The reports I've seen (e.g.,
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/09/04/us/kim-davis-same-sex-marriage.html) do
not make clear exactly what's happening, other than that Davis is
incarcerated.

1.  Is the County Executive Judge now issuing certificates and licenses
(which might ironically eliminate the grounds for Davis's contempt
incarceration . . . until she refuses to allow the documents to be issued
to the next couple that appears)?

2.  What was the deal the judge offered her, regarding her deputies issuing
the documents?  Did she refuse it because her name would continue to appear
on the two lines?  Or did the judge say that she could omit her name and
she still refused?

Thanks in advance for any info, or, better yet, links to actual documents.

On Thu, Sep 3, 2015 at 2:14 PM, Cohen,David <ds...@drexel.edu> wrote:

> Hi all - a mootness question for you.  In the case of the KY clerk who was
> jailed today for refusing to comply with a district court order that
> required her to issue a marriage license to a gay couple (and stay denied
> from the 6th Circuit or Supremes), according to some news reports, now that
> she is in jail and not able to serve, state law allows a county’s executive
> judge to now issue licenses.  So, presumably that will happen relatively
> quickly, and the plaintiffs will get their licenses.
>
>
>
> Is the case now moot and the clerk can get out of jail because she’d no
> longer be in contempt of a court order, since the case is vacated as moot?
> And the issue isn’t capable of repetition at this point for the plaintiffs,
> as they now have a license and can’t get another (until divorced, which may
> never happen).  It certainly is capable of repetition for other people, but
> not these plaintiffs (and they haven’t filed a class action, to the best of
> my knowledge).  We’ve been around this issue before, and to the best of my
> recollection, most people believe the cases say that the “capable of
> repetition” part has to be for the particular plaintiffs, not for someone
> else.
>
>
>
> In other words, is she in jail for an hour, maybe a day, and then back at
> it shortly to deny someone else a license (when that eventually happens)
> only to repeat the whole thing again?
>
>
>
> David
>
>
>
> *David S. Cohen*
>
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>
>
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>
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