The Blog of the Log Cabin Republicans

Issues in Focus

Log Cabin Ally Ambassador John Bolton Comes Out for Repeal of ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’

Log Cabin Republicans ally and former United Nations Ambassador John Bolton is the latest in a series of Bush Administration alumni to support the repeal of the failed ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ policy.

In an interview with the Daily Caller about a potential 2012 Presidential run, Bolton specifically addressed the subject of allowing gay and lesbian servicemembers to serve openly:

Asked about the president’s plan to repeal ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,’ Bolton said he is generally in favor of allowing anyone who wants to serve their country in the military to do so.

“I don’t have any trouble with that [repealing ‘Don’t Ask, ‘Don’t Tell] assuming it is done in a way that is respectful of the people in the military who have great difficulty with it,” he said. “I don’t think there is any good answer to the question why shouldn’t gays and lesbians who want to serve their country be allowed to do it.”

Read more of Bolton’s interview in the Daily Caller.

Lawyers seek injunction to halt military gay rule

Associated Press July 23, 2010

“RIVERSIDE, Calif. — Lawyers for a Republican gay rights organization will ask a judge for an injunction to halt the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy during their closing arguments in a federal trial challenging the law.

Lawyers for the Log Cabin Republicans say they will ask U.S. District Court Judge Virginia A. Phillips on Friday to declare the law unconstitutional.

The case is unique in that it is not based on an individual’s complaint but rather is a broad, sweeping attack on the policy. It is the biggest legal test of the law in recent years.

The case has put the Obama administration in the awkward position of defending a policy the president wants repealed. Government attorneys have argued throughout the two-week trial that Congress should decide on the policy — not a federal judge.

They presented only the policy’s legislative history in their defense.

The Log Cabin Republicans’ witnesses included former officers discharged under the policy and other experts who presented studies of how openly gay troops do not affect unit cohesion or military readiness, as proponents of the law have argued. The group’s attorneys also submitted President Barack Obama’s remarks that the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy weakens national security.

The plaintiff’s lead lawyer, Dan Woods, argued the policy violates the rights of gay military members to free speech, due process and open association.

“Don’t ask, don’t tell” prohibits the military from asking about the sexual orientation of service members but requires discharge of those who acknowledge being gay or are discovered to be engaging in homosexual activity, even in the privacy of their own homes off base.

The group says more than 13,500 service members have been fired under the law since 1994. The 19,000-member Log Cabin Republicans include current and former military members.

Phillips is expected to issue her verdict in writing. Lawyers say she could take weeks or longer to make her decision.

Legal experts say she may hold off to see if Congress is going to repeal it.

The U.S. House voted May 27 to repeal the policy, and the Senate is expected to take up the issue this summer.

In deciding to hear the challenge, Phillips said the “possibility that action by the legislative and executive branches will moot this case is sufficiently remote.”

Woods, a Los Angeles attorney from the firm White & Case, said if Phillips rules in their favor and the government appeals, he will ask her to suspend the policy until the case is decided.”

THE RIGHT SIDE OF HISTORY

‘DON’T ASK, DON’T TELL’ IS A THREAT TO THE CONSTITUTION AND NATIONAL SECURITY.

The following quotes are extracted from Log Cabin Republicans Executive Director R. Clarke Cooper’s  Op-Ed on the DADT policy.

“Recent headlines lead many in the gay community to believe the fight to repeal DADT is over, but the policy and discharges remain fully in force.”

“As a veteran of the Iraq campaign and a current Army reserve officer, I can attest that DADT is a hindrance to servicemember integrity, readiness and security, and is a waste of tax dollars.”

“Further, striking the DADT policy and implementing repeal will be a force multiplier for the retention and expansion of much-needed personnel and resources to fulfill the expeditionary campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as other training and peace-keeping missions around the globe.”

Read the entire Op-Ed at Metro Weekly

Discharged Army interrogator Alexander Nicholson takes the Stand

Yesterday in Riverside California, the head of Servicemembers United Alexander Nicholson, testified in the Log Cabin Republicans lawsuit challenging the ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ policy.

Nicholson is the founder and Executive Director of the nation’s largest organization of gay and lesbian troops and veterans. He was one of the lead witnesses in the trial in federal court. Through testimony and facts, Log Cabin hopes to get DADT declared unconstitutional by the federal judge.

“I am especially honored to be the lead veteran witness in this case and to have the opportunity to represent all gay and lesbian troops and veterans on the witness stand today at this very important and historic trial,” said Nicholson, who was discharged under DADT.

“This unnecessary and bigoted law has caused untold harm to each and every person who has served under it, and that, in turn, has harmed the quality and readiness of our armed forces,” he said.

Read full testimony from the trial on Log Cabin Republicans’s website here.

Their Day in Court

Testimony and personal stories are being heard this week at the Log Cabin Republicans v. United States court case challenging the ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ policy. The trial began on Tuesday in Riverside California and is schedule to continue through next Thursday. Thousands of servicemembers have been discharged under the policy causing for thousands of lives to be thrown into disarray. Testimony from several members about their personal discharge is often very somber and upsetting.

Former petty officer 3rd class Joseph Christopher Rocha was discharged after harassment and hazing from commanders and other servicemembers. He testified that even with this treatment, if the ban is lifted he will rejoin the military.

Even though President Obama made repeal a goal on his agenda, his administration is defending the policy in court. White and Case partner and Log Cabin attorney Dan Woods stated about the US attorneys, “The fact that they are offering no witnesses, no documents other than evidence from 1993 — I think it weakens their case. They’ve chosen a conservative strategy. And they’re not trying to prove that DADT has worked.”

Today Major Mike Almy will testify about his 2006 discharge from the Air Force after a search of Almy’s private e-mails was conducted by his commanding officer. Lawrence J. Korb, a senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, will also testify about how the policy fails to prove any justifiable military objectives.

 Read the entire article by The Advocate here.

Washington Post interviews Log Cabin on fight against ‘Don’t Ask, dont tell’

The Washington Post conducted an interview with Log Cabin Republicans Executive Director R. Clarke Cooper about the Log Cabin trial against the United States ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’ policy. Here are some memorable quotes from Mr. Cooper in the interview

“If [the policy] ends through the executive process, fine; if it ends through the legislative process, fine. But to achieve victory, as in military operations, one has to look at multiple theaters.”

“You can’t walk up to a judge and ask him when to set the trial. We’ve been working up to this court date. It didn’t happen overnight.”

“If you break down those metrics, registered Republicans generally support repeal.”

“For others, it’s the fiscal side. . . . There’s a lot of support data out there that Log Cabin and other organizations have used to show it’s expensive to discharge somebody.”

 “Our moniker is “Inclusion Wins.” We’ve been advocating for years that we should focus on basic, core conservative values and stay away from divisive wedge issues and social issues.”

 Read the entire interview here.

Legal Press buzzes with Log Cabin Republicans DADT Challenge

 Log Cabin Republicans’ challenge to Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell is drawing
the attention of the legal press.  Amanda Bronstad of The National Law
Journal
 stated that Log Cabin Republicans v. United States is highlighted as “the only
formal constitutional challenge to Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”

The Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell policy excludes gays and lesbians from
serving openly in the U.S. military “solely on the basis of status and
conduct that is constitutionally protected,” argues Dan Woods, the
attorney representing Log Cabin in this suit.

 Woods based his arguments on two precedents; the U.S. Supreme
Court’s 2003 ruling in Lawrence v. Texas, which declared unconstitutional the state’s criminalization of sodomy and a 2008 ruling  in Witt v. Department of the Air Force, a challenge brought by an Air Force nurse who was discharged after it was learned that she lived with a woman off base.

Woods argued that legislative history is “replete with homophobic and other inappropriate passages.” “The government will offer no witnesses, either from the military or
any branch of the government, to defend ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’,” he
said. “The government will offer no report, no study, no analysis, no
book, not a single document, showing that ‘Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell’
advances any important government interest — because there is no such
document.”

Although no senior ranking government officials are expected to
testify, Woods declared he would present statements made by
President Obama, Secretary Gates and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Mike Mullen in
support of repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.”

Log Cabin Republicans Trial Begins Today in California

Log Cabin’s Opening Statement

By Daniel Woods

The Log Cabin Republicans, nearly six years after first filing a lawsuit against the federal government over “don’t ask, don’t tell,” will deliver opening statements in the U.S. District Court, Central California on Tuesday morning. The attorney representing the organization, Daniel Woods, a partner for global firm Case and White LLP, has provided The Advocate with his opening statement, to be presented in front of Judge Virginia Phillips.

Your Honor, this case involves one of the most pressing civil rights issues in our great country today – the discrimination against homosexuals by our country’s military, authorized by the “don’t ask, don’t tell” statute, codified at 10 U.S.C. section 654 and its implementing regulations.

Like some heterosexuals, some homosexuals also wish to serve in our country’s armed forces. They agree to conform to military standards and values and are prepared to make the ultimate sacrifice, if necessary, to defend our country and the principles for which it stands. The United States Government, however, denies these men and women the privilege of serving their country if they choose to be as candid and honest about their human nature as their heterosexual comrades are. If they wish to serve in our armed forces, homosexuals must conceal the core of their identity, they must lie — in violation of their honor and duty — if the subject arises, and they must live under constant threat of investigation and discharge if a hint of the truth is suspected. Our military excludes these men and women from service solely on the basis of status and conduct that is constitutionally protected .There is no legitimate basis for “”don’t ask, don’t tell”,” and there never has been.

In 2003, the Supreme Court permanently altered the legal landscape applicable to “”don’t ask, don’t tell”" in Lawrence v. Texas, the implications of which prompted the filing of this action. This Court has now determined that the Witt standard applies to the Fifth Amendment due process claims of Log Cabin Republicans. Under that standard, “when the government attempts to intrude upon the personal and private lives of homosexuals, in a manner that implicates the rights identified in Lawrence, the government must advance an important government interest, the intrusion must significantly further that interest, and the intrusion must be necessary to further that interest.” It is indisputable that “”don’t ask, don’t tell”" does intrude upon the personal and private lives of homosexuals in a manner that implicates the rights identified in Lawrence. We intend to prove at this trial that “”don’t ask, don’t tell”" does not advance an important government interest, that its intrusions into the constitutional rights of homosexuals do not significantly further any important government interest, and that those intrusions are not necessary to further any important government interest.  

Before we get to the merits, because the government persists in disputing Log Cabin Republicans’ standing to bring this action, we will present evidence of Log Cabin Republicans’ standing. Some of our witnesses on standing will testify today to get us started. Because the government will not stipulate that Log Cabin Republicans meets any of the three Hunt factors, we will have Mr. Terry Hamilton, national chairman of Log Cabin Republicans, testify about the organization itself and related issues. We will then introduce testimony from Mr. Philip Bradley about Log Cabin Republicans member Lt. Col. John Doe and, later in the week, will have Mr. Martin Meekins also testify about Lt. Col. Doe’s membership. We will also today have Mr. Jamie Ensley testify about Alex Nicholson’s membership in Log Cabin Republicans and, a little later in the trial, will have Mr. Nicholson tell his story. We will also introduce a few exhibits relating to standing.  This evidence will put the issue of standing to bed, once and for all.

Turning to the merits of Log Cabin Republicans’ constitutional challenges to “”don’t ask, don’t tell”", we have ample evidence to prove that “”don’t ask, don’t tell”" does not meet the Witt standard. First, we will introduce by agreement with the government a number of exhibits. Some of these exhibits are extremely important.  

One is exhibit 4, a Navy report commonly known as the Crittenden report. Back in the 1950s, the excuse for excluding homosexuals from military service was that they were security risks. The Crittenden report concluded, however, that there was no factual data to support the contention that homosexuals were a greater security risk than heterosexuals. And so opponents of homosexuals in the military had to come up with other pretextual reasons to exclude them, a practice that continues today.  

Another exhibit that will come in by stipulation is a 1988 report from the Defense Personnel Security Research and Education Center, called PERSEREC, exhibit 5. This report pointed to the growing tolerance of homosexuality and concluded that “the military cannot indefinitely isolate itself from the changes occurring in the wider society, of which it is an integral part.” It then found that “having a same-gender or an opposite gender orientation is unrelated to job performance in the same way as being left- or right-handed.”  

We will also offer another PERSEREC report from 1989, exhibit 100, which found “the preponderance of the evidence presented indicates that homosexuals show pre-service suitability-related adjustment that is as good or better than the average heterosexual.”  

We will also offer exhibit 7, a GAO report from 1993, which studied 29 foreign militaries, with a special focus on Israel, Canada, Germany, and Sweden, and reported that permitting openly homosexuals to serve did not impair the functioning of these foreign militaries.  This GAO report concluded that, with respect to Israel, Canada, Sweden, and Germany:  “Military officials in all four countries said that the presence of homosexuals in the military is not an issue and has not created problems in the functioning of military units.”  

Another exhibit that will be admitted by stipulation is exhibit 8, a 1993 RAND report prepared at the request of the Secretary of Defense after President Clinton had announced his desire to lift the ban on homosexual service that existed when he took office in 1993.  This extensive inter-disciplinary study by 70 social scientists ultimately concluded as follows:

The team examined a range of potential policy options.  Most of the options were judged to be either inconsistent with the President’s directive, internally contradictory, or both.  Only one policy option was found to be consistent with the findings of this research, with the criteria of the Presidential memorandum, and to be logically and internally consistent.  That policy would consider sexual orientation, by itself, as not germane to determining who may serve in the military.

There will be more support for our position in other stipulated exhibits.

We also expect to introduce excerpts from the government’s responses to requests for admissions.  The admissions include information about the number of individuals discharged under “”don’t ask, don’t tell”,” including some year-by-year numbers, some eye-popping numbers about the number of women discharged pursuant to “”don’t ask, don’t tell”,” and information about the many non-combat occupations held by discharged service members. The admissions also include information about the number of other countries that allow open homosexuals to serve in their armed forces, admissions that homosexuals can openly serve in the FBI, CIA, and NSA and that even the Commander in Chief of our armed forces could be homosexual. They also include admissions as to a number of statements by leading military and political figures, including President Obama. They also include admissions that the government has no evidence to support “”don’t ask, don’t tell”" other than its legislative history and admissions that there is no rational basis for prejudice against homosexuals, generally, or against homosexuals serving in the military. There will be other admissions introduced but this gives you a snapshot of them.  

We also expect to introduce excerpts from the government’s answers to interrogatories, in which the government states that the only evidence of the governmental purposes and interests to be advanced by “”don’t ask, don’t tell”" is contained in the statute and its legislative history; that the only evidence that “”don’t ask, don’t tell”" promotes military readiness is in the statute and legislative history; that the only evidence that “”don’t ask, don’t tell”" promotes good order and discipline is in the statute and legislative history; and that the only evidence that “”don’t ask, don’t tell”" promotes unit cohesion is in the statute and legislative history.

We also expect to introduce a variety of government documents that will support our presentation. These documents, all produced by the government, will illustrate the history and implementation of “”don’t ask, don’t tell”", including the reduced number of discharges in times of war, the number of discharges by occupation, length of service, and gender, as well as information about enlistment waivers.  One noteworthy document is exhibit 337, a 1995 letter from the General Counsel to the Department of Defense to a senator, in which she wrote: “A simple promise to refrain from homosexual acts in the future cannot provide a sufficient basis to rebut the presumption.”  This shows that even celibate homosexuals are not permitted in our country’s military.  

We will introduce the testimony of several former service members.  You have seen a preview of their testimony in the declarations we submitted from them and I am happy to report that all of their depositions have been completed.  These witnesses include members of the Army, Navy, and Air Force, include both officers and non-officers, and include career service members, including one who served over 20 years.  They received many promotions and awards during their service to our country.  Two of them have already testified before Congress this year. Their stories, a small representative sample of the stories of patriotic Americans discharged under “don’t ask, don’t tell”, show that the military discharges service members without regard to their performance of their job duties and that their discharges did not significantly further any important government interest and were not necessary to further any important government interest.  

We also expect to offer deposition testimony from three witnesses who testified in response to a Rule 30(b)(6) deposition notice to the defendants.  One of them, Dr. Paul Gade, testified on the subject of foreign militaries.  In his opinion, the experience of foreign militaries is the best method of evaluating openly homosexual service in our military.  He also testified about a number of studies showing that, in countries with militaries comparable to ours, which had bans on homosexual service for the same stated reasons as our country, and which lifted the bans, allowing homosexuals to serve was a non-event, or anti-climactic.  

Another 30(b)(6) witness whose deposition testimony we will offer is Dennis Drogo.  He testified about the government’s waiver program, by which it allows individuals normally ineligible for service due to criminal convictions to enlist in our armed forces.  Besides his testimony about the type and number of crimes one may commit and still be allowed to enlist, he explained that the military uses a “whole person” review to evaluate candidates for such waivers and that the military does not employ a “whole person” review to evaluate homosexual candidates.  

The third 30(b)(6) witness was Lt. Col. Jamie Brady.  He testified as the 30(b)(6) witness for the government on several topics and we expect to introduce portions of his testimony, including the following admissions:  

• That the largest category of people separated from service because of “don’t ask, don’t tell” are people who were never deployed to a combat zone;

• That he was not aware of any reports or studies that show that the application of the policy to non-combat personnel furthers the purposes of “don’t ask, don’t tell”;

• That since the 1993 RAND report, he is not aware of any systematic empirical research that has been conducted by Defendants on the effect of acknowledged homosexuals on unit cohesion or unit performance; and

• That he is not aware of any evidence that “don’t ask, don’t tell” promotes national security, other than the military judgment of those testified before Congress in 1993.

We also expect to offer the testimony of seven expert witnesses.  You have also seen a preview of the experts’ testimony in the briefing on the government’s motion in limine to exclude them.  They come from different disciplines – history, psychology, sociology, military affairs, and so on – and they are all highly qualified, accomplished, and distinguished in their respective fields.  From their perspectives in their respective disciplines, they will also provide crucial evidence that “don’t ask, don’t tell” does not meet the Witt standard.  For example, Professor Frank will testify early on in the trial about the history of the enactment of “don’t ask, don’t tell”, and what it reveals, and related subjects.  Professor MacCoun, who I am happy to report will be here in person, will testify later on the concept of unit cohesion and explain that it does not provide a legitimate rationale for “don’t ask, don’t tell”.  Professor Korb will testify from the military perspective that “don’t ask, don’t tell” does not further any military objectives.  Professor Embser-Herbert will testify that Congress never considered how “don’t ask, don’t tell” might impact women in the military and about the impact of “don’t ask, don’t tell” on women in particular.  And other experts will also contribute to the court’s understanding of why “don’t ask, don’t tell” does not meet the Witt test.  

In addition, we will offer various admissions by government officials.  We will present evidence showing that several of the people responsible for “don’t ask, don’t tell” now realize that it was misguided when enacted and does not accomplish its stated purposes, or have urged that “don’t ask, don’t tell” be reconsidered.  

Most importantly, we will offer evidence of admissions by current government leaders at literally the highest levels of our Armed Forces, both on the military and the civilian command sides.  From the military side, these admissions include a sworn statement by the highest ranking military officer in the United States Armed Forces, the President’s principal military advisor, Admiral Mike Mullen, the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff. He testified to the Senate Armed Services Committee on February 10, 2010:

No matter how I look at this issue, I cannot escape being troubled by the fact that we have in place a policy which forces young men and women to lie about who they are in order to defend their fellow citizens. For me personally, it comes down to integrity, theirs as individuals and ours as an institution.

Log Cabin Court Case puts Obama Administration in Awkward Position

The Log Cabin Republicans released a press release on Friday July 9th laying out details pertaining to the Log Cabin Republicans v. United States case that will be heard this week. The case challenges the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” military policy. The Obama Administration is being forced to defend this policy which the President is in favor of repealing. Politico printed the following story on the situation.

“OBAMA CAN’T SHAKE GAY-RIGHTS FIGHTS

By JOSH GERSTEIN | 7/10/10 7:03 AM EDT

When President Barack Obama agreed to back legislation in May that could eventually repeal the military’s “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy, the resolution seemed to offer twin benefits for the White House:

 Quell the anger of gay activists who accused Obama of foot-dragging on the issue, and allow the question of gays in the military to cool for a while, perhaps until after the November election.

 That didn’t last long.

 The issue leapt back into the news this week after the Pentagon sent a survey to 400,000 troops to assess their attitudes on whether openly gay soldiers should be allowed to serve — with questions being criticized by gay rights advocates as inaccurate, inflammatory and biased.

 Next week, a lawsuit brought by the Log Cabin Republicans is going to trial in California — and Obama’s Justice Department is in the uncomfortable position of trying to prevent the “don’t ask, don’t tell” policy from being overturned as discharged veterans testify about its dramatic impact on their careers.

 Some gay rights activists who were cheered by Obama’s decision in May now say they’re frustrated by what feels like a two steps forward, one step back approach to the issue — especially in light of Obama’s delay in seeking to repeal of the policy in the first place…”

  Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0710/39560.html#ixzz0tTvL5VdM

Federal Judge rules Defense of Marriage Act Unconstitutional

Victory for Marriage Equality! A Boston Judge ruled today that the 1996 DOMA is unconstitutional because it interferes with a state’s right to define marriage. U.S. District Judge Joseph Tauro handed down two influential rulings Thursday declaring DOMA unconstitutional.

The first case was brought by the state of Massachusetts. Judge Tauro declared Congress violated the Tenth Amendment by originally passing DOMA. They took away the states decisions determining which couples can be considered married.

 His second ruling was on Gill v. Office of Personnel Management. It was decided that DOMA violated equal protection embodied in the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. This case was argued by Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders (GLAD), GLAD represented eight married couples and three widowers in the suit.

 Two other major equality court cases continue to develop in California, the Prop. 8 trial and Log Cabin Republicans trial against the “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy. The decision in Boston today is a great step toward equality for all Americans, regardless of their sexual orientation.