home

UPDATE: Mayor Charged With Crimes For Performing Gay Marriages

by TChris

When elected policy makers, the courts, and the public cannot agree whether gay marriage is or should be legal, nothing could be sillier than arresting a mayor for conducting same sex marriages. And so, of course, that is exactly what happened.

New Paltz Mayor Jason West was arrested yesterday for 19 counts of "solemnizing a marriage without a license," a misdemeanor under New York law. West conducted marriage ceremonies for 25 same sex couples.

Is what he did illegal? State officials have no easy answer. Governor George Pataki thinks that New York defines marriage as a union of husband and wife, but Attorney General Eliot Spitzer isn't so sure that's the law.

"My personal view, just stepping back from a detailed legal analysis, is that the law is clear, the law is being broken, and that it is appropriate to seek an injunction" against more same-sex marriages in the state, Mr. Pataki said. "The attorney general has indicated he does not agree with that," he said. "We are waiting for his analysis."

If the law isn't clear, why is the mayor being charged with a crime? As an elected official, his job is to make judgment calls on matters of public policy. If his judgment is that the logic applied by the Massachusetts Supreme Court also applies in New York, he should not face criminal liability simply because some other official believes the mayor's view of the law is mistaken.

Using the criminal justice system to punish a public official for taking an unpopular stance is abusive. The charges against Mayor West should be dismissed.

Update: New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer split the baby in half, announcing that New York law only permits marriage between a man and a woman while declining to opine whether that law violates the state constitution.

Spitzer's interpretation of the legislature's intent is probably right. The comments to this post illustrate the creative ways in which imprecise language can be construed. As is often the case, the language of New York's law is open to interpretation. Still, given the number of present day politicians eager to disavow support of same sex marriage, it is difficult to believe that statutory language authored many years ago was meant to hold open the possibility of gay marriage.

Spitzer won't say whether he thinks the law is consistent with the state constitution. He says it is his job to uphold the law, not to question it. True, but the state constitution is part of the law. He has presumably sworn an oath to uphold that constitution. Failing to call attention to an unconstitutional statute seems inconsistent with that oath.

The point is, New York law may or may not be constitutional. Mayor West is an elected official. His job is to serve his constituents. If Mayor West holds a good faith belief that a law limiting the availability of marriage (or of marriage licenses) to opposite sex couples is unconstitutional, and if he believes that he lawfully carries out the duties of his office by peforming same sex marriages, he shouldn't be arrested for acting on that belief.

Law enforcement officers and other government officials who violate an individual's civil rights are immune from damages, even if a court finds that a violation occurred, unless their actions disregarded clearly established law. Rulings in Massachusetts have created uncertainty in the law elsewhere. If we protect government officials from civil suits when they exercise their discretion in the face of ambiguity, it makes no sense to subject them to criminal prosecution when they do so.

< Supreme Court Hears Internet Porn Challenge | Administration Hyped Dubious Link beween Saddam and Osama >
  • The Online Magazine with Liberal coverage of crime-related political and injustice news

  • Contribute To TalkLeft


  • Display: Sort: