Arizona Supreme Court to rule on same-sex parental rights
PHOENIX — Arizona’s highest court on Tuesday struggled how to balance U.S. Supreme Court rulings requiring equal treatment for married gay couples with a state law that doesn’t recognize the parental rights of a lesbian woman who is divorcing her spouse.
A lower court decided in October that that Suzan McLaughlin is entitled to the same parental rights as if she were a man to the couple’s now 7-year-old son. He was born through artificial insemination.
Details of how to define parenting and the raft of other issues stemming from legal gay marriage have been working their way through many state courts since the nation’s high court legalized gay marriage in 2015.
Artificial insemination cases raise even more difficult issues. Several states, including New Mexico, Washington and Nevada, allow women or men who consent to another woman’s insemination to be legally considered the child’s parent, even if the couple is not married, according to the National Center for Lesbian Rights. Arizona isn’t one of them.


