| Every month during our 10-year
celebration, we revisit an individual we interviewed
or who played a significant role in the issue
published a decade ago.
CHECK UP: CONNIE MOORE
Ten years later, an attorney and her partner still
strive to protect our families
By Thomas Blanton
Photo by Gavyn Aaron
When Connie Moore and her partner Deborah Hunt
(pictured, Moore on right) opened their lesbian/feminist
law practice in the middle of the Montrose back
in 1987, they found a significant lack of information
regarding the legal rights of gay, lesbian, bisexual,
and transgender persons.
“One of our goals was to provide as much
information as we could.” Moore says. She
remembers that when OutSmart asked them to write
a monthly legal column, “We jumped at the
chance.”
Moore and Hunt’s “OutLaw” column—launched
a decade ago this month with a Moore-written piece—brought
in overwhelming feedback from both readers and
those seeking legal counsel. Over the several
years the column ran, the two lawyers (who penned
columns in alternate months) utilized the opportunity
to discuss a wide range of topics, everything
from family law to landlord/tenant issues. “We
covered a lot of ground,” Moore recalls.
Looking back over her 17 years of law practice,
especially the last 10 years since she wrote that
first column, Moore says that the community has
become a group of more educated consumers when
it comes to the law.
“Originally, we worked with people who assumed
they would not be treated appropriately,”
she explains. “Now, LGBT people have begun
to feel as entitled to protection from our court
system as anyone else.”
According to Moore, the types of legal issues
facing the gay community have evolved significantly.
For example, her first “OutLaw” column
concerned co-parenting rights, because many LGBT
people were beginning to plan families at that
time. Now, many are opting for second-parent adoptions.
However, not all relationships or family units
are able to remain intact, and Moore now sees
new problems looming.
“In the last few years, a number of LGBT
couples have decided to have children, but decide
not to stay together as a family,” she says.
“It’s the same issues that heterosexual
couples face, but there’s no easy vehicle
for divorce, because there’s no marriage
in the first place.”
One tactic Moore condemns in such cases is “playing
the gay card,” or challenging the validity
of an adoption by claiming that one’s former
partner is an unfit parent because of his or her
homosexuality.
“It’s people trying to use prejudice
to rip apart something they were participating
in willingly,” Moore says. “It’s
incredibly destructive to the entire community.
If you’re going to have kids and split up,
do it nicely.”
In order to combat this reinforcement of prejudices,
Moore and Hunt train their team of lawyers to
“do no harm” and to vigorously represent
their clients within the ethical confines of their
own belief systems. Additionally, Moore and Hunt
continue to work with families on an educational
level. “Families are permanent,” Moore
says. “If you want to leave the relationship,
do so with both parents intact.”
As to significant changes and advances in the
law that affect the gay community, Moore points
out the U.S. Supreme Court’s striking down
of anti-sodomy laws as well as the current legal
and non-secular controversies surrounding gay
marriage. “The issue is coming to a head,”
she says, noting that she believes opponents of
gay marriage are working against themselves by
calling so much attention to the situation. “It
has become such an issue because the religious
right and other conservative groups have pushed
it into the forefront.”
Additionally, Moore asserts that the loudest arguments
against gay marriage are the same used in a 1967
court case involving interracial marriage. “If
you were to read that case now and substitute
homosexual for interracial, it would read as identical,”
she says, adding, “There will be setbacks
before it gets here, but gay marriage is on the
horizon. This is a battle we will definitely win.”
Possibly the most noteworthy accomplishment of
Moore and Hunt and their practice is that they
have been able to consistently and successfully
offer her services to the entire community for
nearly two decades. “It’s 2004, and
for us, nothing’s really changed,”
Moore says. “We’re still here, doing
the same things we’ve always done. That’s
a good thing.”
Thomas Blanton also offers his take on queer eyes
and straight guys in this issue.
If you have any comments about this article,
please email them to letters@outsmartmagazine.com.
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