State Persecutes Kim Davis

Kim Davis 1

Kim Davis, the Rowan County, Kentucky clerk who made headlines for acting in line with the basic reality that two people of the same sex cannot contract matrimony, is back in the news.

This time, anti-Christs are celebrating the state’s persecution of Davis through lawfare – in particular, a district court ruling requiring her to pay $360,000 in damages and legal fees and expenses.

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AP Photo/Timothy D. Easley

Former Rowan County Clerk Kim Davis, known for refusing to issue marriage licenses to gay couples back in 2015, now faces a payment of more than $360,000, according to a ruling by a federal judge.

U.S. District Judge David L. Bunning of the Eastern District of Kentucky ruled that Davis must pay $260.084.70 in fees and expenses to attorneys who represented a same-sex couple. The judgment also includes $100,000 in damages a jury said she should pay to a gay couple ($50,000 for each individual) after a federal judge ruled their constitutional rights were violated.

Related: They’re Coming for Christians

Shortly after the 2015 Obergefell v. Hodges Supreme Court ruling granted same-sex couples the right to marry nationwide, David Ermold and David Moore tried to get a marriage license when Davis was the Rowan County clerk. Davis refused and said she wouldn’t do it because it was a violation of her religious rights. The story gained national attention and led to lawsuits against her, with a judge later ordering Davis to issue the licenses. She spent five days in jail for being found in contempt of court after refusing to do so.

Davis had argued that a legal doctrine called qualified immunity shielded her from being held liable, the plaintiffs argued that Davis had violated their constitutional rights, and their right to marry was clearly established at the time of Davis’s violation, and therefore, Davis was not entitled to qualified immunity.

Related: They’re Coming for Christians Again

The court said her decision not to issue marriage licenses “further illustrates that she knowingly violated the law.” The ruling also states, “Davis ‘chose to stand for what [she] believe[s] in over what was contrary to that’—the law.”

The Liberty Counsel, who represents Kim Davis, said they will appeal the case to the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals, and from there, to the U.S. Supreme Court.

Related: They’re Still Coming for Christians

“The finding of liability and the Ermold damages jury verdict are unsound and easily set up this case on an eventual route to the U.S. Supreme Court, where religious freedom will be central to the argument along with the issue that the 2015 case of Obergefell v. Hodges was wrongly decided and should be overturned,” the Liberty Counsel says in a statement.

US Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas has been reported as giving the opinion that Obergfell should be reconsidered.

Perhaps the state-sanctioned persecution of Kim Davis could give SCOTUS the case they’ve been waiting for to overturn same-sex “marriage.”

Only time will tell the fates of Davis and the millions of Americans who embrace the timeless understanding of marriage from natural law and Christian teaching.

No matter the outcome, this will be a case to watch.

 

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