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Memphis Gaydar News

Tennessee Attorney General Statement on Supreme Court Ruling

Tennessee Attorney General Herbert H. Slatery

Tennessee Attorney General Herbert H. Slatery III is not in favor of the U.S. Supreme Court’s 5-4 decision in favor of legal same-sex marriage across the country.

Slatery issued the following statement today: “Today’s United States Supreme Court decision not only changes the definition of marriage, but takes from the states and their citizens the longstanding authority to vote and decide what marriage means. To the Tennessee citizen who asks ‘Don’t we get a chance to vote on this in some way?’ the answer from the Supreme Court is a resounding, ‘No, you do not.’ For the Court to tell all Tennesseans that they have no voice, no right to vote, on these issues is disappointing. The Court, nevertheless, has spoken and we respect its decision. Our office is prepared to work with the Governor and the General Assembly, as needed, to take the necessary steps to implement the decision.”

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Memphis Gaydar News

Shelby County Clerk’s Office Is Issuing Marriage Licenses for Same-Sex Couples

Bradley and Chris Brower

The Shelby County Clerk’s Office began issuing marriage licenses to same-sex couples right after the Supreme Court’s 5-4 ruling in favor of legal gay marriage in all 50 states.

Memphians Bradley and Chris Brower, who held a wedding ceremony in Memphis on June 13th,  were issued the first marriage license in Shelby County at around 11:30 a.m. The couple will be granting an interview to the Flyer later this afternoon.

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Memphis Gaydar News

State Bill Would Allow Religious Clergy To Deny Same-Sex Marriages

Bryan Terry

The anti-gay bills are already coming in Tennessee, just hours after the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that all 50 states must allow same-sex marriage.

Tennessee State Representative Bryan Terry (R-Murfreesboro) has said that he’s drafting the “Tennessee Pastor Protection Act,” which would allow religious clergy to deny performing same-sex marriage and provide legal protection from being  “forced to perform same sex marriages on church property,” according to a press release issued this morning from State Representative Andy Holt’s (R-Dresden) office. Holt has said he’d be the co-sponsor of this bill.

“It comes as no surprise that the Supreme Court ruled in favor of same sex marriage. I have had multiple constituents concerned with how the ruling may impact their church and their religious beliefs. If the issue is truly about equality of civil liberties and benefits, then this ruling should have minimal legal impact on churches,” said Terry. “However, if the issue and the cause is about redefining marriage to require others to change their deeply held religious beliefs, then the concerns of many will be valid.”

In the release, Holt said that he would not recognize the court’s ruling as valid. According to Holt, “God is the ultimate Supreme Court and he has spoken. Marriage is between one man, and one woman.”

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Memphis Gaydar News

US Supreme Court Rules in Favor of Marriage Equality

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Gay marriage will now be legal in Tennessee and the other 49 states after a 5-4 decision this morning in favor of marriage equality by the U.S. Supreme Court.

The ruling reversed the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals decision, which included cases from Tennessee, Ohio, Kentucky, and Michigan, that had previously upheld marriage bans. Two plaintiffs in those cases — Ijpe DeKoe and Thom Kostura — live in Memphis.

Tennessee Equality Project will have a meeting to discuss the ruling at 5:30 p.m. at the Memphis Gay & Lesbian Community Center.

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Memphis Gaydar News

Memphis LBGT Black Pride Event Turns 21

The annual Memphis Black Pride event celebrates its 21st anniversary this year with an appropriate theme — “Turnt Up.” The event kicks off Friday, June 19th and runs through Sunday, June 21st.

On Friday, there’s a meet-and-greet at the Holiday Inn Airport hotel at 2240 Democrat Road from 4 to 8 p.m. Guests can mingle with the weekend’s special guests and entertainers and pick up Memphis Black Pride swag.

Later that night beginning at 10 p.m., bounce-style hip-hop performer Big Freedia makes an appearance at the 21 Candles Foam & Glow Party at the Lipstix Entertainment Complex. It’s hosted by D Money and Blu from Bad Girl’s Club.

Saturday boasts a full day of activities starting with Ladybug’s Afternoon Tea from 10 a.m. to noon at the Holiday Inn Airport hotel. During the first half of tea, people are invited to share stories about relatives, partners, or friends who deserve recognition. In the second half, there’s a “no-holds-barred” panel discussion with LGBT adult film stars.

There’s a pool party at the hotel pool from 4 to 8 p.m. And there will be plenty of water balloons and water guns, sexy swimsuit and hot body contests, and music by DJ Hanz and Lady T.

At 10 p.m., at Lipstix, there’s a birthday bash with performances by Heavy Diva, Otis Mack, Coco LaBelle Thomas, and Mia X.

After all that partying, you can get some church in on Sunday with a special “Church Flow” service led by pastor Darnell Gooch at Cathedral of Praise at noon.

There’s a Pride in the Park event on Sunday from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. at Chickasaw Heritage Park.

“The Unleashed Voice for the LGBTQ Community” KWAM 990 Talk Radio show will be hosting a live satellite show from the Holiday Inn Airport hotel from 5 to 7 p.m.

And the event closes out with a all-white farewell party hosted by Diamond from Sisterhood of the Hip-Hip at the Holiday Inn Airport hotel from 7 p.m. to 1 a.m.

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Memphis Gaydar News

OUTbid Fund-raiser for MGLCC

Booze and schmooze for a good cause this weekend at the fourth annual OUTbid.

The fund-raiser auction benefits the Memphis Gay and Lesbian Community Center (MGLCC) and features both silent and live auction events. Auction items include a basketball signed by Jason Collins (the first out gay player in the NBA), a chocolate tasting at Phillip Ashley Chocolates, a scotch tasting for six people, and a dinner extravaganza with food from Restaurant Iris and wine pairings from Michael Hughes from Joe’s Wines and Liquors, among others.

There will also be food, cocktails, and live jazz by The Randy Ballard Jazz Collective. The event will be held on Saturday, June 13th at Clark Opera Memphis Center (6745 Wolf River Parkway). Doors open at 6:30 p.m. The silent auction begins at 6:45 p.m., and the live auction starts at 7:30 p.m. 

Tickets are $50 for singles, $90 for couples, or $320 for a table of eight. For more information, go here.

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Memphis Gaydar News

Emerald Theatre Company Presents The Laramie Project

Matthew Shepard

Over the month of June, Emerald Theatre Company (Memphis’ LGBT theatre troupe) and New Moon Theatre Company will collaborate on two plays about the 1998 hate crime beating death of 21-year-old University of Wyoming student Matthew Shepard. Shepard’s death brought national attention to hate crimes legislation on the state and federal level. 

From June 5th through the 14th at Theatreworks, Emerald Theatre Company will present The Laramie Project, a classic play based on interviews of Shepard’s friends and fellow Laramie, Wyoming citizens. The play was first put together by Moisés Kaufman and fellow members of the Tectonic Theater Project. They made trips to Laramie over the course of the trial of the two men accused of killing Shepard, and while there, interviewed 200 people. The Laramie Project is a collage of what they found in those interviews.

The Laramie Project will run on Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. Tickets are $20 for adults and $15 for seniors and students. All tickets are sold at the door.

From June 12th through the 28th at Evergreen Theatre, New Moon presents The Laramie Project: Ten Years Later. That play is set 10 years after Shepard’s death — September 12, 1998 — when five members of Tectonic returned to Laramie to analyze the murder’s long-term effects. The play looks at how the murder affected the town’s history and legacy.

The Laramie Project: Ten Years Later will run on Fridays and Saturdays at 8 p.m. and Sundays at 2 p.m. Tickets are $20 for adults and $15 for seniors and students. New Moon can be reached at 901-484-3467.

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Memphis Gaydar News

Miss Gay America Preliminary Pageants This Weekend

Two preliminary pageants for Miss Gay America will be held in Memphis over the weekend.

The Miss Gay Tennessee America Regional Pageant is set for Friday, May 29th, and the Miss Gay Mid America Pageant will be held on Saturday, May 30th. Both events will take place at the Evergreen Theatre in Midtown.

Winners and first alternates from both pageants will go on to compete in the national Miss Gay America Pageant in October.

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Memphis Gaydar News

Gay & Lesbian Community Center Receives Threat

Memphis Gay & Lesbian Community Center

On Thursday, the Memphis Gay & Lesbian Community Center (MGLCC) received a message from someone threatening to harm the people who visit the center and the center’s property at 892 S. Cooper.

Will Batts, MGLCC’s executive director, said the center receives “vile, bigoted, disturbing communications from individuals” occasionally, but he said this one was different because it specifically threatened people and property. Batts could not offer specifics about the threat or where it came from because it is under active investigation by the Memphis Police Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigations.

Batts said the center’s board has begun reviewing its security measures, polices, and procedures. They are making enhancements to security where needed.

“We talk about this as a safe space, so we need to make sure that it’s not only mentally safe but also physically safe,” Batts said. 

Batts said that, as the county draws nearer to the expected June Supreme Court ruling on marriage equality, LGBT organizations across the country have to consider enhanced safety measures.

A statement from Batts was issued to the media on Friday afternoon. It says, “We take seriously the role we play as a physical symbol of our community’s strength, courage and perseverance. We will continue business as usual. All of us on the staff and the board of MGLCC remain committed to our mission and will continue working every day to ensure our equal rights, and to be safe, respected and celebrated.”

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Memphis Gaydar News

Q&A with Memphis Couple in Supreme Court Same-Sex Marriage Case

Maureen Holland, Ijpe DeKoe, Thom Kostura

When they married in New York in 2011, Ijpe DeKoe and Thom Kostura probably never imagined their marriage would make U.S. history. But after returning from a tour of duty in Afghanistan in May 2012, DeKoe, full-time sergeant in the Army Reserves, was transferred to the base in Millington. And suddenly, the couple found that their marriage wasn’t recognized by the state of Tennessee.

Fast forward to 2013, when DeKoe and Kostura signed on as one of three Tennessee couples challenging the state’s same-sex marriage ban. That lawsuit made its way to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, along with similar suits from Kentucky, Ohio, and Michigan. But the Sixth Circuit ruled to uphold marriage bans in those states, a split from other appellate courts’ rulings on same-sex marriage. That ruling was appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court, and today, justices heard oral arguments in the case. Marriage equality advocates believe the Supreme Court’s decision in this case will decide the fate of marriage in the country once and for all. A decision is expected by June.

DeKoe, Kostura, and Holland were in the courtroom today, and they took a few minutes to share their experiences with the Flyer.

Give us a rundown of your morning at the Supreme Court.
DeKoe: We were up by 6 a.m. And we met down in the [hotel] lobby as a group. We were at the Supreme Court by about 7 a.m. They parked us in the back and had us walk around the building, which was pretty amazing. There were about 200 to 300 people lined up on the sidewalk, supporters. We did some interviews, and then the six plaintiffs from Tennessee walked into the Supreme Court at about 8:30 a.m., where we got to wait for about three hours. Sixteen of the plaintiffs went in for Question One, and then we swapped out for Question Two with us. We were in the courtroom for about an hour.

Did any of you speak before the court?

Holland: No. We had two oralists, Doug Hallward-Driemeier and Mary Bonauto. Mary went first, and she addressed Question One, as to whether or not the Fourteenth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution requires states to marry same-sex couples. And Doug did Question Two, which was if a same-sex couple is married someplace else, in a state like New York that recognizes their marriage, and they move to Tennessee, is Tennessee required under the Constitution to recognize that marriage? 

During the last few minutes of Doug’s argument, during his rebuttal, he mentioned Thom and Ijpe and their situation as a personal explanation to the court about how this actually affects the lives of individuals and how it’s not just a philosophy. He mentioned all of the plaintiffs, including Thom and Ijpe.

We had 16 tickets to allot to plaintiffs for Question One, and we were allowed, in a very nice concession by the court, to swap out individuals, so we could allow a different set of 16 individuals into Question Two. So all of the plaintiffs could hear some of the arguments. All three couples on the Tennessee team were able to hear all of the presentation from both sides regarding Question Two. 

From the analysis I’ve read today, I was a little surprised at some of the questions from the more conservative justices, like when Chief Justice Antonin Scalia asked why there was no gay marriage in ancient Greece. Did any of their questions catch you off-guard or strike you as weird?
Holland: We certainly prepare as best we can for a series of questions that might come to mind. Ancient Greece, I don’t know if that was exactly on our radar, but the arguments by respondents that same-sex marriage has been between a man and a woman throughout history is the same type of concept that we were prepared to address. 

What were your impressions of how the case went today? Do you think the justices will rule in your favor?
Kostura: Ijpe and I do not have law backgrounds, and our oralist [Doug Hallward-Driemeier] went first for Question Two, the one that we actually witnessed. And [when we heard] the questions that were coming back from the justices, we were like, “Oh no, they’re going to go really conservative on this.” But then, the other side went, and it went from us thinking it was going to go unanimously against us to thinking it would go unanimously for us. So I think that my impression is that the justices were really rigorous to both sides. Ijpe and I walked away from it optimistically. We don’t know enough law to weigh in, but we know we have a very strong team. And that they argued the strongest case for us that they could.

DeKoe: It was very clear that the justices were asking the peoples’ questions, whatever side they took. The other part of it that struck me was that Doug got the opportunity to close [in Question Two], which was incredibly powerful, and it completely changed the tone of the room. He was able to incorporate each of the three stories of the Tennessee plaintiffs into his closing arguments, so it took this big theoretical problem down to a really human level. It was remarkable how that happened, and it was chilling to be mentioned in front of the justices.

Many seem to think Justices Anthony Kennedy and John Roberts will be the deciding factor. Is that the impression you got?
Holland
: There was a feeling that the numbers might be better [than expected]. Obviously, you’re hoping for a 5-4, but you start to get the feeling that it could be more. But you’re not sure. There was a very positive feeling after Question Two. The Question One questions were harder to read, and there were definitely more questions on both sides. And it does feel like a narrower sense, from our perspective, that we would prevail. But I can tell you that the lawyers are hopeful that it’s at least 5-4, but we can see that some of the questions might tip some of the justices slightly up. But that wasn’t clear from Question One as much as from Question Two.

Much has been made of the anti-marriage equality protester who was ejected from the courtroom after he yelled something homophobic. Did any of you get to see that go down?
Holland
: I did. That happened in Question One, just as the solicitor general is about to walk to the podium. The screaming and yelling begins with a protest or an outburst about God. And there was continual yelling while they got this person out of the courtroom. And it was quite loud. The justices asked the solicitor general if he’d like to take a moment because it was so disruptive. He started to walk away from the podium, and then he just turned right around and said, “Well, you know actually, I’m ready to go.” And he launched right in to his advocacy, which was wonderful to see and hear.

Kostura: From our perspective, because we were not in the courtroom at the time … as you can imagine, at the Supreme Court, there are a lot of logistics, and you get put into a lot of very specific places. Ijpe and I were in the lower level, and as [the protester] was being brought into the main gallery in front of the courtroom, the screaming was echoing down to our level. We weren’t allowed up to the gallery to see what happened. And of course, Ijpe and I, since it was such a controversial thing, when we hear all this screaming, we don’t want to run toward it. But that’s when Ijpe and I realized that there is this strong opposition, and there are these people who will try to break into the courtroom in order to protest.

Speaking of protesters, did you see many outside the courthouse? And did you feel like supporters of marriage equality outnumbered protesters?
DeKoe
: There were definitely a lot more people for us. But I will give the protesters [against us] credit. They were very well organized. They came walking in and set up and had their PA going, and they got their message out. But they were a vocal minority and a very loud minority.

However, the friendly group far outweighed them. When we were inside the courtroom, we didn’t have any communications with the outside because we’d already turned off our cell phones. So we had no idea the crowd [outside] was growing. So it went from 200 to 300 people when we walked in to more than 1,000 when we left. As we walked through the main gallery and we stepped through those doors, we realized that the roar [of support] we could hear inside was even louder outside on the steps. It was a wall of sound in support. I could see the signs [from protestors], but I couldn’t hear anything negative because everyone was championing and yelling so loudly in our favor. These are people who took time out of their day and work week to come out and say “Your marriage has value. And we respect your marriage, and we want to be there for you while you’re inside fighting that fight.”