A federal judge struck down Mississippi’s ban on adoption by same-sex couples Thursday — making the practice legal nationwide.
“We are obviously thrilled with today’s ruling, but our clients are beyond ecstatic,” said Roberta Kaplan, lead attorney in the case for the Campaign for Southern Equality, a North Carolina-based activist group, which represented four Mississippi couples in the suit along with the Massachusetts-based Family Equality Council.
RELATED: Mississippi Senate passes sweeping ‘religious liberty’ bill
We just won Mississippi adoption case! So proud of our brave clients! @CSELive @family_equality https://t.co/8jEk8Px3ai
— Robbie Kaplan (@kaplanrobbie) March 31, 2016
Instead, they argued that the gay and lesbian rights groups didn’t have legal standing to sue — and said they wouldn’t have enforced the law anyway.
Mississippi was the last state to have such a ban on the books after the US Supreme Court’s landmark decision last year legalizing same-sex marriage.
Jordan said in a 28-page ruling filed Thursday in Jackson that the high court decision included equal protection provisions that applied to adoption by same-sex parents, as well.









