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Federal judge: Oklahoma ban on same-sex marriage unconstitutional

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By Greg Botelho

CNN

(CNN) — A federal court ruled Tuesday that an Oklahoma law limiting marriage to one man and one woman violates the U.S. Constitution, giving yet another victory to same-sex marriage supporters.

U.S. District Court Judge Terence Kern said the court would not immediately enforce this ruling — which would open the doors to marriages of gay and lesbian couples in Oklahoma — pending appeals.

His decision specifically deals with “Part A” of an Oklahoma Constitutional amendment that says, in part, “marriage in this state shall consist only of the union of one man and one woman.”

Kern said that “the Court’s rationality review reveals Part A an arbitrary, irrational exclusion of just one class of Oklahoma citizens from a government benefit.”

“The Court holds that Oklahoma’s constitutional amendment limiting marriage to opposite-sex couples violates the Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution,” the judge wrote.

CNN — which has a copy of the ruling — first learned of the court’s decision via Twitter.

This case was first brought by a pair of lesbian couples in 2004, the same year that Oklahoma citizens voted to put a ban on same-sex marriage in their state’s constitution.

Susan Barton, one of the four women involved, told CNN that she is “absolutely thrilled” with the decision, saying it was worth the long fight.

“You can’t stay in this for 9 years and not have faith,” Barton said. “… I feel like we are already married, (but) I want our state to recognize our marriage.”

CNN received no immediate response from the Tulsa County district attorney’s office, which had been among those arguing for the state’s same-sex marriage ban.

Gov. Mary Fallin spoke out against the ruling, which she said defied the views of 75% of those who voted in favor of limiting marriage to a man and woman.

“I support the right of Oklahoma’s voters to govern themselves on this and other policy matters,” Fallin said. “I am disappointed in the judge’s ruling and troubled that the will of the people has once again been ignored by the federal government.”

Several courts ruled on it over what now has nearly been a decade, but the momentous decisions were indirectly related. Those were made last summer by the U.S. Supreme Court, which stated that the federal Defense of Marriage Act “violates basic due process and equal protection principles applicable to the Federal Government.”

That meant the U.S. government would — for tax and other legal purposes — recognize same-sex marriages. However, the rulings did not directly address the many states, like Oklahoma, which have prohibited such marriages within their borders.

Yet it has opened the door for lower federal courts weighing in on the matter, like U.S. District Court Judge Robert Shelby’s December 20 decision striking down Utah’s ban on same-sex marriage. He argued that state’s law conflicted with the equal protection and due process guarantees under the U.S. Constitution.

In his ruling Tuesday, Kern brought up both the high court’s decision (United States v. Windsor) and Shelby’s ruling, which he noted was about a case “nearly identical” to the one in Oklahoma.

In fact, the reason that Kern said he decided to issue a stay on enforcing his Oklahoma ruling was because the U.S. Supreme Court had done the same for the case in Utah.

CNN’s Mayra Cuevas and Bill Mears contributed to this report.

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