Sep 04, 2015 · Staver had previously compared accepting the Supreme Court's ruling on gay marraige to turning over a Jew to the Nazis
Oct 14, 2015 · Kim Davis's Lawyers Have Said Things That Are Literally Unbelievable. Liberty Counsel lawyers keep themselves in the spotlight with tactics like ballyhooing a massive “prayer rally” that never happened and claiming a federal judge said things he never did. Kim Davis hugs her attorney, Mathew Staver. The Vatican was going to release photos ...
Sep 04, 2015 · Kim Davis is the elected clerk of Rowan County in northeastern Kentucky, along the edge of the Appalachian Mountains. She is a Democrat who was first elected last fall with 3,909 votes, or 53% of ...
Two years after Kim Davis ended her crusade against gay marriage by way of the Rowan County, Kentucky clerk's office, ... Kim Davis’s lawyer: Not our problem if Kentucky taxpayers have to pay $200K in legal bills. By Sky Palma. Posted on August 3, 2017.
Rowan County, Kentucky, Clerk Kim Davis returns to work Monday, saying she will not issue any marriage licenses that go against her religious beliefs, but she left the door open for her deputies to continue to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, as …
At the center of the Rowan County marriage license issue is a legal question: Are the licenses issued without Davis’s name on them still valid?
In September, Staver said twice on Liberty Counsel’s radio program, Faith and Freedom, that someone on ABC's popular TV talk show The View had called for Davis to be killed. “Kim has received just horrible death threats, even from The View ,” he said on Sept. 16.
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Kim Davis is the elected clerk of Rowan County in northeastern Kentucky, along the edge of the Appalachian Mountains.
Davis refused to issue marriage licenses to same-sex couples, defying the U.S. Supreme Court ruling in June that legalized same-sex marriage.
Judge Bunning said in his order Tuesday that he is satisfied the office is issuing marriage licenses to “legally eligible couples,” and ordered that counsel for the five deputy clerks who agreed to issue such licenses to submit a status report every 14 days to ensure that compliance continues.
Davis experienced a religious conversion 4½ years ago and became an Apostolic Christian, a faith which has a strict moral code. She attends Solid Rock Apostolic Church in Morehead, the county seat.
The governor has no legal authority to remove Davis and cannot use an executive order to relieve her of statutory duties, he said.