Hundreds of people are formally renouncing their membership in the Mormon church in protest over a new policy that punishes same-sex couples and their children, an attorney assisting them said.
Utah lawyer Mark Naugle, 30, whose family split with the church 15 years ago, is offering his services pro bono to those who want help with the paperwork involved in getting off the rolls.
In the week since the policy was announced, 1,700 people have contacted him, he said.
“People are fed up and just don’t want their name associated with the church any more,” Naugle said.
RELATED: Mormon Church bars children of same-sex couples from baptism, blessings
Salt Lake City realtor Joey Furtado, 42, became a Mormon as a teenager in Brazil and spent two years as a missionary before moving to Utah. But by 2001, he was disillusioned with his adopted faith and stopped attending services.
But he said he never bothered to make it official, in part because he worried it would be a hassle.
“I have a friend who sent a resignation letter and months later had members of the church knocking at his door trying to reactivate him,” Furtado said.
But after the church’s declaration last week, Furtado decided to cut ties for good.
“I am not a gay man. I have a girlfriend and two sons, so the policy does not affect me directly, but I have seen families in a situation like this,” he said.
“I don’t want to have anything to do with them anymore … enough is enough.”
Leaving the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints doesn’t require legal representation, but Naugle said that his forms simplify the process and he acts a buffer between clients and church leaders who may try to convince them not to leave.









