Kentucky Clerk, Citing God, Defies Courts On Gay Marriage

MOREHEAD, Ky. (AP) — Invoking “God’s author­i­ty,” a coun­ty clerk denied mar­riage licens­es to gay cou­ples again Tuesday in direct defi­ance of the fed­er­al courts, and vowed not to resign, even under the pres­sure of steep fines or jail. “It is not a light issue for me,” Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis said lat­er through her lawyers. “It is a Heaven or Hell deci­sion.” April Miller and Karen Roberts, tailed by tele­vi­sion cam­eras and rival activists, were there when the doors opened Tuesday morn­ing, hours after the Supreme Court reject­ed the clerk’s last-ditch request for a delay.

They were hope­ful Davis would accept that her fight was lost and issue the licens­es, end­ing the months-long con­tro­ver­sy that has divid­ed Rowan County, where the seat of Morehead is con­sid­ered a pro­gres­sive haven in Appalachian Kentucky. Instead, Davis once again turned them away. On their way out, Miller and Roberts passed David Ermold and David Moore, 17 years a cou­ple. “Denied again,” Roberts whis­pered in Moore’s ear.

Ermold said he almost wept. They demand­ed to talk to Davis, who emerged briefly on the oth­er side of the counter.

We’re not leav­ing until we have a license,” Ermold told her. “Then you’re going to have a long day,” Davis replied.

Davis, an Apostolic Christian, stopped issu­ing all mar­riage licens­es in June rather than com­ply with the Supreme Court’s legal­iza­tion of gay mar­riage nation­wide. Gay and straight cou­ples sued, say­ing she should ful­fill her duties as an elect­ed offi­cial despite her per­son­al reli­gious faith. U.S. District Judge David Bunning ordered her to issue the licens­es, an appeals court affirmed that order, and the Supreme Court on Monday refused to inter­vene, leav­ing her no legal option to refuse. And yet, she did. “Stand firm,” Davis’ sup­port­ers chant­ed as a tense stand­off erupt­ed in the lob­by. “Do your job,” mar­riage equal­i­ty activists shout­ed back. Davis retreat­ed into her inner office, closed the door and shut the blinds. The sher­iff moved every­one out­side, where demon­stra­tors lined up to shout and sing at each oth­er. Davis knows she faces stiff fines or even jail if the judge finds her in con­tempt, her lawyer said. Her sup­port­ers com­pared her Tuesday to the Biblical fig­ures Paul and Silas, impris­oned for their faith. and res­cued by God.

But the cou­ples’ lawyers asked that she not be sent to jail, and instead be fined, since she cur­rent­ly col­lects her salary — $80,000 a year — while fail­ing to per­form her duties. They asked the judge to “impose finan­cial penal­ties suf­fi­cient­ly seri­ous and increas­ing­ly oner­ous” to “com­pel her imme­di­ate com­pli­ance with­out delay.” Bunning ordered Davis and her six deputy clerks to appear before him Thursday morn­ing at the fed­er­al cour­t­house in Ashland. Davis also faces a poten­tial state charge of offi­cial mis­con­duct, a mis­de­meanor meant for pub­lic ser­vants who refuse to per­form their duties. Kentucky Attorney General Jack Conway, now run­ning as the Democratic nom­i­nee for gov­er­nor, is study­ing a com­plaint filed by a cou­ple she turned away, and will decide whether to appoint a spe­cial pros­e­cu­tor. Davis said she nev­er imag­ined this day would come. “I have no ani­mos­i­ty toward any­one and har­bor no ill will. To me this has nev­er been a gay or les­bian issue. It is about mar­riage and God’s Word,” her state­ment said. Her crit­ics mock this moral stand, not­ing that Davis is on her fourth hus­band after being divorced three times.

Joe Davis, who described him­self as “an old red­neck hill­bil­ly,” came by to check on his wife Tuesday. It’s been an ordeal, he said. She got death threats and they’ve had to change their phone num­ber. He point­ed to the peo­ple call­ing for gay rights on the cour­t­house lawn. “They want us to accept their beliefs and their ways,” he said. “But they won’t accept our beliefs and our ways.” Mat Staver found­ed the Liberty Counsel, a Christian law firm that rep­re­sents Davis. He said she had been a sin­ner until she went to church four years ago when her moth­er-in-law died. She was born again after the preach­er read a Bible pas­sage about how for­give­ness grows from the grace of God, he said. “She’s made some mis­takes,” he said. “She’s regret­ful and sor­row­ful. That life she led before is not the life she lives now. She asked for and received for­give­ness and grace. That’s why she has such a strong conscience.”

Davis served as her moth­er’s deputy for 27 years before she was elect­ed as a Democrat to suc­ceed her in November. Davis’ own son is on the staff. As an elect­ed offi­cial, she can be removed only if the Legislature impeach­es her, which is unlike­ly in a deeply con­ser­v­a­tive state. Davis’ sup­port­ers blame Gov. Steve Beshear, who ordered resis­tant clerks to issue licens­es or resign. The Kentucky County Clerk’s Association has pro­posed leg­is­la­tion to make mar­riage licens­ing a func­tion of state gov­ern­ment, reliev­ing clerks of the bur­den. Kentucky’s Republican nom­i­nee for gov­er­nor, Matt Bevin, said Tuesday that he sup­ports Davis’ “will­ing­ness to stand for her First Amendment rights,” and if elect­ed, would have peo­ple down­load mar­riage licens­es on the Internet to file at clerk’s offices just like oth­er documents.

Outside the cour­t­house, dozens of Davis’ sup­port­ers stood in a cir­cle, singing Amazing Grace and Onward Christian Soldier. “She’s stand­ing for God’s word and we’re stand­ing with her,” said Flavis McKinney On the oth­er side of the cour­t­house lawn, oth­ers held signs read­ing “Hate is not a fam­i­ly val­ue” and sang repur­posed Christian songs: “Jesus loves the lit­tle chil­dren, all the chil­dren of the world. Gay or straight or black or white, they are pre­cious in his sight.” Will Smith Jr. and James Yates, red-eyed and shak­ing, emerged from the cour­t­house red-eyed and shak­ing, too upset to talk about being reject­ed again. They held hands and rushed around the pro­test­ers to reach their car. But Moore and Ermold joined the rain­bow-clad throng. They swayed and sang, pledg­ing to come back again and again until Davis relents. “I feel sad, I feel angry, I feel dev­as­tat­ed,” Ermold said. “I feel humil­i­at­ed on such a nation­al lev­el that I can’t com­pre­hend it. I can­not com­pre­hend it right now.” Sheriff Matt Sparks tried to keep every­one civ­i­lized as he stood between the two sides.

It has dis­rupt­ed our coun­ty, but it shows us that the coun­ty is, prob­a­bly the coun­try is, still divid­ed on this issue,” Sparks said. “I’m just glad we live in a coun­try that we have the free­dom to dis­agree. This will end even­tu­al­ly and we’ll all come togeth­er again.”

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Associated Press Writer Adam Beam in Frankfort con­tributed to this report.