The
Kentucky clerk, who was held in contempt of court for refusing to issue
same-sex marriage licenses, urged her supporters not to give in.
"Thank
you all so much. I love you all so very much," she said. "I just want
to give God the glory. His people have rallied, and you are a strong
people. We serve a living God who knows exactly where each and every one
of us is at. Just keep on pressing. Don't let down, because he is here.
He's worthy."
Davis,
who said issuing the licenses would violate her conscience and go
against her religion, plans to return to work in Rowan County, Kentucky,
this week and won't resign from her post, attorney Mat Staver said.
Asked by a reporter whether her stay in jail was worth it, Davis smiled
and nodded.
But she didn't speak
directly about the case, and a key question remains unanswered: When she
goes back to work, what will she do when she gets there?
The judge who issued an order releasing her Tuesday attached a caveat Davis may not be willing to accept.
U.S.
District Judge David Bunning ordered that Davis be released from jail
-- five days after he sent her there -- saying he was satisfied that her
deputies fulfilled their obligations to give marriage licenses to
same-sex couples in her absence.
But Bunning's new order says Davis cannot interfere with her deputies issuing marriage licenses to all legally eligible couples.
That
means Davis could find herself behind bars again if she does anything
to prevent the marriages from taking place, CNN Senior Legal Analyst
Jeffrey Toobin said.
"If Ms. Davis
stops them from issuing licenses, then we are right back where we
started," Toobin said. "And Judge Bunning has made it quite clear, he
will lock her back up."
'She's not going to violate her conscience'
Davis
previously said she will not authorize her office to issue marriage
licenses to same-sex couples if her name remains on the certificate.
Bunning's order makes no mention of revising the licenses to accommodate
Davis, who says issuing a license with her name on it would violate her
Christian convictions against same-sex marriage.
One of Davis' attorneys said Bunning hasn't resolved anything.
"We've asked for a simple solution -- get her name and authority off the certificate. The judge could order that," Staver said.
Staver
didn't directly answer questions about whether Davis would stop
same-sex couples in her county from getting marriage licenses when she
returns to work.
"She loves God, she
loves people, she loves her work, and she will not betray any of those
three," Staver said. "She'll do her job good. She'll serve the people
... and she'll also be loyal to God, and she's not going to violate her
conscience."
Bunning ordered Davis to jail on Thursday after finding her in contempt of court for refusing to issue marriage licenses to gay couples in Rowan County after June's U.S. Supreme Court ruling legalizing same-sex marriage.
ACLU: 'Goal has been achieved'
After
Bunning's order, five of her deputies agreed to issue marriage licenses
in her absence. The Rowan County clerk's office began doing so Friday.
A
lawyer who represented same-sex couples seeking marriage licenses in
Rowan County said Tuesday that the plaintiffs' goal had "been achieved."
"This
case was brought to ensure that all residents of Rowan County, gay and
straight, could obtain marriage licenses. That goal has been achieved,"
said William Sharp, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union
of Kentucky. "The Kentucky Attorney General and counsel for Rowan
County have said the marriage licenses are valid. We are relying on
those representations, and our clients look forward to proceeding with
their plans to marry."
At rally, Republican presidential hopeful takes center stage
The
case has become a political lightning rod, drawing attention from
several Republican presidential hopefuls, even though Davis is a
Democrat.
At Tuesday's rally, Davis was flanked by her attorney and her husband, but former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee emceed her theatrical arrival at the event, introducing her to cheering crowds as the song "Eye of the Tiger" blared.
Huckabee said he had a message for the judge who sent Davis to jail last week and ordered her release Tuesday.
"If
you have to put someone in jail, I volunteer to go. Let me go. Lock me
up if you think that's how freedom is best served," Huckabee said.
"Because folks, I am willing to spend the next eight years in the White
House leading in this country. But I want you to know I'm willing to
spend the next eight years in jail, but I'm not willing to spend the
next years in tyranny under people who think they can take our freedom
and conscience away."
Texas Sen. Ted
Cruz also traveled to Kentucky to meet with Davis, but he was not part
of the pro-Davis rally that appeared on live cable television.
Davis' attorneys: Kentucky religious freedom law supports her
Davis' legal team has filed appeals to the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals.
"If
(Davis' deputies) can issue licenses under someone else's authority ...
Kim Davis would not stand in the way of that," one of her attorneys,
Roger Gannam, told CNN's "New Day" on Tuesday.
Davis'
legal team on Monday asked the appeals court for an injunction that
would prompt Kentucky Gov. Steve Beshear to remove her name from the
licenses, something her attorneys say Beshear can do through an
executive order.
Some of Davis' opponents say she could resign if she feels she can't issue licenses to same-sex couples.
But
Davis should not have to resign or be jailed, Gannam said, because
"accommodation of religious conscience is the law in Kentucky, including
for elected officials."
Gannam cited Kentucky's Religious Freedom Restoration Act. The 2013 law
prohibits the state government from substantially burdening a person's
freedom of religion unless the government both proves it has a
compelling interest in doing so and has used the least restrictive means
to do it.
"It's
the duty of the Kentucky government to accommodate that, and they very
easily could do so," Gannam said. "Gov. Beshear is the one who should do
his job or resign."




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