Chris Strickland was born and raised in Mississippi and recently went back to school and completed a bachelors in criminal justice. Chris is a Mom, and not unlike many other Americans, Chris’ first marriage ended in divorce. But for same-sex couples, divorce can have a number of harmful consequences, especially when the marriage was never seen as “legal in the court’s eyes” to begin with. Having married before the Supreme Court’s Obergefell decision, Chris Strickland had a tough time getting her marriage acknowledged in the state of Mississippi, and following the divorce, had to fight to secure legal parentage of her children.
Regardless of marital status, a court-ordered adoption remains the best, safest way to secure parental rights for LGBTQ families.
Divorce is always difficult, but for Chris, it included losing rights to her children. Chris and her ex-wife had previously decided to have a baby using an unknown sperm donor, who had waived their parental rights. Chris parented the children in her relationship, with one son even bearing her last name. But after the divorce, the judge disregarded the joint process the same-sex couple went through to form a family. At Chris’ custody hearing, Rankin County’s Judge Grant ruled that Chris did not have any rights to her child born to her ex-wife, but that the unknown sperm donor did. Although Judge Grant ruled that Chris had no parental rights, he did rule that she must pay child support. Chris challenged the ruling with the help of local attorney Dianne Ellis and Beth Littrell of Lambda Legal, and eventually the Mississippi Supreme Court ruled in her favor in April 2018.
Chris’s legal struggle is far from over as the case was ordered back to Judge Grant to decide on custody of Zayden Strickland this fall. Dreaming of a day in which all same-sex parents will have rights to their children, biological or not, Chris shared her story with Family Equality Council for our #StatesofEquality series.
Read more about the Chris Strickland’s case history on Lambda Legal’s website.
Chris Strickland was born and raised in Mississippi and recently went back to school and completed a bachelors in criminal justice. Chris is a Mom, and not unlike many other Americans, Chris’ first marriage ended in divorce. But for same-sex couples, divorce can have a number of harmful consequences, especially when the marriage was never seen as “legal in the court’s eyes” to begin with. Having married before the Supreme Court’s Obergerfell decision, Chris Strickland had a tough time getting her marriage acknowledged in the state of Mississippi, and following the divorce, had to fight to secure legal parentage of her children.
Regardless of marital status, a court-ordered adoption remains the best, safest way to secure parental rights for LGBTQ families. Divorce is always difficult, but for Chris, it included losing rights to her children. Chris and her ex-wife had previously decided to have a baby using an unknown sperm donor, who had waived their parental rights. Chris parented the children in her relationship, with one son even bearing her last name. But after the divorce, the judge disregarded the joint process the same-sex couple went through to form a family. At Chris’ custody hearing, Rankin County’s Judge Grant ruled that Chris did not have any rights to her child born to her ex-wife, but that the unknown sperm donor did. Although Judge Grant ruled that Chris had no parental rights, he did rule that she must pay child support. After years of challenging that ruling, the Mississippi Supreme Court finally ruled in her favor in April 2018.
Chris’s legal struggle is far from over as the case was ordered back to Judge Grant to decide on custody of Zayden Strickland this fall. Dreaming of a day in which all same-sex parents will have rights to their children, biological or not, Chris shared her story with Family Equality Council for our #StatesofEquality series.