There’s one U.S. government institution that still criminalizes consensual gay sex: the military.
Two years into the relatively uneventful implementation of the repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell, it may seem strange that gay and lesbian service members are still technically barred from having sex. Article 125 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice however, is technically still in effect. Article 125 makes it a criminal offense to “engage in unnatural carnal copulation” with “another person of the same or opposite sex or with an animal.” With the Supreme Court having struck down anti-sodomy laws nationwide in 2003, a subsequent military court of appeals decision in 2004, and the repeal of Don’t Ask Don’t Tell in 2010, Article 125 is almost unenforceable, as long as sexual relations don’t run afoul of other military regulations like prohibitions on officers sleeping with enlisted personnel. Technically, the language also criminalizes “unnatural” consensual sexual contact for heterosexual service members as well, but it criminalizes any sexual contact for gay and lesbian service members.
“The circumstances under which it can be prosecuted are limited,” says Beth Hillman, a law professor at the University of California’s Hastings College of Law. “It would be difficult for them to go far without violating Supreme Court precedent.” In fact, prosecutions of consensual same-sex activity that don’t violate other standards of military behavior ceased during the Bush administration. “Commanders and Judge Advocate Generals do not use [Article] 125 against same sex service members because it simply does not apply. It is moot,” says Pentagon spokesperson Lt. Col. Todd Breasseale. “The sole exceptions are when aggravating circumstances exist, like with a child, or if it’s by force, or without consent.”
Nevertheless, supporters of LGBT rights want Article 125 off the books, saying it stigmatizes gay and lesbian service members. “Article 125 currently includes this prohibition alongside a ban on bestiality,” says Ian Thompson of the ACLU. “To say that is stigmatizing and discriminatory to these service members and their relationships is an understatement.” Even if you’re married, if you’re gay, the UCMJ still views your relationship with your spouse as “unnatural.”
Several Democratic senators agree that Article 125 needs to change. Colorado Democratic Senator Mark Udall, along with his Democratic colleagues Kirsten Gillibrand of New York and Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire, have sponsored an amendment to this year’s defense bill that would alter Article 125 so that it no longer criminalizes service members who engage in consensual intimacy with persons of the same sex. The Senate Armed Services Committee approved the Udall proposal as part of the defense bill it sent to the full Senate last week.
“The persistence of it on the books is archaic,” says Hillman. “It would be cleaning up the UCMJ to get rid of it, it makes perfect sense to do so.”









