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GLN OPINION

Kansas Supreme Court Unanimously Strikes Down Gay Sex Ruling

by Associated Press 21 Oct 2005

"Moral disapproval of a group cannot be a legitimate state interest." With words taken from the US Supreme Court decision Lawrence & Garner v Texas, Kansas Supreme Court Justice Marla Luckert dealt another blow to the Christian fascists who would criminalize gays and deny us equal civil rights. And this happened in Kansas, a hot bed of "creationism" and "intelligient design" folly. -Bob Schwartz


TOPEKA, Kan. (Oct. 21) - Kansas cannot punish illegal underage sex more harshly if it involves homosexual conduct, the state's highest court ruled unanimously Friday in a case watched by national groups on both sides of the gay rights debate.

The Supreme Court sided with convicted sex offender Matthew R. Limon. In 2000, he was sentenced to 17 years and two months in prison because, at 18, he performed a sex act on a 14-year-old boy. Had one of them been a girl, Limon could have faced only 15 months behind bars.

The high court ordered Limon to be resentenced as if the law treated illegal gay sex and illegal straight sex the same, and it struck language from the law that resulted in the different treatment.

A lower court had said the state could justify the harsher punishment as protecting children's traditional development, fighting disease or strengthening traditional values.

Writing for the high court, Justice Marla Luckert said the Kansas law specifying harsher treatment for illegal gay sex is too broad to meet those goals.

"The statute inflicts immediate, continuing and real injuries that outrun and belie any legitimate justification that may be claimed for it," Luckert wrote. "Moral disapproval of a group cannot be a legitimate state interest."

Court records say his encounter with a boy identified only as M.A.R. was consensual, but Kansas law makes sex with someone under 16 illegal. Limon's juvenile record had two similar offenses.

Had M.A.R. been a girl, the state's 1999 "Romeo and Juliet" law would have applied. It specifies short prison sentences or probation for sexual activity when an offender is under 19 and the age difference between participants is less than four years - but only for opposite-sex encounters.

He and M.A.R. lived at a group home for the developmentally disabled. In court, an official described M.A.R. as mildly mentally retarded and Limon as functioning at a slightly higher level but not as an 18-year-old.

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press.

URL below is the entire Kansas Supreme Court decision.

http://www.kscourts.org/kscases/supct/2005/20051021/85898.htm



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