MOREHEAD, Ky. — The latest on the defiant Kentucky clerk who has refused to issue marriage licenses to gay couples, disobeying a federal judge and serving five days in jail for contempt (all times local):
10 p.m.
Attorneys representing the couples who sued clerk Kim Davis over her refusal to issue marriage licenses are concerned that the altered forms Davis' deputies issued could be invalid.
Davis, on her first day back at work after a five-day stint in jail, announced Monday that she would not block her deputies from issuing licenses. But she insisted they be edited to exclude her name and her title.
The forms, a template issued by the state, now read, "pursuant to federal court order" in the spaces meant to list Davis' position.
Kentucky's governor and attorney general both said they believe the altered marriage licenses are legal.
But lawyers with the American Civil Liberties Union say they "have concerns about the validity," given the alterations and said they were reviewing their legal options.
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