MONTGOMERY — An appeals court ruled Friday that a Mobile County woman can’t adopt her female partner’s child because of Alabama’s law defining marriage as being between a man and woman.
The Alabama Court of Civil Appeals ruled that Cari Searcy can’t adopt her partner’s child even though the couple was married in California. Searcy said she and Kimberly McKeand were married after responding to a contest advertised in a San Diego Convention and Visitors Bureau publication asking people to write an essay explaining why the wanted to marry in California. They married in September 2008 during the brief period before same-sex marriages were banned in California by a ballot measure, Proposition 8.
The unanimous opinion, written by Presiding Judge Bill Thompson, said one member of the couple cannot adopt the other’s child. The opinion said marriages between same-sex couples are not recognized in Alabama even if they were conducted in another state.
The women and the child were only identified by initials in the court ruling, but Searcy said she and McKeand were OK with being identified.
Searcy was appealing a decision of Mobile County Probate Court that she could not adopt the child, Khaya, because under Alabama law she and McKeand were not considered to be married.
A supporter of Alabama’s law banning same sex marriage, Republican state Sen. Gerald Allen of Tuscaloosa, said he believes this is the first time a court has upheld a 2006 constitutional amendment that declared marriage was between a man and a woman.
“This ruling solidifies the fact the institution of marriage includes a man and a woman raising the children,” Allen said.
In the opinion, the court said Searcy’s marriage to McKeand is not recognized and therefore under Alabama law she “is not the spouse of the child’s mother.”
Searcy and McKeand have been together as a couple for 14 years. Searcy said McKeand had artificial insemination so the couple could have Khaya, who both women consider their son.
She said the boy is now 6 years old and in the first grade. She said Alabama law only recognizes McKeand as the mother even though the child was raised by both women and refers to Searcy as Mommo and McKeand as Mom.
Searcy said she first started trying to adopt the child when he was a baby and the couple decided to try to get married in California after the adoption application was turned down the first time.
Copyright 2012 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
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Their is nothing wrong with SAME - SEX- MARRIAGE ........ EVERYONE SHOULD BE GLAD TO HAVE PARTNER THAT WANTS TO ADOPT A CHILD ......... ALABAMA NEEDS TO WAKE UP ....
ALABAMA SHOULD PASS THE LAW TO LET SAME-SEX- MARRIAGES HAPPEN ...... EVERYONE DESERVES EQUAL RIGHTS !!!!!!!
Wrong!
DD must be running out of illegal alien sob stories.
not sure why they would want to marry but let em - all kinda strange stuff is legal why not gay?
...and let them pay the same legal and financial marriage penalties as the rest of us. Co-habitation is taxed less.....
Glad we have Republican Judges in Alabamahigh courts . Where are Thompson and Paler on this one?