, et al: www.aclu.org/court/hyman_brief.html Information on the U.S. Dept. of Justice's unprecedented brief in this case: www.aclu.org/news/2000/n081500b.html An ACLU backgrounder on the lawsuit: www.aclu.org/news/1999/hyman_backgrounder.html |