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Prop 8 Case Goes Back To Court Today, Hearing To Be Televised

PAUL ELIAS and LISA LEFF   12/ 6/10 10:26 PM ET   AP

Prop 8

SAN FRANCISCO — The legal fight over California's gay marriage ban went before a federal appeals court Monday in a hearing that reached a nationwide TV audience anxious for a final decision on whether the measure violates the U.S. Constitution.

The hearing before a three-judge panel of the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals also focused on whether supporters of voter-approved Proposition 8 have legal standing to challenge a lower court ruling that the ban was unconstitutional.

The judges did not issue an immediate ruling and no timetable has been set.

C-SPAN piped the nearly three-hour hearing into law schools, courthouses, community centers and elsewhere across the country, giving the public outside the 9th Circuit headquarters in San Francisco its first – and possibly last – direct look at the debate raging in the landmark challenge that could impact gay marriage bans in other states.

Earlier this year, the U.S. Supreme Court blocked a district court judge in San Francisco from broadcasting the full trial. The Supreme Court has a blanket ban on televising its own proceedings, meaning future hearings will be blacked out if the gay marriage case reaches the high court, as many legal experts and lawyers on both sides think it might.

Matt Walker, 60, of Los Angeles watched the hearing with about 20 other people at the Los Angeles Gay and Lesbian Center in West Hollywood, saying the lives of many of his friends would be affected by the final decision. He found the hearing fascinating.

"Nobody from either side was getting a pass. The judges asked very probing questions," he said.

Only a few people gathered at the San Francisco Lesbian, Gay Bisexual and Transgender Community Center to watch the hearing that was broadcast at multiple locations in the city.

"I feel like it's our civil rights issue of today," said Jubilee Menzies, a 33-year-old who recently passed the state bar exam.

Roberto Isaac Ordenana, a spokesman for the center, was pleased the hearing was broadcast so "more people have access to the reality of countless lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people and their communities."

Viewers watched attorney Charles Cooper, who represents sponsors of the ban, argue that the state can treat same-sex couples differently when it comes to marriage without running afoul of the Constitution because "sexual relationships between men and women naturally produce children."

"Society has no particular interest in a platonic relationship between a man and a woman no matter how close it might be, or emotional relationships between other people as well, but when the relationship becomes a sexual one, society has a considerable interest in that," Cooper told the judges. "It's vital interests are actually threatened by the possibility of an unintentional and unwanted pregnancy."

Judge Stephen Reinhardt replied: "That sounds like a good argument for prohibiting divorce. But how does it relate to having two males and two females marry each other and raise children as they can in California and form a family unit where children have a happy, healthy home?"

The issue of legal standing surfaced after outgoing California Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and Attorney General Jerry Brown both refused to challenge the ruling that overturned the ban.

Cooper contended the coalition of religious and conservative groups that sponsored Proposition 8 should be allowed to appeal because of the moves by Brown and Schwarzenegger. However, his claim met skepticism by Judge N. Randy Smith.

"There is no question the attorney general has a duty to defend all the causes the state or any state official is a party in," Smith said. "Did you ever seek an injunction or an order or anything suggesting the attorney general should appeal and appeal?"

The panel appeared dubious about whether the ban's supporters were qualified to appeal but also seemed worried about allowing the governor and attorney general to effectively kill Proposition 8 by refusing to defend it.

"If the state does not defend it, it's just tossing in the towel," Judge Reinhardt said. "The governor is not allowed to veto this measure, but he can in effect veto it."

Opponents of Proposition 8 contend it violates the due process and equal protection rights of gays and lesbians under the U.S. Constitution by denying them the right to marry the person of their choice and by singling them out for disparate treatment without a legitimate rationale.

Supporters of the ban succeeded in keeping the full trial earlier this year from being televised, saying they feared broadcasts could prompt violent extremists who support gay marriage to attack lawyers and witnesses who would be identified on TV.

The U.S. Supreme Court prohibited the broadcasts with a 5-4 ruling. The unsigned opinion also said U.S. District Court Judge Vaughn Walker attempted to change the local court's rules barring broadcasts "at the eleventh hour to treat this case differently than other trials."

University of Pittsburgh law professor Arthur Hellman, who watched Monday's hearing in his office, said he understood the reluctance of the U.S. Supreme Court to allow television from its hearings.

The temptation for media to distort images or comments becomes greater with the high court than with lower courts that don't attract as much public attention, he said.

"I think it will be some time before the Supreme Court allows cameras," Hellman said.

In contrast, the 9th Circuit has allowed broadcasts of civil cases for years, and many state courts for decades have allowed broadcasts of high-profile cases such as the 1995 O.J. Simpson murder trial in Los Angeles, which became a ratings bonanza.

The California Supreme Court televises many of its oral arguments and twice aired gay marriage hearings when the case came before it.

Thousands gathered in front of a large-screen television set up in a park across from San Francisco City Hall in March 2009 to watch a skeptical state Supreme Court grill gay marriage supporters over why it should invalidate California Proposition 8.

The state Supreme Court upheld the proposition later that year, which led to the federal lawsuit now under consideration before the 9th Circuit.

Lawyer Austin Nimocks, who represents Proposition 8 sponsors, said the cameras did not affect arguments made Monday by his colleagues or questions asked by the judges.

Theodore Olson, who argued a portion of the case on behalf of the plaintiffs, said the case involves important civil rights issues.

"I am so glad it was televised because the American people could see what the issues are," Olson said.

__

Associated Press writers Marcus Wohlsen in San Francisco and Christina Hoag in Los Angeles contributed to this report.

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SAN FRANCISCO — The legal fight over California's gay marriage ban went before a federal appeals court Monday in a hearing that reached a nationwide TV audience anxious for a final decision on w...
SAN FRANCISCO — The legal fight over California's gay marriage ban went before a federal appeals court Monday in a hearing that reached a nationwide TV audience anxious for a final decision on w...
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COMMUNITY PUNDITS
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SilentSolidarity 04:05 PM on 12/06/2010
I'm for referendums on rights. HOWEVER, not like Prop 8.

Constitutional amendments should require a constitutional convention which means Legislature would first discuss the amendment. Then the courts would have to check if the new law is compatible with the state and US constitution. THEN it would be up to a referendum.

If Prop 8 went through such a procedure it would have been declared  Read More...
04:30 PM on 01/04/2011
Say no to H8...say no to Prop 8.
04:01 PM on 12/07/2010
"the state can treat same-sex couples differently when it comes to marriage without running afoul of the Constitution because 'sexual relationships between men and women naturally produce children.'"

What about older couples who are no longer fertile? Should we say post-menopausal women can no longer get married? How about couples who are just sterile or have had their sexual organs removed/altered for health issues? Are they not allowed to get married?

This is why you can't say that Prop 8 is right because gay couples can't produce children. There are PLENTY of straight couples who can't, either.
04:56 PM on 12/12/2010
It would be too difficult to enforce that. It's easy to enforce prop 8. If their the same gender, don't give them a marriage license.
09:47 AM on 12/07/2010
Once again, like DADT, is this proposition being created to protect conservatives and Republicans from those unlike them??
Jesus was a Democrat.
09:49 AM on 12/07/2010
Prop 8 has as much chance to survive than a TV show named, "I Love Eichmann".
09:46 AM on 12/07/2010
Proposition 8 is an evil and hateful proposal. A true believer in God would never even consider voting in favor of this.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
MsMcgee
06:47 AM on 12/07/2010
Up until just 40 years ago it was “still” (in some places) illegal for a black person and a white person to get married. A variation of the same lame argument was made about “protecting children”. Then it was to protect them from the “disgrace of being a half-breed", now it’s to protect them from even knowing or understanding that gay relationships even exist. IMO it’s probably more so to protect homophobic parents from having to explain anything.

The SCOTUS ruled it was unconstitutional to restrict marriage based on race, (Loving v Virginia) and if this case makes it to the SC I can’t imagine they will be able to rule any other way than they did in Loving.
04:59 PM on 12/12/2010
There's a difference. Gay marriage is not actually illegal.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Halter
10:28 PM on 12/06/2010
There seem to be a lot of legally well informed contributors to this discussion. Let me preface my question with the statement that I am totally in support of LGBT equal rights in all areas, including marriage.
What puzzles me, however, is why the government has the right to sanction anything other than civil unions for anyone, gay or straight.With true separation of church and state, why isn' t the contractual, civil part of a union of two people the perview of the state, and the spiritual or religious commitment part of the union the perview of a church or social organization? Amarriage would then be a civil union AND a commitment ceremony FOR EVERYONE.
Please help me understand why this isn't viable.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Concerned Citizen in CA
3 things cannot be long hidden: sun, moon & truth
10:34 PM on 12/06/2010
Because atheists are allowed to marry. Who is to say what qualifies as a religious component and who is eligible to to be united in this manner? Any decision to exclude anyone from the religious component (marriage), even those that do not follow a religion, would be religious discrimination and would not be allowed by state and US law.
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EmmaDarian
All in all, I'm loving every rise and fall (RHCP)
07:56 AM on 12/07/2010
Yep. No one ranted about marriage being just a religious term before, even though atheists married in purely secular ceremonies. I

I'll fight for the rest of my life for marriage equality, but I'm not giving up my right to marriage. We don't need the dividing line moved from between gay and straight people to between believers and non-believers. We're divided enough.
12:01 AM on 12/07/2010
That's a perfectly fine fix to the problem. But would take a legislature to make that happen, and no legislature would ever do what you suggest. Why? Because its taking marriage away from straight people. Even though the legal effect of a civil union would be the same as a marriage, straight people, especially conservatives, want their union to called "marriage." The word "marriage" carries a greater respect than "civil union." This is exactly why it is an equal protection violation to not allow the same word to be used by gay couples.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Ioan Lightoller
Proud Married Gay Pagan Man
05:47 PM on 12/08/2010
F&F. Exactly. And that is why so many of us are unwilling to call our unions anything but marriage.
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Scott Zwartz
09:46 PM on 12/06/2010
The issue whether the Supporters of Prop 8 have standing to appeal is interesting. forcing the state to defend a law which the Governor and the Attorney General and the trial court find unconstitutional would require the state to promote a law they believed to be unconstitutional.

All officials take an oath of office to uphold and defend the Constitution. It is akin to a prosecutor refusing to prosecute a case when he/she believes the police have brought bad case. The prosecutor's duty is to justice and not to convict everyone who is arrested.

On the other hand, some people fear that the State might some day abandon a good law after a bad court decision. American courts, however, are not allowed to provide Advisory Opinions -- those are opinions about what people should do in the case such-in-such happens. This case is about a bad law rejected by a good court decision. When the opposite occurs, then the court will have that Case or Controversy before it. ruling on the good law - bad decision when they situation does not face the court today.

Trial judges need to gather facts before rendering decisions, but appellate courts only review the record. The 9th Circuit had the record and each judge can review the trial court record and decide whether this is a bad case -- good decision situation (which I believe it to be) or whether it is a good law -- bad decision situation.
(there's more)
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Scott Zwartz
10:00 PM on 12/06/2010
The 9th Circuit could allow the supporters of Prop 8 to have standing and then rule against them, but that would be intellectually dishonest. The court must address the issue of the Prosecutorial Discretion of the Governor and the Attorney General. When there is a "bad law -- good court decision" situation, may the court compel the State to defend the bad law?

This involves the Separation of Powers. The courts may compel the State's executive branch to exercise its discretion, but very seldom can the court compel the State to exercise its discretion to force a particular outcome. I believe the justices were raising this point when they asked whether the supporters of Prop 8 had sought a Writ to Compel the State to exercise its discretion in a particular manner. That would have properly framed the issue.

Without enabling legislation like a Private Attorney General Theory, private people may not step in and assume the role of the State. I may not, for example, decide that the DA should have prosecuted someone and bring a criminal action, People vs John Doe. California law forbid private persons from exercising governmental powers, e.g. impersonating a cop.

I believe that the supporters of Prop 8 are attempting to exercise governmental powers in appealing the court decision.

All things considered, they should have sought a writ, but they would have most likely lost as the Courts cannot tell the Executive how to exercise its discretion.
07:16 PM on 12/06/2010
The arguments in support of Prop 8 are weak; those who are making the arguments don't seem to be intellectually connected, and the rank and file supporters are dwindling. Time to fold the cards.
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KenClay
REPEAL DOMA
07:15 PM on 12/06/2010
Freedom For ALL!
09:44 PM on 12/06/2010
This has nothing to do with freedom.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Callyson
I don't respond to haters or paid trolls.
11:13 PM on 12/06/2010
The right to marry the person one loves has everything to do with freedom
10:23 AM on 12/07/2010
this has EVERYTHING to do with freedom.
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Luke Friesen
06:58 PM on 12/06/2010
you get the impression that if it wasnt gay marraige it would besingle parents or adoption either by lgbt or single people that they would go after. it is just that the gay community was the possibly the easiest target. By saying that only a man and a woman can raise a child they are insulting not only single parents and gay couples who have kids but the kids themselves by saying that you are not being raised the best.
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Concerned Citizen in CA
3 things cannot be long hidden: sun, moon & truth
07:04 PM on 12/06/2010
The funny thing is that while they are arguing against gay marriage, they are simultaneously using the argument about children, which has no direct relationship to the gay marriage issue. LGBT couples currently have the right in the state of California to adopt children or become foster parents. Nothing that would result from the Prop 8 decision (for or against) will change that. So why use that as a primary argument?
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Luke Friesen
07:55 PM on 12/06/2010
because they don't have an actual reasonable argument.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
TaxpayingVoter
Wait....whut?
06:33 PM on 12/06/2010
This time it will be decided that they cannot appeal, and then it would be sent up to the Supreme Court.

I wonder if the SCOTUS has the stones to hear this. I could see them refusing to hear it and allowing Walker's ruling to stand. Which would be a good thing.
07:11 PM on 12/06/2010
SCOTUS won't hear the case.. it's boilerplate 14th Amendment... just ask Orly Taits.
06:09 PM on 12/06/2010
My prediction = no standing to appeal, so the Court will dismiss the appeal without reaching the merits, leaving Judge Walker's ruling intact, with a near-term economic boom in gay wedding-related business statewide.
06:16 PM on 12/06/2010
Agreed.. this is clear violation of the 14th and even the most conservative SCOTUS Justices wouldn't even hear the case.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
zombywulf
Pirate Captain Church of Saint Jerry
07:57 PM on 12/06/2010
becareful these are the justices that said companies are people.
09:48 PM on 12/06/2010
Scalia and Thomas saw nothing wrong with the law struck down in Lawrence v. Texas (criminalization of sodomy, even as applied only to gays and lesbians). I'm not completely convinced that Roberts and Alito don't think along similar grounds.
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Concerned Citizen in CA
3 things cannot be long hidden: sun, moon & truth
06:19 PM on 12/06/2010
Agreed. After which, the proponents of Prop 8 will file for an emergency stay until the case can be heard by the Supreme Court. The stay will be denied, as they have no standing in the court to appeal, they also have no standing to file for a stay. (at least that is what I think, but I'm not a lawyer)
06:06 PM on 12/06/2010
SantaFeConservative:

"The President is against gay marriage."

___________________________________

Don't be OBTUSE.

That argument has more "straw" than a scarecrow.

As a citizen and a Christian, he believes that "marriage" describes the union of one man and one woman.... but "marriage" is a RELIGIOUS SACRAMENT... and has no place in civil law.

The President is, and has ALWAYS been FOR CIVIL UNIONS.. which, as the leader of a SECULAR NATION.

The "marriage / civil unions" debate can't rely solely on semantics... as, in the eyes of the LAW, are identical.
06:12 PM on 12/06/2010
Let me try that AGAIN (((brainfart))).

As a citizen and a Christian, President Obama believes that "marriage" describes the union of one man and one woman.... but the concept of "marriage" in that sense, is a RELIGIOUS SACRAMENT.¬.. and has no place in CIVIL LAW.

The President is, and has ALWAYS been FOR CIVIL UNIONS.. which, as the leader of a SECULAR NATION who has sworn to abide by our Constitution, MUST do.

The "marriage / civil unions" debate can't rely solely on semantics.¬.. as, in the eyes of the LAW, they are IDENTICAL.

Let’s keep our eyes on the prize.
09:58 PM on 12/06/2010
A state that recognizes civil unions can (but is not required to) extend all of the benefits that go with marriage to people who are in civil unions. But the state is not required to do so, and not all of the states that have adopted civil unions/domestic partnerships have made them fully equilavent, in terms of rights and benefits, to marriage.

Moreover, the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA) expressly provides that federal benefits (social security governorship payments, federal pension plans, etc) are NOT AVAILABLE to same sex couples who enter into civil unions, because such unions are not recognized as (wait for it) "marriage" by the federal government. Granted, DOMA is currently in limbo (as a result of a few judicial decisions), but as the law currently stands, unions and marriage are far from equal.
06:13 PM on 12/06/2010
Let me try that again ((((brainfårt))))....

As a citizen and a Christian, President Obama believes that "marriage" describes the union of one man and one woman.... but the concept of "marriage" in that sense, is a RELIGIOUS SACRAMENT.¬.. and has no place in CIVIL LAW.

The President is, and has ALWAYS been FOR CIVIL UNIONS.. which, as the leader of a SECULAR NATION who has sworn to abide by our Constitution, MUST do.

The "marriage / civil unions" debate can't rely solely on semantics.¬.. as, in the eyes of the LAW, they are IDENTICAL.

Let’s keep our eyes on the prize.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
dennissinned
Progressive but not a Democrat.
06:05 PM on 12/06/2010
The money that had been poured into this losing battle could have been better spent elsewhere such as Send the Palins to Russia campaign. lol
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
enigma2
Enigmas are enigmatic..
06:09 PM on 12/06/2010
ROTFL..make that a one way trip.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
lisalulu
I stand for Planned Parenthood.
06:26 PM on 12/06/2010
Despite the waste - I love it. Also love all that faux fem money spent and lost too: Whitman/Fiorini.

Too bad 1/4 was not given to food banks.
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ljmck
Stand Up, Show Up, Speak Up
06:02 PM on 12/06/2010
Cooper supports a woman's right to choose!

He said "vital interests are actually threatened by the possibility of an unintentional and unwanted pregnancy."

Hold him and the Right to that statement.