A federal court has reserved judgment after hearing oral arguments Friday in a lawsuit seeking to overturn Indiana’s ban on same-sex nuptials.
U.S. District Judge Richard Young, a President Clinton appointee, said he would deliberate and rule at a later date on whether to expand an earlier decision that cleared the way for two women to become the first legally married same-sex couple in the Hoosier State.
Amy Sandler and Niki Quasney were married in Massachusetts last year, more than a decade after they first met. But because the couple lives in Indiana, which only recognizes marriages between heterosexual couples, Quasney’s legal rights to Sandler’s biological children were murky at best. So were Sandler’s rights to make emergency medical decisions or even visit Quasney, who is battling terminal cancer, in the hospital. The couple sought immediate recognition of their marriage so that they could access federal and state benefits for surviving spouses and have their union reflected on Quasney’s death certificate.
Judge Young granted a temporary restraining order against Indiana’s same-sex marriage ban last month, compelling the state the recognize Quasney and Sandler’s union. They were the only couple affected by the judge’s order, which expires on May 8.
But they weren’t satisfied.
“I don’t feel good about it,” Quasney told The Indianapolis Star about the temporary recognition of her marriage. “I don’t want to feel like this should be a special privilege just because I have cancer. I think that does not seem right.”
Attorneys were back in court Friday in the case, Baskin v. Bogan, filed by Lambda Legal in March on behalf of five same-sex couples, including Quasney and Sandler. Both sides asked Judge Young for a permanent resolution in the case, but were told they’d have to wait.
Plaintiffs sought to extend marriage rights not just for Quasney and Sandler, but for all same-sex couples in Indiana.









