CLANTON, Ala. — Confusion reigns in Alabama over gay marriage, days after the first same-sex wedding licenses were issued in the Deep South state. Probate judges say it’s been a bewildering week of conflicting signals whether to issue those licenses or not.

Probate judges in at least 22 of the 67 counties are issuing the licenses but others are not – either denying licenses to gay couples or shutting down marriage license operations altogether because the probate judges aren’t sure what to do.

Chilton County Probate Judge Bobby Martin, in the small town of Clanton, is a case in point.

He issued a wedding license to a gay couple first thing Monday after a federal judge ruled the state’s gay marriage ban was unconstitutional. But Martin stopped after learning of a warning from Alabama Chief Justice Roy Moore, a conservative supporter of the state’s gay marriage ban, who wrote the probate judges that such unions were still illegal in the state.

Moore sent a directive to probate judges Sunday instructing them to refuse the licenses – one day before an order by U.S. District Judge Callie Granade allowing gay marriage was to take effect. Moore argued that the probate judges weren’t defendants in the lawsuit that prompted Granade’s decision and didn’t have to abide by the order.

Juggling the sides, Martin said he decided that a federal court order would override a “memorandum” from Moore. So the probate office sold its second marriage license to a gay couple Wednesday.

“It’s like being on a wild ride on a roller coaster,” said Martin, a probate judge for 26 years.

Meanwhile, gay couples are hoping that probate judges statewide will receive clear direction to issue the licenses after a federal court hearing before Granade on Thursday.


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