• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
  • About Towleroad
  • Towleroad on Social Media
  • Privacy Policy

Towleroad Gay News

Gay Blog Towleroad: More than gay news | gay men

  • Travel
  • Sports
  • Law/Justice
  • Celebrities
  • Film/TV/Stream
  • Republicans
  • Madonna
  • Books
  • Men
  • Trans Rights
  • Tech/Science
  • Royals
  • Monkeypox
  • Madonna’s Daughter Lourdes Leon Drops First Single & Steamy Music Video: WATCH
  • Jonathan Knight secretly marries boyfriend Harley Rodriguez
  • Ex-football star Herschel Walker’s woes hurt Republican chance of taking U.S. Senate

Gay Jurors and Marriage Equality: The Common Legal Thread

Ari Ezra Waldman January 22, 2014

AbbottThis step forward in equality comes to us courtesy of a fight between pharmaceutical companies. SmithKline Beecham and Abbott Labs both make HIV medications. SmithKline alleges that Abbott performed a little bait-and-switch: it allowed SmithKline to include Abbott's new HIV drug in its cocktail, but then quadrupled the price so as to make SmithKline's drug combination much less attractive than Abbott's own cheaper therapy. Fast forward to the trial on this allegation and Abbott wants the only openly identified gay person off the jury.

Abbott's lawyers are not being hateful here. HIV health care is of particular concern to the gay community and they want an unbiased jury. The law even allows each side of a jury trial a certain number of what are called "peremptory challenges," or strikes to the jury pool. But you cannot strike someone for an illegitimate reason. A famous case every law student learns called Batson v. Kentucky held that you cannot strike a potential juror from the pool simply on the basis of race. Batson was a criminal case, but the rule has been extended to civil cases like SmithKline's.

So the question was whether the Batson rule applied to sexual orientation.

The Ninth Circuit not only said yes — you cannot strike a juror simply because he is gay — it took us through step by step: First, striking a juror on the basis of sexual orientation implicates unequal treatment. Second, unequal treatment on the basis of sexual orientation merits heightened scrutiny. Third, under that standard, striking a gay juror violates equal protection.

This decision should strike us as just. Being gay has no bearing on your ability to be impartial, to consider the facts, and apply the law. To suggest otherwise burdens our identity with insidious stereotypes and lends institutional support to continued discrimination.

But the court's heightened scrutiny analysis was particularly notable. If you recall, we've discussed heightened scrutiny many times, most in the DOMA and marriage equality context. They speak directly to how a court will analyze a given instance of discrimination. Note that not all discrimination is bad; we discriminate against young people by not allowing them to vote or drive until a certain age. Scrutiny levels tell us how much work the government has to do to justify its discriminatory behavior. They are like hurdles on a race track — the higher the hurdle, the fewer runners are going to make it over and make the team. Similarly, the higher the level of scrutiny, the harder it will be for a discriminatory law to pass constitutional muster.

Many scholars believe that discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation demands heightened scrutiny. We meet all the requirements: we have been burdened by discrimination for generations, our sexuality is irrelevant to our ability to serve as jurors, we have traditionally lacked the political power to realize our full rights in the political sphere, and we have a defining characteristic essential to our identity as a group.

NinthcircuitBut the Ninth Circuit went a step further and argued that the Supreme Court's Windsor decision suggests that heightened scrutiny is appropriate. Review in Windsor, the Ninth Circuit wrote, was not the traditional lowest form of review that had for years been applied to anti-gay discrimination. It was something more, something higher, something "intermediate."

How could the Ninth Circuit justify this conclusion if Windsor never explicitly said it was using heightened scrutiny?

The argument is simple: Look at what the Court actually did, not what it said. In Lawrence v. Texas, for example, the Supreme Court was similarly confounding, but by looking at the Court's decision, it was clear it was not using traditional rational basis. After all, the state had to do more justifying and the cases Lawrence relied on also used something more than rational basis. The same was true for Windsor. The state had to do a lot of work to justify DOMA, the precedent Windsor cited all used more than rational basis, and the Windsor Court did not go through a list of possible rational justifications for DOMA, all of which would normally be the case in a standard rational basis case.

Although I agree that heightened scrutiny should be applied to anti-gay discrimination, there is something missing in the Ninth Circuit's decision. Just because Windsor used something more than rational basis does not necessarily mean it used heightened scrutiny. Many scholars identified a new tier of review in Lawrence, which was used in Windsor, and called it "rational basis plus" or "rational basis with bite." It's tenuous to exist in this unjustifiable limbo between rational basis and heightened scrutiny, but the Ninth Circuit has nonetheless failed to make the jump.

If the Ninth Circuit's opinion catches on, if sexual orientation discrimination gets heightened scrutiny post-Windsor, our battle is more than half over. It is hard to justify banning us from the institution of marriage under rational basis review; heightened scrutiny takes away all doubt.

***

Follow me on Twitter: @ariezrawaldman

Ari Ezra Waldman is a professor of law and the Director of the Institute for Information Law and Policy at New York Law School and is concurrently getting his PhD at Columbia University in New York City. He is a 2002 graduate of Harvard College and a 2005 graduate of Harvard Law School. Ari writes weekly posts on law and various LGBT issues.

Topics: Health, News, Supreme Court More Posts About: Ari Ezra Waldman, Ari Ezra Waldman, gay marriage, Gay Marriage, Law - Gay, LGBT, Law - Gay, LGBT, News

Related Posts
  • Former Roommate Indicted For Murder Of Florida LGBTQ Activist Jorge Diaz-Johnston, One of the Public Faces In State Fight For Marriage Equality
  • Russia Blocks Facebook, Accusing it of Restricting Access to Russian Media;
  • Survivor Benefits Payments For Same-Sex Partners Are Being Paid Under Biden, But Many Don’t Even Know They Qualify
  • Jonathan Knight secretly marries boyfriend Harley Rodriguez

    Jonathan Knight secretly marries boyfriend Harley Rodriguez

    Published by BANG Showbiz English Jonathan Knight has married his boyfriend Harley Rodriguez. The New Kids on the Block star has confirmed he’s a married man after tying the knot with his longtime partner in secret …Read More »
  • Ex-football star Herschel Walker’s woes hurt Republican chance of taking U.S. Senate

    Ex-football star Herschel Walker’s woes hurt Republican chance of taking U.S. Senate

    Published by Reuters By David Morgan WASHINGTON (Reuters) – Republican hopes of taking control of the U.S. Senate in November could hinge on former football star Herschel Walker, a first-time candidate endorsed by Donald Trump, whose …Read More »
  • The Shocking Truth 25 Years After Princess Diana’s Tragic Death — Brother Charles Speaks Out

    The Shocking Truth 25 Years After Princess Diana’s Tragic Death — Brother Charles Speaks Out

    Published by OK Magazine mega August 31 marks the 25th anniversary of Princess Diana’s tragic death — and her only brother, Charles, proudly spoke out about his sister! “I’m always surprised by how difficult August 31 …Read More »
  • U.S. releases 2019 memo opposing Trump obstruction charges

    U.S. releases 2019 memo opposing Trump obstruction charges

    Published by Reuters By Sarah N. Lynch WASHINGTON (Reuters) -The Justice Department on Wednesday released under court order all of a 2019 memo https://www.justice.gov/file/1528466/download in which two top officials advised then-Attorney General William Barr not to …Read More »
Previous Post: « Gay Marriage Documentary Seeks Funding On Kickstarter: VIDEO
Next Post: News: Armistead Maupin, Jerry Smith, Lou Pearlman, ‘YMCA’ »

Primary Sidebar

Adjacent News

  • Ivanka Trump & Jared Kushner Contently Stroll Hand-In-Hand As Donald Trump’s Legal Woes Mount

    Ivanka Trump & Jared Kushner Contently Stroll Hand-In-Hand As Donald Trump’s Legal Woes Mount

  • Biden to hold first political rally in run-up to November elections

    Biden to hold first political rally in run-up to November elections

  • Trump has displayed ‘anxiety in private conversations’ following Mar-a-Lago search: report

    Trump has displayed ‘anxiety in private conversations’ following Mar-a-Lago search: report

Good Trash: Going to Read It Somewhere, Y’know

  • Duke and Duchess of Sussex adopt new rescue dog

    Duke and Duchess of Sussex adopt new rescue dog

  • Vanessa Bryant awarded 16m in damages over helicopter crash photos

    Vanessa Bryant awarded 16m in damages over helicopter crash photos

  • Lisa Scott-Lee recalls surreal dinner date with Michael Jackson

    Lisa Scott-Lee recalls surreal dinner date with Michael Jackson

RSS Partner Links

  • An error has occurred, which probably means the feed is down. Try again later.

Most Recent

  • Madonna’s Daughter Lourdes Leon Drops First Single & Steamy Music Video: WATCH

    Madonna’s Daughter Lourdes Leon Drops First Single & Steamy Music Video: WATCH

  • Jonathan Knight secretly marries boyfriend Harley Rodriguez

    Jonathan Knight secretly marries boyfriend Harley Rodriguez

  • Ex-football star Herschel Walker’s woes hurt Republican chance of taking U.S. Senate

    Ex-football star Herschel Walker’s woes hurt Republican chance of taking U.S. Senate

  • The Shocking Truth 25 Years After Princess Diana’s Tragic Death — Brother Charles Speaks Out

    The Shocking Truth 25 Years After Princess Diana’s Tragic Death — Brother Charles Speaks Out

  • U.S. releases 2019 memo opposing Trump obstruction charges

    U.S. releases 2019 memo opposing Trump obstruction charges

  • William Orbit: ‘Queen loves DJs as long as they end sets with National Anthem’

    William Orbit: ‘Queen loves DJs as long as they end sets with National Anthem’

  • Sir Rod Stewart takes another cheeky dig at his long-time pal Sir Elton John with stage mockery

    Sir Rod Stewart takes another cheeky dig at his long-time pal Sir Elton John with stage mockery

  • Scott Maxwell: Marco Rubio says his campaign is ‘a disaster.’ Is he crying wolf or truly scared of Demings?

    Scott Maxwell: Marco Rubio says his campaign is ‘a disaster.’ Is he crying wolf or truly scared of Demings?

Most Commented

Social

Twitter @tlrd | Facebook | Instagram @tlrd

Footer

Copyright © 2025 · Log in

×