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
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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.
She refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples; a jury will decide how much she owes those couples.
David Ermold claims Davis's Democratic opponent is a lying homophobe -- but a Kentucky LGBTQ group begs to differ.
David Ermold is one of four people seeking the Democratic nomination for Rowan County clerk, while Davis is seeking reelection as a Republican.
David Moore and David Ermhold are featured in GQ's Men of the Year issue.
The antigay official lost her reelection bid to Democrat Elwood Caudill Jr.
Cameras were recording every moment as the staff of renegade Kentucky clerk Kim Davis defied a court order to issue same-sex marriage licenses.
The former clerk from Kentucky who refused to sign marriage certificates for same-sex couples may also be liable for damages.
A panel of federal appeals court judges ruled that Kim Davis could be sued personally for violating two gay couples' constitutional rights.
Kentucky clerk Kim Davis has defied yesterday's Supreme Court ruling by refusing two same-sex couples marriage licenses this morning, citing 'God's authority.'
Remember them? Their repeated emotional encounters with antigay Kentucky clerk Kim Davis went viral.Â
Yes, Kim Davis is back. Again. A brief filed this week by her lawyers at Liberty Counsel argues that the Supreme Court's Obergefell v. Hodges ruling should be overturned.
Lupe Valdez's win in the Democratic primary runoff was one of several significant LGBT victories Tuesday.
The homophobic county clerk promises a tale including "dramatic encounters with furious, fist-pounding, homosexual men."
These men have made sacrifices to live in Kentucky, but they refuse to let their state tell them they can't wed.
The LGBT people who made this year one for the history books will be remembered long past 2015.