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  ACLU Challenges N.C. Cohabitation Law
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ContributorArmyDem 
Last EditedArmyDem  May 10, 2005 01:38am
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CategoryNews
MediaNewspaper - Washington Post
News DateTuesday, May 10, 2005 07:00:00 AM UTC0:0
DescriptionWoman Fired for Living With Boyfriend

By Steve Hartsoe
Associated Press
Tuesday, May 10, 2005; Page A06

RALEIGH, N.C., May 9 -- There are about 144,000 unmarried couples living together in North Carolina, and they are all breaking the law -- a statute that has been on the books since 1805.

The law against cohabitation is rarely enforced. But now the American Civil Liberties Union is suing to overturn it altogether, on behalf of a former sheriff's dispatcher who said she had to quit her job because she would not marry her live-in boyfriend.

Debora Hobbs, 40, said her boss, Sheriff Carson Smith of Pender County, near Wilmington, told her to get married, move out or find another job after he found out she and her boyfriend had been living together for three years. The couple did not want to get married, so Hobbs quit.

Her lawsuit, filed in March in state court, seeks to have the cohabitation law declared unconstitutional.

"Certainly the government has no business regulating relationships between consenting adults in the privacy of their own homes," said Jennifer Rudinger, state executive director of the ACLU. "This law is 200 years old, and a lot of people are very surprised that we even have it on the books."
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