Kentucky homophobe Kim Davis, who denied gay couples marriage licenses, must pay over $360,000
After a lengthy legal battle, Kim Davis owes more than $360,000 for violating the constitutional rights of a gay couple.
January 2, 2024
By continuing to use our site, you agree to our Private Policy and Terms of Use.
After a lengthy legal battle, Kim Davis owes more than $360,000 for violating the constitutional rights of a gay couple.
A jury awarded damages to one couple, but another jury didn't award anything to a different couple.
After an antigay clerk dug in her heels, a U.S. district judge issued a preliminary injunction ordering Rowan County, Ky., to stop denying marriage licenses to couples.
The rejections keep piling up for the Rowan County clerk who claims her religious objection to same-sex marriage trumps the law. And her lawyer says they're not giving up.
Cameras were recording every moment as the staff of renegade Kentucky clerk Kim Davis defied a court order to issue same-sex marriage licenses.
She refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples; a jury will decide how much she owes those couples.
A federal judge today ordered the state to cover the fees for lawyers representing the couples who sued Davis when she shut down marriage license operations.
Her legal team throws a Hail Mary pass in hopes she won't have to obey a court order when she returns to work Monday.
A gay couple trying to get married in a small Kentucky county were turned away despite a federal order because the clerk suddenly took a vacation.
Kim Davis, who attempted to prevent gay couples from acquiring marriage licenses, is being asked to cover the legal fees of the people she discriminated against.
Gov. Steve Beshear says the antigay clerk's arguments make no legal sense.
The antigay renegade Kentucky clerk has lost yet another appeal of a federal judge's marriage equality ruling.
The lawyer for one of the clerks issuing marriage licenses in Rowan County, Ky., says forms altered by Kim Davis are not valid and in violation of a federal judge's order.
The antigay Kentucky county clerk claims a new law gives her all the "religious accommodation" she ever desired.
The antigay Kentucky clerk makes her case, once again, that a judge's order to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples violated her religious liberty.