The
county clerk from Kentucky who was jailed after refusing to issue
marriage licenses to gay couples said Monday she will not authorize the
licenses now that she has returned to work, but she will not block her
deputies from issuing them.Rowan
County Clerk Kim Davis, 49, who has said her beliefs as an Apostolic
Christian prevent her from issuing marriage licenses to same-sex
couples, has been under the threat of returning to jail if she
interfered in the issuance of licenses.
Davis
said she doubted the validity of the licenses that are set to be
issued, which she said would state that they are being issued under U.S.
District Judge David Bunning's order.
Davis,
who returned to work on Monday, told a news conference any marriage
licenses issued would not carry her name, title or her personal
authorization. She added she would take no action against deputy clerks
who issue licenses, although she does not believe they have the
authority to do so.
"I'm here
before you this morning with a seemingly impossible choice that I do not
wish on any of my fellow Americans: my conscience or my freedom," Davis
said.
A pack of reporters crowded
into the clerk's office on Monday morning, where there were no
applicants for marriage licences. Davis' supporters rallied outside,
saying gay marriage is a sin.
The
issuance of marriage licenses to same-sex couples in Kentucky and other
states has become the latest focal point in the long-running debate over
gay marriage, which became legal nationwide following a U.S. Supreme
Court decision in June.
Her
supporters see her as being persecuted for her religious beliefs while
her opponents say she is abdicating her duties as a public servant by
trying to ban gay marriage which is now the law of the land.
Shortly
after the U.S. Supreme Court ruling, Davis announced an office policy
that no marriage licenses would be issued. Gay couples who were denied
licenses challenged her policy.
U.S.
District Judge David Bunning ordered Davis jailed for contempt on Sept.
3 for refusing to comply with his order to issue licenses in line with
the Supreme Court ruling. He ordered her released five days later when
the licenses were being issued by deputy clerks.
In his release
order, Bunning warned Davis there would be consequences if she
interfered with the issuance of marriage licenses, directly or
indirectly, when she returned to work.
Davis
left the jail last Tuesday to a roaring crowd of supporters, who
launched rallies after her release demanding the firing of deputy clerks
who provide marriage licenses without her permission.
On
Friday, Davis asked the Sixth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals to allow
her to continue banning marriage licenses for her entire office until a
lawsuit against her is decided. Her attorneys argued that Bunning's
initial order had only covered couples who were suing her.
Liberty Counsel spokeswoman Charla Bansley said on Monday they would continue to pursue appeals for Davis.
Davis has asked Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear, a Democrat, state lawmakers and Bunning to accommodate her beliefs.
"I
don't want to have this conflict. I don't want to be in the spotlight,
and I certainly don't want to be a whipping post," said Davis, also a
Democrat.
The Rowan County Rights
Coalition has no objection to licenses being issued as Davis described,
spokeswoman Mary Hargis said. Davis violated the civil rights of
same-sex couples when she chose not to issue marriage licenses, she
added.
"She has an excuse as a
religious conviction, but when did religious conviction and religious
freedom become a shield for bigotry?" Hargis said.
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