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Davis appeals ruling over attorney fees

The Associated Press//July 26, 2024//

Kim Davis, the former county clerk for Rowan County, Kentucky, was ordered to pay $260,000 in attorney’s fees to the lawyers representing a same-sex couple to whom she refused to issue a wedding license in 2015. (Associated Press file)

Kim Davis, the former county clerk for Rowan County, Kentucky, was ordered to pay $260,000 in attorney’s fees to the lawyers representing a same-sex couple to whom she refused to issue a wedding license in 2015. (Associated Press file)

Davis appeals ruling over attorney fees

The Associated Press//July 26, 2024//

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CINCINNATI — A former county clerk who refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples a decade ago is appealing a ordering her to pay thousands of dollars in attorney fees.

The filed by attorneys for in federal court argues that the landmark ruling in 2015 should be overturned. Davis objected to on religious grounds and was briefly jailed.

A federal judge ruled in January that Davis, who is the former clerk, must pay $260,000 in fees to attorneys who represented a couple who sought a license from her office. Attorneys from the group The Liberty Counsel filed a brief Monday asking the 6th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in Cincinnati to overturn that ruling.

Davis’ refusal to issue a license to a same-sex couple led to weeks of as gay marriage opponents around the country praised her defiance. Davis, a Republican, ultimately lost her bid for in 2018.

Davis “deserves justice in this case since she was entitled to a religious accommodation from issuing marriage licenses under her name and authority,” Mat Staver, Liberty Counsel’s founder and chairman, said in a news release.

The appeal brief takes aim at the 2015 Supreme Court ruling that allowed same-sex couples to legally marry, saying the ruling was a “mistake” and “has produced disastrous results for individuals like Davis, who find it increasingly difficult to participate in society without running afoul of” the law.

Davis has also been ordered to pay $100,000 in to the couple who sued.

Davis was released from jail in 2015 only after her staff issued the licenses on her behalf but removed her name from the form. Kentucky’s legislature later enacted a law removing the names of all county clerks from state marriage licenses.


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