Miami Court Declares Gay Adoption Ban Unconstitutional; George Rekers Weeps | Riptide 2.0 | Miami | Miami New Times | The Leading Independent News Source in Miami, Florida
Navigation

Miami Court Declares Gay Adoption Ban Unconstitutional; George Rekers Weeps

This morning, an appeals court in Miami declared Florida's three-decade old ban on gays adopting children unconstitutional in a unanimous decision. The law -- which we at Riptide like to call the Rentboy Memorial Statute --  is headed to the state's Supreme Court for an appeal. In fact, the judges...
Share this:

This morning, an appeals court in Miami declared Florida's three-decade old ban on gays adopting children unconstitutional in a unanimous decision. The law -- which we at Riptide like to call the Rentboy Memorial Statute --  is headed to the state's Supreme Court for an appeal.

In fact, the judges reserved particular scorn for the state's contention that "experts" like George Rekers -- the anti-gay "researcher" New Times caught coming back from Europe with a Rentboy earlier this year -- had shown that gay couples are unfit as parents.


"Given a total ban on adoption by homosexual persons, one might expect that this reflected a legislative judgment that homosexual persons are, as a group, unfit to be parents," the court wrote. "No one in this case has made, or even hinted at, any such argument."

The case centered on a North Miami man named Frank Martin Gill, who, along with his partner, adopted two children in 2009 after caring for them as a foster parent for seven years.

The ACLU hailed the case as a milestone win. ``This is good news for the advancement of human rights and the children in Florida's troubled foster-care system," Howard Simon, head of the ACLU in

Florida, tells the Herald.

The three Miami judges who heard Gill's case -- Gerald B. Cope Jr., Frank A. Shepherd and Vance E. Salter -- voted 3-0 against the law.

Read the full decision here:

gayadoption.pdf

KEEP NEW TIMES FREE... Since we started New Times, it has been defined as the free, independent voice of Miami, and we'd like to keep it that way. Your membership allows us to continue offering readers access to our incisive coverage of local news, food, and culture with no paywalls. You can support us by joining as a member for as little as $1.