The South Carolina couple suing the state over its voter-approved marriage ban is still awaiting a hearing in their case. But a major ruling Monday on same-sex marriage has Tracie Goodwin and Katie Bradacs feeling cautiously optimistic that their marriage may finally be recognized in this deeply conservative Southern state.
In a 2-1 decision, the 4th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a lower court decision in finding Virginia’s ban on same-sex marriage unconstitutional. Because South Carolina falls under the 4th Circuit — along with Maryland, West Virginia and North Carolina – the court’s ruling could overturn South Carolina’s ban as well.
“I was ecstatic when I found out,” said Goodwin, 35, who first learned the news from Bradacs’s cousin.
In August 2013, Goodwin and Bradacs’ initiated their own challenge to South Carolina’s gay marriage ban. The case, Bradacs v. Haley, was filed in the 4th Circuit but stayed pending a decision in Virginia. Carrie Warner, the attorney for the couple, is expected to file for a hearing, according to Goodwin.
Unlike neighboring North Carolina, which has announced it will stop defending its constitutional ban on same-sex marriage, South Carolina plans to continue upholding the law, which the state passed in 1996 and voters reaffirmed through an amendment in 2006.
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“Currently, South Carolina’s law remains intact, and, of course, our office will continue to defend it,” said J. Mark Powell, spokesman for the state’s Republican Attorney General Alan Wilson.
“The 4th Circuit ruling is fairly lengthy and our attorneys are reviewing its impact on South Carolina and the Bradacs case,” Wilson added. Nikki Haley, the state’s Republican governor, also indicated in a statement her administration will continue to uphold the ban.
Bradacs and Goodwin aren’t the only LGBT individuals challenging South Carolina’s ban: In March, a woman in the upstate region filed at the county level to have her divorce recognized by the state.
Goodwin — who works in IT for the state, and Bradacs, 31, a highway state trooper — married in Washington D.C. in 2012, two years after same-sex nuptials became legal there. Together, they are raising three children.
Goodwin said she’s puzzled by her state’s continued effort not to recognize her marriage and that of other same-sex couples.









