Some Indiana Gay Marriages Could Be Invalid

In this Dec. 20, 2012 file photo Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller speaks at the Statehouse in Indianapolis. Lawyers representing Wisconsin and Indiana’s attorney general offices defended their states’ same-sex marriage bans before a federal appeals court in Chicago on Tuesday, Aug. 26, 2014 (AP Photo/Darron Cummings, File)
The Indiana Attorney General's office says same-sex couples who married in the two days after the state's gay marriage ban was first struck down should confirm their marriages were properly recorded.
The Attorney General's office sent a memo to county clerks saying those couples faced unusual circumstances because same-sex marriages were allowed for a short time before a ruling against the ban was put on hold by a federal appeals court.
The Times of Munster reports those marriages might not be legally valid if couples didn't solemnize their marriage within 60 days of receiving a marriage license or the county clerks didn't record them within 3 days.
The office says those couples could obtain a new license and complete the necessary steps to avoid any uncertainty.
Links
- Indiana Clerks Must Issue Gay Marriage Licenses
- High Court Turns Away Gay Marriage Appeals in Five States, Including Indiana
- Indiana Asks Supreme Court To Settle Gay Marriage
- Appeals Court Rules Against Gay Marriage Bans In Indiana, Wisconsin
- Bucking Legal Trend, Federal Judge Upholds Louisiana’s Ban On Gay Marriage
- Indiana Told To Honor Other States’ Gay Marriages
- Indiana Governor’s Office Tells Agencies To Ignore Gay Marriages
- Motion Filed To Protect Indiana’s 1st Gay Marriage
- Judge Strikes Down Indiana Ban On Gay Marriage
- Judge Strikes Down Wisconsin Gay Marriage Ban