Cancer kills Niki Quasney, Indiana gay marriage pioneer
Sunday, February 8, 2015
Niki Quasney, who together with wife Amy Sandler became the first married gay couple in Indiana, died of cancer on Thursday. She was 38. The death was announced today by the law firm that assisted her.
They knew that by coming forward they could help accelerate equality for all same-sex couples in Indiana by demonstrating the urgency of their need for equal dignity | ||
—The couple's lawyer |
Indiana, US had only recognised their marriage last year after a federal judge granted their emergency request. They wed in 2013 in Massachusetts, two years after an Illinois civil union.
Quasney was diagnosed with ovarian cancer in 2009 and sought the intervention to ensure eligibility for her daughters and wife to receive state and national assistance after her death. Also sought was a death certificate recognising her marriage.
The same judge ultimately struck down the state gay marriage ban. An appeals court in Chicago upheld the decision, as did the national Supreme Court. The case was one of a national slew following an earlier Supreme Court ruling in favor of gay marriage.
"If my life is cut short because of ovarian cancer," Quasney told one court "I want our children to know that their parents were treated like other married couples in their home state, and to be proud of this. I want to know what it feels like to be a legally recognized family in our community, together with Amy and our daughters." Their lawyer Paul Castillo said today the couple "knew that by coming forward they could help accelerate equality for all same-sex couples in Indiana by demonstrating the urgency of their need for equal dignity."
Sources
- Jill Disis. "Munster woman in Indiana’s 1st same-sex marriage dies" — The Indianapolis Star, February 8, 2015
- AP. "Indiana woman who fought gay-marriage ban dies of cancer" — WISH-TV, February 8, 2015