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Pro-gay Republicans suing Pentagon
October 12, 2004
Associated Press
WASHINGTON (AP) -- A pro-gay Republican
group plans to file a lawsuit asking a federal court to
overturn the U.S. government's "don't ask, don't tell" policy
covering gays in the military.
Log Cabin Republican leaders said the suit would be filed
Tuesday in federal district court in Los Angeles, California.
The "don't ask, don't tell" policy, put into place in 1993
during the Clinton administration, allows gays and lesbians to
serve so long as they do not disclose their sexual orientation
and do not engage in homosexual acts.
Log Cabin members serving in the military asked the group's
leaders over the last four months to take legal action, the
group's attorney, Marty Meekins, said Tuesday. They did not
come forward because of a specific incident, but simply
because "of fear of the military finding out their sexual
orientation if they are gay and lesbian," Meekins said.
"This case is fundamentally about correcting a misguided
governmental policy based on prejudice toward gay and lesbian
Americans," he added.
While it's not the first challenge of the "don't ask, don't
tell" policy, Log Cabin officials say they are encouraged by a
historic Supreme Court decision in 2003 that struck down a
Texas law that made homosexual sex a crime.
The court, in the ruling, said that what gay men and women do
in the privacy of their bedrooms is their business and not the
domain of government.
In response to the Log Cabin suit, Pentagon spokeswoman Lt.
Col. Ellen Krenke said in a statement that the military
implemented "don't ask, don't tell" because of a federal law
that "would need to be changed to affect the department's
policy."
Meekins denied there were political motivations behind the
announcement, which came a day before a debate over domestic
issues between President Bush and Democratic challenger John
Kerry, and three weeks before the presidential election.
The Pentagon under Bush has maintained the Clinton-era "don't
ask, don't tell" policy, while Kerry has said he would let
gays serve openly in the military.
Log Cabin backed Bush in 2000, but has withheld an endorsement
this year, saying the president was disloyal to the 1 million
gays and lesbians who voted for him four years ago for
supporting a constitutional amendment banning gay marriage.
The lawsuit against the government and Defense Secretary
Donald Rumsfeld would have been filed sooner had the group and
its lawyers been prepared, Meekins said.
"The decision to file the lawsuit doesn't have anything to do
with any election," added Log Cabin political director
Christopher Barron. "We are a nation fighting a war on terror
and we need a policy that protects our national security."
A report earlier this year from the Servicemembers Legal
Defense Network found that 787 gays and lesbians were
dismissed from the military over "don't ask, don't tell" in
2003, down 39 percent from 2001.
The advocacy group said the decline was due mainly to U.S.
military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.
The military has discharged nearly 10,000 people for
violations of the policy since it first took effect, according
to that report.
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