- Posted January 25, 2012
- Tweet This | Share on Facebook
Women sue over adoption ban for unmarried couples
HAZEL PARK (AP) -- Two lesbians who are raising three children filed a lawsuit Monday to overturn Michigan's ban on adoption by unmarried couples.
April DeBoer, with two adopted children, and Jayne Rowse, with one, are longtime partners and nurses who live together with the kids in suburban Detroit. But under state law, they can't adopt them as a couple, an option available only to heterosexual married couples.
"Jayne and I love our children as deeply as any other parent loves their kids," DeBoer said in the statement. "We just want our children to have the same protections all other children have so that our kids know they can never be taken from either of us."
The lawsuit filed in federal court in Detroit claims the women's civil rights are being violated. By adopting as a couple, DeBoer and Rowse would be confident that the children would be cared for in case of death or another emergency, the lawsuit states.
The children, ages 3 and under, were born to biological parents who couldn't care for them.
"Michigan'as law prohibiting second parent adoptions by unmarried persons serves no legitimate government interest. ... The undisputed sociological and psychological evidence demonstrates that unmarried persons, straight, gay or lesbian, are no less loving, caring and effective parents than those parents who are married to each other," the lawsuit says.
The lawsuit names Gov. Rick Snyder and Attorney General Bill Schuette as defendants.
"We have not seen the suit yet, but our job is to enforce and defend all laws as enacted by the Legislature," Schuette spokesman John Sellek said. "Any changes to a law would have to originate in the Legislature."
Published: Wed, Jan 25, 2012
headlines Oakland County
- Solo practitioner happy to spearhead association’s Young Lawyers Section
- Woman sentenced following felony animal neglect conviction involving 37 animals
- Four to stand trial in connection to death of 5-year-old after hyperbaric chamber explosion at Oxford Center
- ‘Now is not the time to walk back the progress that we have made,’ ABA president says at Midyear Meeting
- Two convicted of conducting criminal enterprise in 2022 signature collection election fraud scheme
headlines National
- Inter American University of Puerto Rico School of Law back in compliance with ABA standard
- Chemerinsky: The Fourth Amendment comes back to the Supreme Court
- Reinstatement of retired judge reversed by state supreme court
- Mass tort lawyer suspended for 3 years for lying to clients
- Law firms in Minneapolis are helping lawyers, staff navigate unrest
- Federal judge faces trial on charges of being ‘super drunk’ while driving




