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Griego v. Oliver - Freedom to Marry in New Mexico

Location: New Mexico
Status: Closed (Judgment)
Last Update: April 25, 2014

What's at Stake

Six same-sex couples, represented by the ACLU, the ACLU of New Mexico, the National Center for Lesbian Rights (NCLR) and Albuquerque law firm Sutin, Thayer & Browne, APC, filed a lawsuit against the State of New Mexico and the Santa Fe and Bernalillo County Clerks seeking the freedom to marry. The lawsuit argues that the New Mexico marriage statutes and the New Mexico Constitution do not bar same-sex couples from marrying, and that the New Mexico Constitution requires the state to allow same-sex couples the freedom to marry.

On August 21, 2013 we filed a request for an emergency order on behalf of Plaintiffs Jen Roper and Angelique Neuman. Jen and Angelique have been together for over 21 years, and have long wanted to marry. In late 2012, however, Jen was diagnosed with an advanced and aggressive brain cancer, and doctors told her that she had only 18 months to live. By August of this year Jen was too sick to travel to another state to marry, and she was not sure she could wait for the normal course of a lawsuit. To allow Jen and Angelique to marry before it was too late, we asked the court for an emergency order, which the court granted, and Jen and Angelique were married in a ceremony performed at a cancer care clinic, during a break from a chemotherapy infusion.

In addition to allowing Jen and Angelique to marry, the court entered a Final Judgment, in which it concluded that denying same-sex couples the freedom to marry violates the New Mexico Constitution. The Judgment applies not only to the Santa Fe and Bernalillo County Clerks, but also to the New Mexicfo Association of Counties (NMAC), which intervened in the litigation and which represents all 33 County Clerks in New Mexico.

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