A gay couple from Rhode Island has the right to marry in Massachusetts because laws in their home state do not expressly prohibit same-sex marriage, a judge...
A man was arrested after a 17-year-old Massachusetts boy he met on MySpace.com sent a text message to his family claiming he was being held against his will on the man's west Georgia sheep farm, police said.
BOSTON - A Superior Court judge ruled Friday that same-sex couples from Rhode Island have the right to marry in Massachusetts, touching off a debate over how much the landmark ruling to legalize gay marriage in Massachusetts should influence other states.
(Boston - AP) - A Boston judge rules that gay couples from Rhode Island have the right to marry in Massachusetts. Suffolk Superior Court Judge Thomas Connolly says there's no constitutional amendment, statute, or court ruling from Rhode Island that explicitly forbids same-sex unions.
The decision by Massachusetts Superior Court Justice Thomas E. Connolly means gay couples from states with ambiguous laws on gay marriage can marry in Massachusetts.
BOSTON (BP)--A Massachusetts judge ruled Sept. 29 that same-sex couples from Rhode Island can "marry" in the Bay State, handing homosexual activists a significant victory and likely sparking a movement for a law or constitutional amendment in Rhode Island banning "gay marriage."
A man was arrested after a 17-year-old Massachusetts boy he met on MySpace-dot-com sent a text message to his family back home claiming he was being held against his will on the man's west Georgia farm.
A gay couple from Rhode Island has the right to marry in Massachusetts because laws in their home state do not expressly prohibit same-sex marriage, a judge in Boston ruled Friday.
A gay couple from Rhode Island has the right to marry in Massachusetts because laws in their home state do not expressly prohibit same-sex marriage, a judge ruled Friday.