Tuesday, August 19, 2008
Judge agrees former lesbian partner in Vt. has right to see child
A Frederick County judge said Vermont orders granting visitation rights must be enforced.
WINCHESTER -- A judge has dismissed the latest attempt by a woman to deny visitation rights to her former lesbian partner.
Frederick County Circuit Court Judge John Prosser on Monday dismissed Lisa Miller's request to halt efforts to enforce a Vermont court's orders granting Janet Jenkins visitation with the daughter born to her and Miller in April 2002. Prosser agreed with lawyers for the American Civil Liberties Union, who argued that lower courts and the Virginia Supreme Court already had ruled in Jenkins' favor.
Prosser remanded the case to the county juvenile court for enforcement of the Vermont orders.
ACLU attorney Rebecca Glenberg said Miller's lawyers were trying unsuccessfully to re-litigate the case, attempting an "end run" around the state Supreme Court decision.
Mathew Staver, founder of Liberty Counsel and dean of the law school at Liberty University in Lynchburg, said his client plans to appeal the case, arguing that Virginia courts shouldn't enforce Vermont's custody orders because of a state constitutional amendment barring same-sex marriage and the enforcement of same-sex civil unions.
Jenkins has been fighting for visitation rights since the dissolution of the civil union she and Miller obtained in Vermont in 2000. The legal battle is closely watched by national conservative and gay rights groups.
Miller renounced homosexuality and moved back to Virginia with now 6-year-old Isabella after the couple split, and she has fought Jenkins' visitation efforts. However, the Virginia Supreme Court ruled in June that a federal law aimed at preventing parents from crossing state lines to evade a custody ruling requires Virginia courts to enforce Vermont's order.





