More Fallout from the Religious Right
The Ohio anti-gay marriage law has had some unexpected results. Not that the extremists will care. The woman was living in sin and obviously deserved what she got.
From Women's eNews:
Jeers
A constitutional amendment passed by Ohio voters in 2004 that banned same-sex marriages is having an unintended consequence, The Associated Press reported May 26. An appellate court has ruled that the state's domestic violence laws define legal relationships in a manner that conflicts with the marriage amendment, and therefore, crimes of domestic violence that fall outside legal marriages cannot be prosecuted in the same way.
One fallout from the ruling came with the court's decision to throw out the conviction of Logan County resident Dallas McKinley, who received a six-month jail sentence and five years probation in December 2004 after hitting his girlfriend and throwing objects at her, the Lima News reported May 24. Reversing the judgment, however, the court said that the domestic violence law could no longer apply to the case. McKinley now may only be retried on a misdemeanor assault charge because he wasn't married to the victim.
Logan County's prosecutor will appeal the decision to the state's high court, but until a ruling comes individual counties will interpret the amendment's provisions differently. Until the high court's ruling, nearby Greene County prosecutor Suzanne Schmidt said, "Unmarried defendants who would have faced felony domestic violence charges will be charged with misdemeanor assault charges."
From Women's eNews:
Jeers
A constitutional amendment passed by Ohio voters in 2004 that banned same-sex marriages is having an unintended consequence, The Associated Press reported May 26. An appellate court has ruled that the state's domestic violence laws define legal relationships in a manner that conflicts with the marriage amendment, and therefore, crimes of domestic violence that fall outside legal marriages cannot be prosecuted in the same way.
One fallout from the ruling came with the court's decision to throw out the conviction of Logan County resident Dallas McKinley, who received a six-month jail sentence and five years probation in December 2004 after hitting his girlfriend and throwing objects at her, the Lima News reported May 24. Reversing the judgment, however, the court said that the domestic violence law could no longer apply to the case. McKinley now may only be retried on a misdemeanor assault charge because he wasn't married to the victim.
Logan County's prosecutor will appeal the decision to the state's high court, but until a ruling comes individual counties will interpret the amendment's provisions differently. Until the high court's ruling, nearby Greene County prosecutor Suzanne Schmidt said, "Unmarried defendants who would have faced felony domestic violence charges will be charged with misdemeanor assault charges."
Labels: granny
4 Comments:
At Saturday, June 03, 2006 11:25:00 AM , jay lassiter said...
Granny i read this earlier and didn't have time to comment but as i take another look i feel sick to my stomach.
tony perkins (who i believe is gay)will get his. what goes around always comes around.
At Saturday, June 03, 2006 11:34:00 AM , Granny said...
Yes, Jay, but how many must die before then?
I'd heard that about Perkins as well. If I could document it, I'd lead with it.
At Sunday, June 04, 2006 8:03:00 PM , JBlue said...
In what alternate reality does this even make sense?
At Sunday, June 04, 2006 11:51:00 PM , Granny said...
To anyone who is confused, Jay and I were talking about another post.
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