A federal appeals court will allow the military to continue enforcing the law restricting the service of openly gay men and women in the military while a lower court decision that struck the law down as unconstitutional is being appealed.
A federal judge in California, Virginia A. Phillips, ruled on Sept. 9 that the “don’t ask, don’t tell” law violated the equal protection and First Amendment rights of service members, and wrote that it had a “direct and deleterious effect” on the armed services. On Oct. 12, she ordered the military to stop enforcing the law nationwide.
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More News On The Appeals Court Allowing The Military To Continue DADT
Appeals court extends life of gay military policy -- AP
Appellate panel says 'don't ask, don't tell' should stay during appeal -- CNN
Don't Ask, Don't Tell can stay in effect, judges say -- L.A. Times
Military's 'Don't Ask, Don't Tell' Policy Remains In Effect, Court Rules -- NPR
Court extends gay military ban pending appeal -- BBC
Court stays 'don't ask' ruling enforcement -- UPI
Appeals Court Rules 'Don't Ask Don't Tell' Policy Can Remain in Effect -- ABC News
'Don't ask' will be the law until at least spring -- San Francisco Chronicle
Federal appeals court keeps 'Don't ask, Don't tell' policy in place -- The Hill
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