State lawyers filed a legal notice today morning that said they won't defend a recently overturned Wyoming law that defined marriage as a union between one man and one woman, meaning county clerks can begin to issue marriage licenses to gay couples and the state will recognize same-sex unions performed legally elsewhere.
More than 30 states, including Alaska and Arizona, now recognize same-sex unions in changes triggered by a US Supreme Court decision Oct 6 that refused to hear appeals from states that wanted to defend gay marriage bans.
He died days after the attack on Oct 12, 1998. The slaying galvanized a nationwide push for gay rights and tough penalties for hate crimes.
A celebration of the long-sought victory, featuring what could become Wyoming's first same-sex wedding, was planned for today evening in Cheyenne.
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Wyoming has joined several other politically conservative states in allowing gay marriage after a series of recent court rulings have struck down bans as unconstitutional.
Not many same-sex couples were expected to line up right away because Wyoming, the least populated state in the US, doesn't have a large number of same-sex couples ready to marry.
The Williams Institute, a think-tank at the UCLA school of law, released a study last month saying there were about 700 same-sex couples in Wyoming and that maybe about 200 would choose to marry within the first year of being able to do so under the changed state status.