Mary Bonauto (born 1961) is an American lawyer and civil rights advocate who has worked to eradicate discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. She began working with the Massachusetts-based Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders (GLAD) organization in 1990.[1] A resident of Portland, Maine, Bonauto was one of the leaders who both worked with the Maine legislature to pass a marriage equality law and to defend it at the ballot in a narrow loss during the 2009 election campaign.
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Bonauto grew up in Newburgh, New York in a Roman Catholic family. She graduated from Hamilton College and Northeastern University School of Law. In 1987, after graduating from law school, she entered private practice in Maine, where she was at the time one of three openly-gay private practice lawyers in the state.[1] As of May 2010, she lived in Portland with her spouse Jennifer Wriggins, who is a professor at the University of Maine School of Law. The couple were married in Massachusetts.[2] They have two children.
GLAD, through Bonauto, has litigated widely in areas such as job and public accommodations discrimination, securing domestic partner benefits and relationship protections, establishing second parent rights and de facto parent status, vindicating First Amendment protections, and challenging anti-gay harassment and violence. She has worked in public policy in all six New England states, and occasionally writes for legal publications. Bonauto filed her first marriage case in Vermont in July 1997.[1]
Yale University awarded its 2010-2011 Brudner Prize, which recognizes "an accomplished scholar or activist whose work has made significant contributions to the understanding of LGBT issues or furthered the tolerance of LGBT people," to Bonauto.[3]
In 2011, Bonauto was named one of the 50 most-powerful women in Boston by Boston Magazine.[4]
In 1997, Bonauto on behalf of GLAD, along with Beth Robinson and Susan Murray, filed a lawsuit in Vermont on behalf of three couples seeking the freedom to marry.[1] The suit was ultimately appealed to the Vermont Supreme Court, which ruled in the couples' favor but invited the Vermont Legislature to legislate a solution.[5] In the spring of 2000, the Vermont Legislature enacted civil unions, which extended all of the state-level benefits of marriage but in a different system from marriage itself.[1]
GLAD led by Bonauto filed suit in Massachusetts on behalf of seven gay and lesbian couples denied the freedom to marry in 2001.[6] In the case, known as Goodridge v. Department of Public Health, the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court became the first state high court to rule that excluding gay people from civil marriage violates equal protection guarantees. Same-sex couples began marrying in May 2004.[1] The November 2003 ruling was contested politically for a number of years, but in June 2007, more than three-fourths of the state legislature voted to reject any proposal to amend the state constitution and reverse the Goodridge decision.[7]
GLAD, including Bonauto, filed suit in Connecticut[8] on behalf of seven gay and lesbian couples in August 2004. The Connecticut legislature responded by passing a civil union law the next year.[9] GLAD attorney Bennett Klein, joined by Bonauto, argued for the couples in the Connecticut Supreme Court and won a ruling that it was unjustified discrimination to place same-sex couples in the separate and lesser status of civil unions, and that sexual orientation was a "quasi-suspect" classification for equal protection purposes.[10]
In 2009, Maine became the first state to pass a marriage equality law through the legislature, instead of through the court system, and also have it signed into law by the Governor.[11] Bonauto was instrumental in the campaign to enact the marriage equality law, and was the architect of an unprecedentedly large public hearing on April 22, 2009, where proponents and opponents presented their arguments.[12] After the law was passed, a "people's veto" referendum campaign was begun and the voters overturned the law in November 2009, by a 53-47 margin.[13][2]
In March 2009, GLAD, including Bonauto, and along with co-counsel from Foley Hoag, Jenner & Block, and Sullivan & Worcester, filed in U.S. District Court in Boston a lawsuit challenging the constitutionality of section 3 of the Defense of Marriage Act (DOMA).[14] The case claims that the federal definition of marriage created by DOMA to exclude married same-sex couples from all federal marital protections violates equal protection guarantees. U.S. District Judge Joseph L. Tauro heard oral arguments on the merits of the case on May 6, 2010. [15] On July 8, 2010, Judge Tauro ruled that Section 3 of DOMA is unconstitutional with respect to claims brought by the seven married same-sex couples and three widowers from Massachusetts GLAD is representing in the case.[16] The Department of Justice will now decide whether to appeal the ruling.[17]