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Law.com Home > First Prop 8 Amicus Brief Raises Issue of Judge's Sexual Orientation

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First Prop 8 Amicus Brief Raises Issue of Judge's Sexual Orientation

By Ginny LaRoe All Articles 

The Recorder

September 20, 2010

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Before gay marriage foes filed their first brief to the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals seeking to restore Proposition 8, both parties agreed to open up the matter to amicus curiae briefs.

Who would have the first say? A guy named Robert Wooten, who wastes no time in making things personal, at least for Northern District Chief Judge Vaughn Walker, who in August delivered the landmark ruling calling Prop 8 unconstitutional.

"If the allegation that Judge Walker is a homosexual is true, [then] he has a personal interest in the outcome of the trial" and should have recused himself, the brief states.

And with that, the speculation over Walker's sexual orientation is now apparently for the first time part of the court record.

Walker has not discussed his orientation publicly. And for the duration of the Prop 8 trial, the parties had stayed away from the topic -- at least inside the courtroom.

So will the judge's personal life be relevant in the appeal? One of the chief opponents of the ban thinks not.

"It's a ridiculous issue," says San Francisco Chief Deputy City Attorney Therese Stewart, who said it's like saying a black judge shouldn't preside over cases involving discrimination or race or a female judge hearing gender issues.

Wooten, who provides no address, phone number or indication of group affiliation in his two-page, typo-laden brief, says homosexuality is a "moral issue" of public interest, which "negates the requirement of 'standing' in the matter."

This article originally appeared on Legal Pad, the blog for The Recorder.



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Reader Comments

  • Joseph A. Mustich, JP

    September 21, 2010 02:39 AM

    Recuse himmself? No way.....

    Onward to full civil and marriage equality rights in 21st century America, and abroad.

    Cheers, Joe Mustich, Justice of the Peace,

    Red Studio Farm, Washington, CT USA

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