Federal Appeals Court Reinstates 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell'
Gay Military Service Members Must Again Hide Sexual Orientation

Post a Comment By ARIANE de VOGUE

A federal appeals court Wednesday reinstated "don't ask, don't tell,"
the military's policy forbidding openly gay troops from serving.

A three-judge panel granted the Justice Department's emergency request
to allow the policy to remain on the books so that the appeals court
could have more time to fully consider the issues presented.

An attorney for the group pushing to change the policy suggested
today's reversal would be only temporary.

"While we are disappointed with the court's ruling granting a
temporary administrative stay, we view the decision as nothing more
than a minor setback," said Dan Woods, a partner at the law firm White
& Case, which is representing Log Cabin Republicans in Log Cabin
Republicans vs United States of America.

"We didn't come this far to quit now, and we expect that once the
Ninth Circuit has received and considered full briefing on the
government's application for a stay, it will deny that application,
and the district court's injunction, which it entered after hearing
all the evidence in the case, will remain in place until the appeal is
finally decided," Woods said.

On Oct. 12, California District Court Judge Virginia Phillips issued a
worldwide ban on the policy, and shortly thereafter the Department of
Defense said it would abide by the judge's order.

That meant the policy no longer was in effect from Oct. 12 until
today's ruling, meaning gay and lesbian troops and recruits
temporarily did not have to hide their sexual orientation.

But gay rights advocates urged caution to those serving, warning that
the policy could be reinstated at any time.

"The bottom line: If you come out now, it can be used against you in
the future by the Pentagon," Aubrey Sarvis of the Servicemembers Legal
Defense Network said in a statement. "As the DOJ fights to keep this
unconstitutional and oppressive law, we are monitoring active-duty
clients' cases and fielding calls every day to our hotline."

In court papers, lawyers for the Obama administration urged the
appeals court to lift the ban on enforcement of "don't ask, don't
tell" because it would cause the government "irreparable injury" and
"short-circuit" a comprehensive review process of the policy currently
under way at the Department of Defense.

They argued it would also interfere with other pending litigation in
other federal courts, and it would cause confusion among the troops.

"A stay pending appeal," government lawyers wrote, "would obviate the
confusion and uncertainty that might be caused by temporary
implementation of the district court's injunction, with the looming
possibility that the statutory policy could be reinstated on appeal."

But lawyers for the Log Cabin Republicans, a gay rights groups that
brought the case to court, argued against a stay.

"Each argument that the government asserts as a basis for a stay,"
they said, "has already been raised to the district court, which
rejected them all -- not cursorily, or in passing at an oral argument,
but in extensive reasoned opinions at multiple stages of the
proceedings below."

The Obama administration already has notified the appeals court that
it is planning to appeal Judge Phillips' finding that "don't ask,
don't tell" violates the due process and free speech rights of service
members.

Appeal of DADT Ruling Puts Administration in Bind
The legal wrangling has infuriated gay rights activists. The Obama
administration has vowed to work to repeal the policy in Congress, but
has said it does not want the issue decided by the courts. As such,
government lawyers are in the awkward position of defending a statute
that the administration admits it is against.

More:
http://abcnews.go.com/Politics/dont-federal-appeals-court-reinstates-ban-openly-gay/story?id=11930570&page=2

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Have a great day,
Tommy

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