|
Sodomy Laws - History of Sodomy
The Sensibilities of Our Forefathers
The History of Sodomy Laws in the United States
By George Painter
© Copyright, George Painter 1991-2005
Virginia
"This character of evil conduct is the vice of low and depraved natures, and instances of it appear to have been notably rare in this jurisdiction."
The Colonial Period, 1607-1776
The first charter granted by King James I to the Virginia colonists
1
in 1606 contained a provision that all residents of the Jamestown colony "shall have and enjoy all liberties, franchises, and immunities" the same as residents of
England.
2
The ruling councils were given authority to enact laws, but English laws were
not
considered in force.
3
In 1607, shortly after the first settlement of Jamestown (initially settled only by men), there were reports of sailors stealing food for which they traded sexual favors.
4
In 1609, the English government increased the powers of the Virginia government and the local government, in turn, gave vast power to Lord Delaware, the colony’s lord-governor.
5
Sodomy apparently became common because, in 1610, a military order was adopted stating that
[n]o man shal
[sic]
commit the horrible, and detestable sinnes of Sodomie upon pain of death[.]
6
It is not known if this regulation ever was enforced.
7
A revised charter from 1611
8
granted by King James I made reference to "most vile and slanderous reports" coming from Virginia that bring the "plantation into disgrace and contempt."
9
The new charter gave the power to the colony’s rulers over "notorious misdemeanors" and "indecent carriages" as they would be handled in England.
10
In 1618, the military order banning sodomy ended when martial law was terminated upon the change in control of the Virginia Company.
11
A new charter granted in 1621
12
created a semi-autonomous government for Virginia. The government was charged with
first and principally...the advancement of the honour and service of God, and the enlargement of his kingdom against the heathen people.
13
as well as
maintaining the said people in justice and christian conversation amongst themselves.
14
The new House of Burgesses could enact laws subject to an absolute veto of the Governor
15
as well as disapproval by the English Parliament.
16
The laws were required to
imitate and follow the policy of the form of government, laws, customs, and manner of trial, and other administration of justice, used in the realm of England, as near
as may be even as ourselves, by his majesty’s letters patent, are required.
17
This section required the colony generally to mimic laws of England
if it adopted laws,
but did not expressly adopt all laws of England. Thomas Jefferson, in his writings on early Virginia history, stated that
[t]he laws of England seem to have been adopted by consent of the settlers, which might easily enough be done whilst they were few and living all together. Of such
adoption, however, we have no other proof than their practice[.]
18
In 1623, the Virginia Company tottered on the verge of bankruptcy and the charter was revoked. This action made Virginia, as of early 1624, a royal colony ruled by a committee
of 40 men appointed by the Privy Council in England.
19
Whether this was considered to have reinstated English law in the colony is not known.
This point is important because a man lost his life when convicted of sodomy. In 1625, Richard Cornish was hanged in Virginia after he was accused of forcibly sodomizing
another man.
20
The alleged victim, William Cowse, was referred to as a "rascally boy" and two men who knew both individuals claimed that Cornish was convicted wrongfully. Both
were punished severely for their statements.
21
In 1629, the Virginia courts were faced with the case of Thomas Hall, an alleged hermaphrodite sometimes known as Thomasine Hall. Hall dressed as a woman to obtain sex,
apparently from men, since he stressed that he had "a piece of a hole." Hall was punished by being required to wear both men’s and women’s clothes.
22
In 1659, the Virginia House of Burgesses declared themselves the supreme power in the Virginia Colony until and unless contrary directions came from England.
23
Any ambiguity as to what laws were in effect disappeared with the passage of a statute in 1661
24
that pledged the colony to "addhere
[sic]
to those excellent and often refined laws of England, to which we profess and acknowledge all due obedience and reverence[.]"
25
This law was enacted after the restoration of royal rule in England in 1660.
In 1673, all of the Virginia colony was given to two nobles as a proprietary colony, the grant initially to last 31 years, but the crown regained the colony well before
then. It is unclear if English law would have been suspended during this time.
26
Period Summary:
Virginia, the first of the English colonies to be founded, apparently did not recognize sodomy as a crime except for less than a decade, and then as a military
regulation. Early reports from the all-male colony showed sexual activity, but there appeared to be no suppression of it. A man was hanged for sodomy in 1625,
but the authority for the prosecution remains unclear. It was not until 1661 that English laws specifically were adopted in the colony. Thomas Jefferson commented
that there is no proof that English laws were followed in the colony prior to that time.
The Post-Revolution Period, 1776-1873
In 1777, Thomas Jefferson and others worked on a proposed new criminal code for Virginia in anticipation of the success of the American Revolution. The proposed new sodomy
law would have eliminated the death penalty and replaced it with castration for males and the boring of a hole through the nose of a woman. The proposal did not become law,
but clearly showed that women were subject to prosecution under current legal thinking.
27
In 1792, when Virginia enacted its first sodomy law,
28
it still was not ready for the removal of the death penalty. The law did, however, make certain that women were liable to prosecution. The new law read
That if any do commit the detestable and abominable vice of Buggery, with man or beast, he or she so offending, shall be adjudged a felon, and shall suffer death, in
the case of felony, without the benefit of Clergy.
29
This law makes it clear that a woman could not be a victim of sodomy, but could be a perpetrator.
In 1800, the Virginia legislature showed its willingness to reduce the penalty for sodomy, but only for some people. A new statute
30
set a penalty of 1-10 years for free persons committing sodomy either as principal or as accessory, but did not reduce the death penalty for slaves.
31
A book published for justices of the peace in 1810
32
gave legal and historical information on various crimes and prescribed indictment forms. Despite the broader wording of the 1792 and 1800 sodomy laws, it appears that
there was a stereotyped belief among authorities as to how sodomy was committed. The "Indictment for Buggery" provided that
[name of defendant]..., labourer, not having the fear of God before his eyes, nor regarding the order of nature, but being moved and seduced by the instigation of
the devil, on the ____ day of ____ in the year of our Lord ____ with force and arms, at the county aforesaid, in and upon
one ____ a youth about the age of ____ years,
then and there being, feloniously did make and assault, and then and there feloniously, wickedly, diabolically, and against the order of nature, had a venereal
affair with the said ____ and then and there carnally knew the said ____...
33
[Emphasis is the book’s].
Thus, sodomy was perceived as always being accomplished by force, against a minor, and by a member of the working class.
The first reported sodomy case in Virginia was
Commonwealth v. Thomas,
34
from 1812. The General Court of Virginia voted 8-0 against Thomas’s contention that emission of semen had to be proven to establish the crime.
35
This was the first such case in the United States and its precedent was followed by most other states.
A statute of 1819
36
pulled together from disparate sections of Virginia law the penalties for both free persons and slaves, keeping the 1-10 year penalty for the former and death without
benefit of clergy for the latter.
37
No other change occurred in the law until 1848 when a new statute
38
reduced the maximum penalty for sodomy for free persons from 10 years to five years, without changing the death penalty for slaves.
39
This discrimination finally disappeared with the adoption of a new code of law in 1860.
40
The 1-5 year penalty remained but the word "free" disappeared, thus reducing the penalty for slaves.
41
Period Summary:
A proposed criminal code during the American Revolution, advocated by Thomas Jefferson, was rejected by the legislature. Other than giving Virginia its first sodomy
statute, the code would have made Virginia the first to eliminate the death penalty for the crime. It was not until after statehood, in 1792, that the first sodomy
statute was enacted, but the death penalty was retained. That penalty disappeared for free persons in 1800, but not for slaves until just before the Civil War.
Virginia had one of the earliest reported sodomy cases and one of great historical importance to the country. In 1812, the Virginia Supreme Court broke with English
precedent and ruled that an act of sodomy could be complete upon penetration only, rather than requiring emission as well. Most other states then followed the
Virginia lead.
The Victorian Morality Period, 1873-1948
A new law in 1878
42
raised the minimum penalty for sodomy to two years while making no change in the 5-year maximum.
43
In 1895, the Virginia Supreme Court decided the case of
Williams v. Commonwealth,
44
and began a string of consecutive sodomy conviction reversals. Brown Williams, a boy who had not yet reached the age of 12, had been convicted of sodomy. Believing it to
be "extremely doubtful, to say the least, whether the plaintiff in error was capable of committing the offense," the Court unanimously overturned his conviction.
45
In 1916, Virginia amended its sodomy
46
law to expand its scope to cover oral sex. However, the legislature made a unique contribution to law for more than a half century when it worded the provision to read:
"If any person...[shall] have carnal copulation in any manner with another person
of the same sex...[Emphasis added].
47
Fellatio and cunnilingus could be enjoyed by heterosexuals, but not Gay men or Lesbians.
The Virginia Supreme Court followed the dictates of this statute in the case of
Wise v. Commonwealth,
48
decided in 1923, when it unanimously overturned the conviction of a heterosexual man for cunnilingus. The Court stated that it could not understand why the legislature
put the same-sex restriction into the law
unless because the legislators did not even imagine that such an offense would ever be committed between a man and a woman.
49
However, the Court was confident that the legislature "will cure the oversight when called to its attention[.]"
50
In concluding, the Court said that it "can hardly be necessary for us to say that the subject of this opinion has been distasteful."
51
They had endeavored to reach the conclusion
without unnecessary indelicacy of expression, but also without prudery or idle denunciation of the act charged. This character of evil conduct is the vice of low
and depraved natures, and instances of it appear to have been notably rare in this jurisdiction.
52
The legislature did exactly as the Court suggested. In 1924, the law was reworded
53
to read
If any person shall carnally know in any manner any brute animal, or carnally know any male of female person by the anus or by or with the mouth, or voluntarily
submit to such carnal knowledge, he or she shall be guilty of a felony and shall be confined in the penitentiary not less than one nor more than three years.
54
Thus, even though the law was broadened, the penalty was reduced from 2-5 years to 1-3 years. Also, the archaic term "buggery" finally was eliminated.
In 1925, the Virginia Supreme Court unanimously overturned the sodomy conviction in
Hudson v. Commonwealth.
55
Two men became intoxicated and were found in the same bed "so stupefied that water had to be thrown on both of them before either regained consciousness."
Hudson’s head was lying on the stomach of the other and he held the other man’s penis in his hand. The Court believed that this was insufficient evidence to sustain
the conviction.
56
Period Summary:
During this time, the Virginia Supreme Court reversed every sodomy conviction to come before it. During World War I, Virginia followed the lead of other states
and amended its law to permit prosecution for oral sex, except that this provision was limited to acts between those of the same sex. There is no historical
indication as to why this discrimination was enacted and, when a heterosexual oral sex case appeared before it, the Virginia Supreme Court reluctantly reversed
on that ground. The legislature speedily revised the law to include heterosexual acts.
The Kinsey Period, 1948-1986
In 1950, Virginia enacted a psychopathic offender law.
57
The law covered only criminal offenses that revealed "sexual abnormality" and permitted the mental examination of persons committing such crimes.
58
With a mental health report, the trial judge could decide "what disposition shall be made of the defendant."
59
No statutory guidelines limited the judge’s power in this disposition.
This law was interpreted by the Attorney General in an opinion
60
in 1951. Answering a query as to whether the law required the judge to sentence an offender to prison after the evaluation, the Attorney General said that it did not.
61
Just how corrosive the Virginia Supreme Court was toward evidence in sodomy convictions is shown by the extreme case of
Commonwealth v. Pepoon,
62
from 1951. Timothy Pepoon’s sodomy conviction was overturned because there was no corroboration of the testimony of his alleged
three-year-old
partner, who had made an off-hand comment to his mother about being touched on his genitals by Pepoon.
In 1960, the Court shot down a sodomy conviction in the companion cases of
Phillips v. Commonwealth
and
Campbell v. Commonwealth.
63
In this case, Phillips claimed that he was approached by a "boy," Campbell, whose age is never stated, and, at Campbell’s suggestion, engaged in an act of sodomy.
Campbell countered with the claim that Phillips gave him a lift, but, once inside the car, put his hand on Campbell’s leg. Campbell ended up keeping Phillips’s car overnight
and that fact alone was used as corroboration of his act of sodomy.
64
The Court felt that this was insufficient and reversed the conviction.
65
The case of
Ashby v. Commonwealth
66
from 1968 led to the Virginia Supreme Court unanimously deciding that the sodomy law was not violated by the mere placing of a mouth on a penis. Actual penetration of the
mouth had to be proven.
67
An opinion of the Attorney General
68
from 1968 gave the go-ahead to local prosecutors to charge Gay men soliciting for sex under the common-law crimes provision of the Virginia Code. There was no specific
solicitation statute in Virginia.
The psychopathic offender law was amended in 1970
69
to
require
the trial judge to order an examination of any person the Commonwealth’s attorney asked to have evaluated.
70
A comprehensive criminal code revision in 1975
71
raised the penalty for sodomy from a 3-year maximum to a 5-year maximum, but gave the jury the option of a sentence of up to one year in a jail and/or a fine.
72
A constitutional challenge to the law in federal court in 1975 led to defeat. In
Doe v. Commonwealth’s Attorney for the City of Richmond,
73
a 2-1 vote of the panel upheld the law. Writing for the Court, Judge Albert Bryan said that, although [n]o judgment is made upon the wisdom or policy of the statute,"
the law did not violate the Constitution.
74
There was no bar to criminal penalties for sodomy "since it is obviously no portion of marriage, home or family life[.]"
75
In circular logic, the criminal statute was found to be within the state’s interest because the law was "simply directed to the suppression of crime, whether committed
in public or in private."
76
The state was
not required to show that moral delinquency actually results from homosexuality. It is enough for upholding the legislation to establish that the conduct is likely to
end in a contribution to moral delinquency. Plainly, it would indeed be impracticable to prove the actuality of such a consequence, and the law is not so exacting.
77
After noting the length of time that sodomy had been proscribed, and making a footnote reference to the Biblical condemnation in Leviticus,
78
the Court concluded that Virginia showed a "rational basis of State interest[.]"
79
In dissent, Judge Robert Merhige noted that Virginia, in its arguments in favor of the law, had offered
no evidence which even impliedly demonstrated that homosexuality causes society any significant harm. No effort was made by defendants to establish either a rational
basis or a compelling state interest so as to justify the proscription of [the sodomy law] presently under attack. To suggest, as defendants do, that the prohibition
of homosexual conduct will in some manner encourage new heterosexual marriages and prevent the dissolution of existing ones is unworthy of judicial response.
80
Merhige felt that "one can only conclude that the sole basis of the proscription of homosexuality was what the majority refers to as the promotion of morality and
decency."
81
In his conclusion, Merhige stated that the other two judges "misinterpreted the issue—the issue centers not around morality and decency, but the constitutional
right of privacy."
82
The plaintiffs then appealed directly to the U.S. Supreme Court for review, bypassing the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals. The high court surprised the nation when
it simply affirmed the District Court decision on appeal by a vote of 6-3.
83
Thus, a major constitutional issue was decided by the United States Supreme Court without even the courtesy of granting the plaintiffs a hearing on their case.
The extent to which private sexual relations can be regulated was documented by the 1976 case of
Lovisi et ux. v. Slayton et al.
84
A married couple, Aldo and Margaret Lovisi, went to prison for consensual sodomy between themselves and between Mrs. Lovisi and another man. They were caught only
because they had pictures taken of themselves in the act, and their children got their hands on them and took them to school. Sitting
en banc,
the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals divided 5-3 to uphold the convictions. The opinion was written by Chief Judge Clement Haynsworth, who had been rejected by the
U.S. Senate for a seat on the Supreme Court in 1969. Haynsworth said that the court could "assume" that the fellatio in which the Lovisis engaged was
constitutionally protected under the right to privacy enunciated by the Supreme Court.
85
However, once
a married couple admits strangers as onlookers, federal protection of privacy dissolves. It matters not whether the audience is composed of one, fifty, or
one hundred, or whether the onlookers pay for their titillation. If the couple performs sexual acts for the excitation or gratification of welcome onlookers,
they cannot selectively claim that the state is an intruder. They possess the freedom to follow their own inclinations in privacy, but one they accept onlookers,
whether they are close friends, chance acquaintances, observed "peeping Toms" or paying customers, they may not exclude the state as a constitutionally
forbidden intruder.
86
Thus, Haynsworth said that married couples, and therefore obviously the unmarried, could not set the parameters of their privacy within their own home. That was the
job of the state. Judge Harrison Winter, writing for the dissenters, noted that the majority’s opinion had cited no authorities for its conclusion and he cited a long
string of case law that reached the opposite conclusion.
87
Winter noted that the majority said explicitly that the Lovisis could write a book about their sexual activity, thus sharing it with everyone, but could not, on their
own decision, invite one or more parties into their own home to witness it.
88
The U.S. Supreme Court, half a year after its widely attacked summary affirmance in
Doe,
declined to hear the
Lovisi
case.
89
In 1979, the Virginia Supreme Court broke its string of conviction reversals when it upheld a solicitation conviction in
Pedersen v. City of Richmond.
90
Pedersen had been arrested by an undercover police officer, Kenneth Palmer, who was working for Richmond’s "Selective Enforcement Unit," a police unit whose
name alone suggests much.
91
Palmer was working "a known area for homosexuals" when he was approached by Pedersen in his car and invited in on a cold winter night. Palmer testified that,
once inside the car, Pedersen said "that I looked nice in my blue jeans and that he would like to see me naked."
92
Palmer also testified that he answered Pedersen’s questions about "what type of things [sexual acts] did I like" and when Pedersen popped the question,
Palmer arrested him.
93
Breaking its impressive line of more than 80 years of stringent testing of state’s evidence, the Supreme Court rejected Pedersen’s argument that
the evidence is susceptible of the reasonable inference that the officer was solicited for one of such non-criminal forms of deviant sexual behavior between two
males, as kissing, fondling, or what his counsel on oral argument referred to as "partner masturbating." We agree that it could reasonably be inferred
that Pedersen, who was willing to try almost anything, had one or more acts of non-criminal sexual perversion in mind. However, the evidence that he wanted to see
Palmer unclothed and desired to have sex with him showed
beyond a reasonable doubt
that, regardless of what other incidental sexual activities Pedersen may have hoped to experience with Palmer, Pedersen’s principal objective was to persuade Palmer
to engage in an act of sodomy[.]" [Emphasis added].
94
In 1984, a solicitation for sodomy charge was dropped when the arresting officer let slip in court that he himself had solicited the man on trial.
95
Also in 1984, a trial judge threw out cases against four men arrested for sex in a shopping mall when evidence of police viewing the activity through a two-way mirror was
introduced.
96
Period Summary:
During most of this time, the Virginia Supreme Court continued to reverse every sodomy conviction to come before it, but that string ended after the birth of the
modern Gay rights movement. The first conviction to be upheld had the same circumstantial evidence in it that the Court had rejected in other cases. The law’s
penalty was revised during this time, but retained as a felony. A federal court challenge was unsuccessful and the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed the lower court’s
decision on appeal a decade before the Georgia law was sustained in a written opinion.
The Post-Hardwick Period, 1986-Present
In 1990, the Court of Appeals decided
Ford v. Commonwealth.
97
In this case of heterosexual solicitation, the words "I want to lick your pussy" were found not to constitute a solicitation, distinguishing the case from
Pedersen.
How this differed from Pedersen’s statement that the undercover officer looked nice in his blue jeans and that he wanted to see him naked is difficult to understand.
Possibly because it was heterosexual in nature, the court distinguished the two statements.
A bill to repeal the sodomy law was introduced in 1994.
98
In addition, a bill to abolish parole for all felonies was introduced in 1994. As proposed, it would outlaw parole for consensual sodomy, since that remains a felony
in Virginia. However, both houses of the legislature rejected the proposal and passed a bill that still permitted parole for consensual sodomy. A conference committee
was needed to finalize the wording.
99
A sodomy repeal bill failed in committee in 1995
100
and 1996.
101
In 1997, the Virginia Court of Appeals, deciding
Branche v. Commonwealth,
102
unanimously rejected a challenge to a solicitation law. Earl Branche had been arrested for soliciting an undercover police officer, Edgar Cruz, who had, through eye contact,
led Branche to believe that he was looking for sex. Later, Cruz got more explicit with Branche, stating that he didn’t like anal sex, and asked Branche who was to perform
fellatio on the other. When Branche suggested mutual oral sex and reached for Cruz’s crotch, he was arrested.
103
Under Virginia law, the solicitation is a felony. Had Branche asked for money, the solicitation would have been a misdemeanor. Curiously, Cruz, after arresting Branche,
asked him if he would have demanded money. Branche said that he wouldn’t, thereby unwittingly passing up the chance for prosecution for a less serious offense. Branche
challenged this dichotomy as unconstitutional discrimination in that soliciting females were arrested under the prostitution section and Gay men under the felony provision,
but the Court of Appeals noted that there was neither sex nor sexual orientation discrimination in these laws.
104
The Court also rejected Branche’s selective enforcement argument, even though Cruz testified that, to his knowledge, no female undercover officers ever had been assigned to
arrest Lesbians.
105
Another example of the wrong kind of case to claim privacy rights was
DePriest et al. v. Commonwealth,
106
from 2000. A number of men had been arrested by undercover police at public parks in Roanoke for solicitation and fondling of the officers. The officers were instructed
not to entrap anyone and to make arrests only of those who solicited them for sexual activity to occur in the parks. One man who suggested going to a "private place"
for sex wasn’t arrested.
107
In denying the arrestees standing to raise a privacy claim, the Court of Appeals reminded the public that anyone
proposing or engaging in sodomy under circumstances supporting a claim of privacy may, upon discovery and accusation, assert, in his defense, those circumstances and that
claim.
108
The Court also rejected a cruel and unusual punishment claim for the maximum five-year sentence for sodomy, saying that "[w]e find our conscience shocked neither by
appellants’ sentences nor by the five-year maximum sentence provided by the statute [footnote omitted]."
109
Finally, it rejected the claim that the state’s sodomy law violates the establishment of religion provisions of the Constitution, saying that the law "rests plainly
on long established secular values concerning sexual conduct."
110
Common-law crimes remain in force in Virginia
111
as well as the sodomy provision.
112
Case law in Virginia is that repeal of the sodomy law will reenact the common-law crimes provision to continue sodomy as a crime.
113
Period Summary:
The conservative Virginia legislature has shown no willingness to repeal the sodomy law. The Virginia courts show a continuing support for the sodomy and
solicitation laws, if applied to people of the same sex.
Footnotes
1
Colony Laws of Virginia 1619-1640,
Vol. I, page 57. Charter signed by King James on April 10, 1606.
2
Id.
at 64, §XV.
3
Id.
at 60-61, §VII.
4
John Smith et al.,
A Map of Virginia. With a Description of the Country, the Commodities, People, Government and Religion...
(Oxford;Joseph Barnes, 1612). Reprinted in Philip L. Barbour, ed.,
The Jamestown Voyages under the First Charter, 1606-1609: Documents Relating to the Foundation of Jamestown and the History of the Jamestown Colony Up to the Departure
of Captain John Smith, Last President of the Council in Virginia Under the First Charter, Early in October 1609,
Vol. 2, (London:Cambridge University Press, 1969), page 384.
5
Arthur Schlesinger, general ed.,
The Almanac of American History,
(New York:G.P. Putnam’s, 1983), pages 32 and 33.
6
For the Colony in Virginea Britannia. Lavves Diuine, Morall and Martiall, etc.,
(London:Walter Barre, 1612), page 5, §9. I thank Catherine Mishler, Head of the Reference Section of the Virginia State Library and Archives, for providing a copy
of the original law. This statute is not apparently well known. The Virginia Attorney General’s office was unaware of any colonial sodomy statute. The law was enacted
May 24, 1610.
7
Colony Laws of Virginia 1619-1660,
(Wilmington DE:Michael Glazier, Inc., 1979), page v.
8
Id.
at 98. Signed by King James on Mar. 12, 1611.
9
Id.
at 106-107, §XIV.
10
Id.
at 107-108, §XV.
11
Arthur Schlesinger, general ed.,
The Almanac of American History,
(New York:G.P. Putnam’s, 1983), page 37.
12
Colony Laws of Virginia 1619-1660,
(Wilmington DE:Michael Glazier, Inc., 1979), page 110, dated July 24, 1621.
13
Id.
at 111, §III.
14
Id.
15
Id.
at 112, §IV.
16
Id.
§VI.
17
Id.
§V.
18
Adrienne Koch & William Peden, eds.,
The Life and Selected Writings of Thomas Jefferson,
(New York:The Modern Library, 1944), page 249.
19
Arthur Schlesinger, general ed.,
The Almanac of American History,
(New York:G.P. Putnam’s, 1983), pages 40 and 41. The revocation of the last Virginia charter occurred on May 24, 1624.
20
H.R. McIlwaine, ed.,
Minutes of the Council and General Court of Colonial Virginia 1622-1632, 1670-1676...
(Richmond:Colonial Press, 1924), pages 34, 42, 78, 81, 83, 85.
21
Id.
22
Id.
at 194-195.
23
Arthur Schlesinger, general ed.,
The Almanac of American History,
(New York:G.P. Putnam’s, 1983), page 53.
24
The Statutes at Large; Being a Collection of All the Laws of Virginia, from the First Session of the Legislature in the Year 1619,
(Richmond:William Waller Hening, 1810), page 41, enacted Mar. 23, 1661.
25
Id.
at 43.
26
Arthur Schlesinger, general ed.,
The Almanac of American History,
(New York:G.P. Putnam’s, 1983), page 58.
27
Julian P. Boyd, ed.,
The Papers of Thomas Jefferson,
Vol. 2, (Princeton:Princeton University, 1950), page 325.
28
A Collection of All Acts of the General Assembly of Virginia 1802,
(Richmond:Pleasance and Price, 1803), page 179, ch. C [50], enacted Dec. 10, 1792.
29
Id.
30
Id.
at 402, ch. CCLXIV, enacted Jan. 25, 1800.
31
Id.
32
William Waller Hening, ed.,
The New Virginia Justice, Comprising the Office and Authority of a Justice of the Peace, in the Commonwealth of Virginia together with a Variety of Useful Precedents,
Adapted to the Laws Now in Force,
(Richmond:Johnson & Warner, 1810).
33
Id.
page 148.
34
3 Va. 307, decided June 16, 1812.
35
Id.
at 308.
36
Revised Code of Virginia 1819,
Vol. 1, page 586, ch. 159, enacted Feb. 6, 1819.
37
Id.
38
Laws of Virginia 1847-1848,
page 93, enacted Mar. 14, 1848.
39
Id.
at 112, §11.
40
The Code of Virginia. Second Edition, Including Legislation to the Year 1860,
(Richmond:Ritchie, Dunnavant & Co., 1860), enacted Mar. 19, 1860.
41
Id.
42
Laws of Virginia 1877-1878,
page 279, ch. 311, enacted Mar. 14, 1878.
43
Id.
at 303, §12.
44
22 S.E. 859, decided Sep. 19, 1895.
45
Id.
at 860.
46
Virginia Acts of Assembly 1916,
page 511, ch. 295, enacted Mar. 18, 1916.
47
Id.
48
115 S.E. 508, decided Jan. 18, 1923.
49
Id.
at 509.
50
Id.
51
Id.
at 511.
52
Id.
53
Virginia Acts of Assembly 1924,
page 516, ch. 358, enacted Mar. 20, 1924.
54
Id.
55
127 S.E. 89, decided Mar. 19, 1925.
56
Id.
57
Virginia Acts of Assembly 1950,
page 897, ch. 463, enacted Apr. 7, 1950.
58
Id.
at 897-897, §53-278.2.
59
Id.
60
Report of the Attorney General 1951-52,
page 49, issued Sep. 13, 1951.
61
Id.
at 50.
62
66 S.E.2d 854, decided Oct. 8, 1951.
63
116 S.E.2d 282, decided Oct. 10, 1960.
64
Id.
at 283-284.
65
Id.
at 285.
66
158 S.E.2d 657, decided Jan. 15, 1968.
67
Id.
at 658.
68
Report of the Attorney General 1967-68,
page 76, issued June 27, 1968.
69
Virginia Acts of Assembly 1970,
page 58, ch. 62, enacted Mar. 6, 1970.
70
Id.
§1.
71
Virginia Acts of Assembly 1975,
page 18, ch. 14, enacted Feb. 14, 1975.
72
Id.
at 19, §18.2-10(f).
73
403 F.Supp. 1199, decided Oct. 24, 1975.
74
Id.
at 1200.
75
Id.
at 1202.
76
Id.
77
Id.
78
Id.
79
Id.
at 1203.
80
Id.
at 1205.
81
Id.
82
Id.
83
425 U.S. 901, decided Mar. 29, 1976. Rehearing denied, 425 U.S. 985, decided May 19, 1976. The history of this case in the U.S. Supreme Court is given in Woodward & Armstrong,
The Brethren,
(New York:Avon, 1981), page 505.
84
539 F.2d 349, decided May 12, 1976. The trial court decision is reported in 363 F.Supp. 620, decided Aug. 31, 1973. The judge in the case was Robert Merhige, who,
ironically, voted to strike the sodomy law in 1975.
85
539 F.2d, at 351.
86
Id.
87
Id.
at 354.
88
Id.
at 354-355.
89
429 U.S. 977, decided Nov. 29, 1976.
90
254 S.E.2d 95, decided Apr. 20, 1979.
91
Id.
at 97.
92
Id.
93
Id.
94
Id.
at 100.
95
Washington Blade,
June 1, 1984, page 6.
96
Washington Blade,
July 6, 1984, page 6.
97
391 S.E.2d 603, decided Apr. 24, 1990.
98
Washington Blade,
Feb. 4, 1994, page 1.
99
Washington Blade,
Sep. 30, 1994, page 1.
100
Washington Blade,
Feb. 17, 1995, page 10.
101
Washington Blade,
Feb. 16, 1996, page 5.
102
489 S.E.2d 692, decided Sep. 2, 1997.
103
Id.
at 694.
104
Id.
at 695.
105
Id.
at 696-697.
106
537 S.E.2d 1, decided Nov. 21, 2000.
107
Id.
at 3.
108
Id.
at 5.
109
Id.
at 5-6.
110
Id.
at 6.
111
Code of Virginia 1975, §1-10.
112
Id.
§18.2-361.
113
Insurance Company of the Valley of Virginia v. Barley’s Administrator,
16 Gratt. (57 Va.) 363, at 384, decided Feb. 18, 1863.
Virginia
-
Statute:
18.2-361, Crimes Against Nature.
Unconstitutional under
Lawrence v. Texas.
Virginia continues to arrest and prosecute under this law.
-
Penalty:
5 years
-
Classification:
Felony
-
Restrictions:
None
Adultery, and co-habitation are also illegal and enforced sporadically and maliciously. Fornication was ruled unconstitutional in 2005 by the Virginia Supreme Court based on the
Lawrence
decision.
§ 18.2-361 Crimes against nature
A. If any person carnally knows in any manner any brute animal, or carnally knows any male or female person by the anus or by or with the mouth, or voluntarily submits
to such carnal knowledge, he or she shall be guilty of a Class 6 felony, except as provided in subsection B.
B. Any person who carnally knows by the anus or by or with the mouth his daughter or granddaughter, son or grandson, brother or sister, or father or mother shall be
guilty of a Class 5 felony. However, if a parent or grandparent commits any such act with his child or grandchild and such child or grandchild is at least thirteen
but less than eighteen years of age at the time of the offense, such parent or grandparent shall be guilty of a Class 3 felony.
History
1625
|
Richard Cornish is hanged for sodomy with another man in Virginia. This is the first known death sentence for sodomy in the American colonies, although it is
unclear if there was legal authority for the sentence.
|
1777
|
A committee works on a revised set of criminal law for Virginia. Thomas Jefferson and other liberals attempt to have the death penalty for sodomy replaced by
castration for men and boring a hole through the nose of a woman. The committee rejects their suggestion and retains the death penalty.
|
1812
|
The Virginia Supreme Court is the first in the nation to decide that emission of semen is not necessary to complete an act of sodomy. This rejects English law
on the subject and almost all U.S. courts later follow Virginia’s lead.
|
1916
|
The Virginia legislature expands the state’s sodomy law to cover oral sex and makes the oral sex provision applicable only to people of the same sex. After the
Virginia Supreme Court follows the law and reverses a heterosexual sodomy conviction, the legislature broadens the law to cover opposite-sex sodomy as well.
|
Legal
Doe v. Commonwealth’s Attorney for the City of Richmond,
403 F. Supp. 1199 (E.D. Va.
1975),
the case which upheld Virginia’s sodomy law and which was summarily affirmed by the Supreme Court
Elvis Gene DePriest, et al. v. Commonwealth of Virginia
,
2000
Upholds the Virginia sodomy law as constitutional. Significantly, it found that the specific cases of individuals charged with solicitation to commit sodomy had not established a
presumption of privacy by seeking to commit sodomy in a public park. Their complaints were not allowed to be extended question the constitutionality of the sodomy law as applied
to acts engaged in private.
Lawrence v. Texas,
2003
Found sodomy laws to be an unconstitutional violation of liberty when applied to non-commercial, consensual sex between adults in private. Virginia's fornication and
cohabitation laws are also unconstitutional as a result of this opinion.
Repeal bills
2004 - Equality Virgina
HB 1054. Sodomy. Del. David Albo (R-Springfield)
This bill was advertised as "Sodomy reform" but instead it was an attempt to allow gay continued discrimination against gay and lesbian Virginians. While HB 1054
left the existing now-unconstitutional "Crimes Against Nature" untouched, it created a new statute allowing public sodomy to be treated as a Class 6 felony while
all other non-violent public sexual activity is a misdemeanor. Although it passed the house on a "fast track" it was successfully defeated in the Senate Courts of
Justice Committee by a vote of 10-5. Equality Virginia had followed and lobbied for fair treatment under the law for over six months while the issue was first debated in
the Crime Commission and then introduced as legislation.
Equality Virginia has decided not to have a repeal bill introduced in 2003, instead waiting to see the outcome of the Supreme Court's decision in
Lawrence v. Texas.
2000 Repeal bill HB 718
This bill, introduced by
Delegate Darner,
would reduce the penalties for consensual sodomy from a class 6 felony to a class 4 misdeamenor.
1997 Repeal bill HB 2718
This bill would legalize consensual adult sexual behavior for non-commercial purposes and would reiterate laws against child sexual abuse. Died in committee.
In 1996 the ACLU
supported HB 1468, introduced by
Delegate Darner,
which would have legalized intimate sexual acts between consenting adults which are done in private and for non-commercial purposes. This bill was carried over to the
1997 session by the House Committee for Courts of Justice.
News
-
Gay, Lesbian Group Honors Controversial Jamestown Figure - March 12, 2007
Records don't show whether Richard Cornish felt like a martyr almost 400 years ago as he stood on a Jamestown gallows with a rope around his neck. But he was
adopted as one by the William and Mary Gay and Lesbian Alumni Association. GALA and a number of activists and historians recognize Cornish as the first man prosecuted
and executed for homosexuality in the British North American colonies.
-
Appeals Court Upholds Conviction in Va. Beach Sodomy Case
-
Virginian Pilot,
November 8, 2005
-
Virginia's Appeals Court Upholds Oral Sex Statute,
Washington Times,
November 8, 2005
-
Appeals Court Upholds Virginia Sodomy Law
-
365Gay.com,
November 8, 2005
-
Low Court, High Principles
-
The Cavalier Daily,
February 28, 2005
-
Obituary: Robert Merhige, Jr.
-
Associated Press,
February 19, 2005
-
Gay Marriage Bills Pass House, Senate
-
Connection Newspapers,
February 17, 2005
-
Legislating Morality in the Land of the Free
-
National Post,
February 12, 2005
-
Engrossing Tales of the Enslaved
-
The Baltimore Sun,
February 9, 2005
-
Gay Marriage Amendment Compared to Nazism
-
365Gay.com,
February 7, 2005
-
Gay Father Appeals Custody Ruling
Washington Post,
February 3, 2005
-
Gay Father Fights Antigay Custody Restriction
-
The Advocate,
February 2, 2005
-
Ouster of Gay Partner ‘Negative’
-
Associated Press,
January 31, 2005
-
Appeal in Case of Gay Couple Ordered to Split Up Over Child
-
365Gay.com,
January 31, 2005
-
Gay Pair Appeals Order to Split Over Child
-
Gay.com,
January 31, 2005
-
NCLR and Lambda Legal File Appeal on Behalf of Gay Dad in Maryland Custody Case
-
NCLR
and
Lambda Legal,
January 31, 2005
-
Jagdmann Breezes to Likely Approval as Attorney General
-
Richmond Times-Dispatch,
January 27, 2005
-
The Virginia Supreme Court Strikes Down the State’s Fornication Law, Indicating that Other States’ Antiquated Laws Will Fall if Challenged
-
Findlaw.com,
January 25, 2005
-
Virginia Sex Law Struck Down
-
Gay City News,
January 20, 2005
-
Virginia Court Strikes Down Unmarried Sex Law
-
The Advocate,
January 15, 2005
-
Court: Fornication Law Unconstitutional
-
Richmond Times-Dispatch,
January 14, 2005
-
Virginia Court Strikes Down Singles Sex Law
-
The Associated Press,
January 14, 2005
-
Sending Them PAC-ing
-
Augusta Free Press,
January 14, 2005
-
Whose Values? Lefty PAC Fights for Families
-
The Hook,
January 13, 2005
-
Virginians Form Family Values PAC
-
Virginia Family Values PAC,
January 9, 2005
-
Virginia Adultery Case Goes from Notable to Nonevent
- August 25, 2004
-
Virginia Man Challenges Antisodomy Law
- July 14, 2004
-
Virginia Sodomy Law Challenged
- July 13, 2004
-
Suit Challenges Virginia Sodomy Law
- July 9, 2004
-
Lambda Legal Will Appeal the Solicitation of Sodomy Conviction of Virginia Beach Man Monday
- July 9, 2004
-
Virginia Among 13 States Affected By Sodomy Decision
-
NBC4.com,
June 26, 2003
-
Senate Delays Ruling on Sodomy
- March 9, 2003
-
Virginia Man Sentenced to Six Months in Jail for Soliciting Sodomy
- February 18, 2004
-
Virginia Eases Sodomy Ban but Keeps it on the Books
- January 15, 2004
-
Virginia Eyes New Sodomy Law
- January 14, 2004
-
Virginia Crime Panel Backs Dual Strategy on Sodomy Law
- January 14, 2004
-
City Urges Richmond to End Same-Sex Discrimination
- January 8, 2004
-
Virginia Continues to Prosecute Gay Men for Sodomy
- December 12, 2003
-
Virginia Hesitates on Sodomy Repeal
- December 7, 2003
-
Keep Sodomy Ban, Commission Says
- December 5, 2003
-
Darner Urges Caution in Tinkering with Sex Laws
- December 4, 2003
-
Panel Urges Virginia to Keep Sodomy Ban
- December 4, 2003
-
Virginia Adultery Case Roils Divorce Industry
- December 1, 2003
-
Sodomy Case Can Proceed, Judge Says
- October 30, 2003
-
Lambda Legal Helps Defend Virginia Man Against Rogue Sodomy Prosecution
- October 29, 2003
-
Commission Bringing Laws into 21st Century
- October 11, 2003
-
Gay Killer Charged with Being Peeping Tom in Public Bathroom
- September 21, 2003
-
Virginia Sting Operations Challenged
- August 20, 2003
-
Virginia Pursues Sodomy Charges Despite Supreme Court Ruling
- August 20, 2003
-
Virginia to Try 26 for Sodomy Despite Supreme Court
- August 19, 2003
-
Sodomy Charges Set to Be Pursued
- August 19, 2003
-
Sodomy Law Ruling Sparks Virginia Debate
- August 18, 2003
-
Lawyer Uses Texas Case to Challenge Virginia Sodomy Law
- August 14, 2003
-
Court Asked to Overturn 17-Year Prison Sentence of Bi Teen
- August 11, 2003
-
Panel: Strike Sodomy Statutes
- July 17, 2003
-
Sodomy Ruling Might Not Alter Much in Virginia
- July 6, 2003
-
Resistance in Tradition of Virginia
- July 6, 2003
-
The Ghosts of Jamestown
-
New York Times,
July 3, 2003
-
Virginia “Crimes Against Nature” Law Struck Down?
-
Connections Newspapers,
July 1, 2003
-
Virginia Among 13 States Affected By Sodomy Decision
-
NBC4.com,
June 26, 2003
-
Virginia GOP Denies Askew Seat
- January 27, 2003
-
Judge Hearing Stirs Backlash
- January 21, 2003
-
Warner, Kaine Attend Gay-Rights Reception
- January 20, 2003
-
Judge Selection Takes on Sexual Tones
- January 17, 2003
-
Being Gay Could Disqualify Judges Virginia Lawmaker Says
- January 16, 2003
-
Virginia Sodomy Law Invoked to Block Judge’s Reappointment
- January 16, 2003
-
In Virginia, Fears of a Judicial Litmus Test
- January 16, 2003
-
Sodomy Law Bedevils Virginia Confirmation
- January 15, 2003
-
Sex Life May Be Used Against Judges
- January 15, 2003
-
Gay Sex in Park ‘Worse’ Despite Arrests
- November 25, 2002
-
Virginia Park now Taken Over by Gay Sex
- October 1, 2002
-
Lesbian Wins Virginia Assurances in Adoption Attempt
- August 15, 2002
-
Conservatives See Fisette Appointment as a Threat
- July 11, 2002
-
Virginia Officials Deny Discrimination in Adoption Case
- June 4, 2002
-
Virginia Senate Committee Kills Sex Ed Bill
- February 15, 2002
-
Bill Would Ban Discussion of Gays
- February 8, 2002
-
Log Cabin Republicans Launch Campaign to Reform Virginia Sodomy Statute
- January 24, 2002
-
Bill Bans ‘Crimes’ in Sex Education
- January 14, 2002
-
Gay Virginians Meet with Mark Warner
- January 11, 2002
-
Stiff Penalty: Local Legislators Find Repealing an Old Law Hard to Swallow
- December 18-24, 2001
-
Log Cabin Republicans of Virginia Endorse Sodomy Law Repeal, Government Employment Anti-discrimination Measure
- December 13, 2001
-
Stinging: Staunton Officials Don’t Like Sodomy
- November 6-12, 2001
-
Virginia’s Gay Vortex
- November 2, 2001
-
Gay-Baiting Enters Virginia Race
- September 7, 2001
[Republicans support sodomy law, Democrats don't want to talk about it.]
-
Virginia Sodomy Case Loses Final Appeal
- August 17, 2001
-
Virginia Politicians Face Off Over the Legal Rights of Gay Partners
- July 31, 2001
-
Police Raid Dominatrix’s Residence
- July 17, 2001
-
Virginia Supreme Court Upholds Sodomy Law
- June 15, 2001
-
Virginia Sodomy Appeal Declined
- June 8, 2001
-
Attorney Vows to Petition for a Rehearing by The Full Court
- June 6, 2001
-
Straight Man Joining Challenge to Virginia Sodomy Law
- March 6, 2001
-
Lawyer: Link Wasena Park Case with Heterosexual Oral Sex Case
- March 2, 2001
-
Lawyer Expands Sodomy-Law Challenge With Straight Couple
- March 2, 2001
-
Sodomy Laws Debated
- February 8, 2001
-
The Moral Opposition
- February 4, 2001
-
Most in Virginia Oppose Law
- February 2, 2001
-
Virginia Activists Try a New Approach
- January 26, 2001
-
Virginia House Panel: No Sodomy Reform
- January 23, 2001
-
House Panel Votes to Keep Law Against Sodomy
- January 20, 2001
-
Virginia Appellate Court Upholds Sodomy Convictions
- November 27, 2000
-
Virginia Sodomy Sting Challenge Fails
- November 27, 2000
-
Virginia Upholds Sodomy Law
- November 23, 2000
-
Virginian Court Upholds Sodomy Convictions
- November 22, 2000
-
10 Wasena Park Defendants Had Argued Law Violated Privacy of All Virginians
- November 22, 2000
-
Appeals Court Rules Against Change in Sodomy Law
- November 22, 2000
-
Gay Rights Activist to Speak Here
- November 15, 2000
-
Virginia Sodomy Law Challenged
- October 10, 2000
-
Virgina Sodomy Law Challenged
- September 15, 2000
-
State Says Law Must Be Viewed in Context of Curbing ‘Cruising’
- September 13, 2000
-
Appeal of Virginia Sodomy Law Argued
- September 12, 2000
-
Virginia Court Hears Sodomy Law Challenge
- September 11, 2000
-
10 Men Appealed Convictions in Wasena Park Cases
- September 10, 2000
-
Friend of Court Briefs Accepted
- September 1, 2000
-
Board Votes to Change Discrimination Policies
- August 4, 2000
-
Sodomy Case Heads Toward Resolution
- July 21, 2000
-
Virginia Attorney General Says Sodomy Always Illegal
- July 1-3, 2000
-
Virginia Law Says Sodomy Is Always Illegal
- June 29, 2000
-
‘Log Cabin Republicans’ Show Strength in Northern Virginia GOP
- June 29, 2000
-
Gay Republicans Add Voice to Challenge Virginia Sodomy Law
- June 9, 2000
-
ACLU Challenges Virginia’s "Crimes Against Nature" Sodomy Law
- May 31, 2000
-
Virginia’s Attorney General Blocks ‘Friends of The Court’ Briefs
- May 25, 2000
-
City Council Rejects Gay-Rights Policy
- May 10, 2000
-
Virginia Court Hears Sodomy Appeal
- April 7, 2000
-
Va. Senate Nixes Change To Sodomy Law
- February 26-28, 2000
-
Virginia Panel Kills Sodomy Reform
- February 25, 2000
-
Virginia Sodomy Bill Defeated
- February 25, 2000
-
Senate Committee Kills Proposal to Lower Penalties
- February 24, 2000
-
Senate Panel Kills Cutting Penalties For Sex-Law Violations
- February 24, 2000
-
Virgina House Oks Sodomy Bill
- February 18, 2000
-
VA House OKs Sodomy Reform
- February 17, 2000
-
Virginia May Lighten Sodomy Restrictions
- February 16, 2000
-
VA House Committee OK’s Sodomy Reform Bill
- February 15, 2000
-
Sodomy Bill Endorsed House Gives Tentative OK To Lessen Penalties
- February 15, 2000
-
Bill Would Alter State Sex Law
- February 14, 2000
-
We Have Very Little to Lose by Trying
- February 4, 2000
-
Virginia May Lighten Sodomy Restrictions
- January 16, 2000
-
Virginia Sodomy Challenge May Expand
- January 7, 2000
-
Virginia Panel Mulls Sodomy
- December 24, 1999
-
Appeals Court to Review Sodomy Law Case Stems From Arrests of Men in a Roanoke Park
- December 15, 1999
-
Whatever Happened To . . . The Lesbian Mother Who Lost Custody Of Her Son?
- November 29, 1999
-
Lobby Issues More Complete Guide On Gay-Rights Issues
- October 28, 1999
-
Virginia’s Sodomy Ban Is OK With Most Candidates
- October 27, 1999
-
Charges Dropped In Roanoke Solicitation Cases
- October 1, 1999
-
Fractured State Works To Unite Gay Activist Forces
- October 1, 1999
-
Charges Dropped In 2 Park Sex Cases
- September 24, 1999
-
Man Acquitted In Virginia Sodomy Case
- September 10, 1999
-
Residents' complaints sparked police sting in Roanoke's Wasena Park
- September 8, 1999
-
18 Arrested In Wasena Park Sting Man's Offer To Officer Gets Him 60 Days
- August 10, 1999
-
Man Sues City Over AIDS Postcard
- July 3, 1999
-
Cruiser Showdown in Virginia
- June 23, 1999
-
Attorney Taking On Sodomy Law
- June 13, 1999
-
Roanoke, VA Defendants Plead
- June 11, 1999
-
Eight Men Convicted of Felony Sodomy
- June 10, 1999
-
3 More Men Plead Guilty To Seeking Sex In Park
- June 10, 1999
-
Activist Presents Immodest Proposal
- May 21, 1999
-
Gay Man Propositions Four Virginia Officials To Challenge Sodomy Law
- May 21, 1999
-
State's Anti-Sodomy Law Used To Prosecute Men Accused Of Seeking Sex In Roanoke Parks
- May 4, 1999
-
Roanoke Judge Hopes To Rule Soon On Constitutionality Of Anti-Sodomy Law
- March 2, 1999
-
18th Defendant Bases Arguments On Privacy
- January 15, 1999
-
Sodomy Showdown Heats Up In Virginia
- January 13, 1999
-
Column: The Radio Listener
- January 12, 1999
-
An Indecent Proposal?
- January 1, 1999
-
Gay Cruising Prosecuted as Felony in Roanoke, Va.
- November 24, 1998
-
The Law 'Is Only Used To Persecute Gay People,' Says Gay Rights Supporter
- November 22, 1998
-
Police Use Sodomy Laws In Prostitution Sting
- July 20, 1998
-
Same-Sex Marriage Proposal Voted Down
-
The Washington Post,
December 15, 1996
-
Fighting For Tyler: A Lesbian Loses Her Son - To Her Own Mother
- September 27, 1993
Editorials
-
A Changing Morality Within Our Society
- Jeff Cumberbatch in the
Barbados Advocate,
February 28, 2005
-
Not Exactly a Valentine
- James Kilpatrick in
The Southern Illinoisan,
February 20, 2005
-
Bad Bills in Richmond
-
Patricia S. Ticer, State Senator (D-30) in the
Connection Newspapers,
February 18, 2005
-
In Defense of Marriage, Families
-
Connection Newspapers,
February 11, 2005
-
Virginia Enters the 20th Century
- Richard Sincere in
The Augusta Free Press,
January 20, 2005
-
Virginia Is for (Straight) Lovers
- Tracy Thorne in the
Washington Post,
May 9, 2004
-
Repeal Sodomy Laws Once and for All
-
Norfolk Virginian-Pilot,
January 26, 2004
-
Gays Move into The Mainstream, and Extremists Move Out
-
Roanoke Times,
October 21, 2003
-
Letter: Faiths That Do Harm Don’t Deserve Our ‘Tolerance’
- Cris F. Elkins in the
Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star,
July 13, 2003
-
Letter: From Public-Health Standpoint, Sodomy Laws Make Sense
-
Carrie Tyer in the Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star,
July 13, 2003
-
‘Unaccountable Politicians’: Court Usurped States’ Legislative Role
- Bob Marshall in the
Richmond Times-Dispatch,
July 6, 2003
-
High Noon for Gay Rights: Supreme Court Decision Will Set Course
- Dyana Mason,
Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star,
June 17, 2003
-
About Fairness and My Family
- Linda Kaufman in
The Washington Post,
March 30, 2003
-
Virginia Legislators Sow a Legacy of Seediness
- Marc Fisher in
Washington Post,
January 23, 2003
-
Orientation Week: Case Illustrates Skewed Application of Law
- A. Barton Hinkle in
Richmond Times-Dispatch,
January 20, 2003
-
An Ugly Litmus Test for the State’s Judiciary -
Virginia Pilot,
January 17, 2003
-
Sex Law Is No Judging Criteria
- Jim Spencer in
The Daily Press,
January 16, 2003
-
Crimes Against Nature Law Allows Virginia Police To Target Gays
- Richard Sincere in
Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star,
February 9, 2001
-
Putting an End to Prying Into Private Lives
- David Lampo in
Washington Post,
February 3, 2002
-
Letter: You and Deeds Need Clarity on Sodomy
- January 8-14, 2002
-
Letter: Out of Touch
- January 1-7, 2002
-
Commonwealth Still Reaches Into Bedrooms
-
Daily News Leader,
January 26, 2001
-
Three Bills
-
Richmond Times Dispatch,
January 26, 2001
-
Punish Public Sex, Not Private Sodomy
-
Roanoke Times,
July 2, 1999
-
In Case You Missed It: Smile, You’ve Been Propositioned!
- Karen Murray in
Alexandria Journal,
January 13, 1999
-
Sodomy, Solicitation, and Civil Disobedience
- Franklin E. Kameny, December 26, 1998
-
Privacy, Please
-
The Virginian-Pilot,
December 3, 1998
-
One Good Mother To Another
- Minnie Bruce Pratt in
The Progressive,
November, 1993
Letters
Alerts
Advocates
EqualityVirginia
6 N. 6th Street, Suite LL3
Richmond, VA 23219
804-643-4816
Fax:804-643-2050
Virginia Family Values PAC P.O. Box 1142
Charlottesville, VA 22902
Log Cabin Republican Club of Northern Virginia
P.O. Box 16611 Alexandria, VA 22302
703-972-3838
info@VaLogCabin.org
CAN Reform Center (LCR) http://www.valogcabin.org/canreform/
Virginia Partisans Gay & Lesbian Democratic Club
P.O. Box 6243 Arlington, VA 22206
703-658-5331
va-partisans@mindspring.com
Virginia Is Not For Lovers
P.O. Box 11242
Richmond, VA 23230
http://www.virginiaisforhaters.org/
|