Court strikes down ban, ruling Two Foster Children Can Be Adopted by Gay Foster Parent
Released by: Brandon Hensler, Paul Cates, Cell,
MIAMI (November 25, 2008) – A Florida circuit court today struck down a
Florida law that bars lesbians and gay men from adopting. The court granted adoptions to a gay man, represented by the
American Civil Liberties Union, who has been raising two foster children since 2004.
“Our family just got a lot more to be thankful for this Thanksgiving,” said Martin
Gill, a North Miami resident who is raising two brothers, four and eight, with his partner. “We are extremely
relieved that the court has recognized that it is wrong to deny our boys the legal protections and security that only come
with adoption.”
The court ruled that the ban violated
the equal protection guarantees of the state constitution because it singles out for different treatment gay people and the
children they raise for no rational reason. The court also found that the ban denies children the right to permanency
provided by federal and state law under the Adoption and Safe Families Act of 1997.
“While the decision will be welcome news to many lesbian and gay Floridians, the children
in Florida foster care are the real winners today,” said Leslie Cooper, a senior staff attorney with the ACLU Lesbian
Gay Bisexual Transgender Project and a member of the legal team that tried the case. “The court put the interest
of the children first, recognizing that the gay ban served no legitimate purpose and only made it more difficult for the state
to find homes for the many children in foster care.”
The court’s decision comes after a four-day trial in October where the court heard from experts
on children’s health and development and listened to the justifications offered by the state for the ban. In reaching
its decision, the court rejected the false assumptions and stereotypes about gay people presented by the state, holding that
many “reports and studies find that there are no differences in the parenting
of homosexuals or the adjustment of their children. These conclusions have been accepted, adopted and ratified by the American
Psychological Association, the American Psychiatry Association, the American Pediatric Association, the American Academy of
Pediatrics, the Child Welfare League of America and the National Association of Social Workers. As a result, based on the
robust nature of the evidence available in the field, this Court is satisfied that the issue is so far beyond dispute that
it would be irrational to hold otherwise; the best interests of children are not preserved by prohibiting homosexual adoption.”
The court also rejected claims by the state that children do better when raised in homes with
a mother and a father and that children raised by gay parents face social stigma. The court found, “. . . the
professionals and the major associations now agree there is well established and accepted consensus in the field that there
is no optimal gender combination of parents.”
“Judge Lederman made clear today that it violates every rule
of decency and fairness to threaten to tear a four-year-old boy from the only home he has ever known, and to send him to strangers
who don’t even know him simply because his beloved Papi is gay,” said Robert Rosenwald, Director of the LGBT Project
of the ACLU of Florida and one of the attorneys who tried the case.
Martin Gill and his partner of more than
eight years became foster parents to the two boys on December 11, 2004. The couple, who had been parents to seven other
foster children over the years, was initially told that the placement would be temporary, but a plan to place the children
with their grandmother fell through. Both boys had significant health problems when they arrived in the home.
The older boy, who was four at the time, was withdrawn and didn’t speak. Today both boys are healthy, have lots
of friends and are doing well in school. The older boy started out behind educationally and had to repeat the first
grade, but with the couple’s help, he has progressed significantly.
The Florida law barring lesbians and gay men from adopting is the most expansive anti-gay
parenting law in the country. It was passed in 1977 in response to an anti-gay crusade led by former Miss America and
Florida orange juice spokesperson Anita Bryant.
In
addition to Cooper and Rosenwald, Gill is represented by James Esseks, Litigation Director of the ACLU’s Lesbian Gay
Bisexual Transgender Project and Shelbi Day, a Staff Attorney with the ACLU of Florida. The children are represented
by Hilarie Bass and Ricardo Gonzalez of Greenberg Traurig, and Charles Auslander, an attorney and former District Administrator
for Florida’s Department of Children and Families (DCF).
For additional information about the case, including a video and podcast of Martin Gill talking about his
experiences as a foster parent as well as a copy of today’s decision and a copy of the trial transcript, visit www.aclu.org/gill.