
Mistaken Ark. law would let toddlers wed
Fri Aug 17, 2007
LITTLE ROCK, Ark. - A law passed this year allows Arkansans of any age —
even infants — to marry if their parents agree, and the governor may
have to call a special session to fix the mistake, lawmakers said
Friday.
The legislation was intended to establish 18 as the minimum age to marry
but also allow pregnant teenagers to marry with parental consent, bill
sponsor Rep. Will Bond said. An extraneous "not" in the bill, however,
allows anyone who is not pregnant to marry at any age if the parents
allow it.
"It's clearly not the intent to allow 10-year-olds or 11-year-olds to
get married," Bond said. "The legislation was screwed up."
The bill reads: "In order for a person who is younger than eighteen (18)
years of age and who is not pregnant to obtain a marriage license, the
person must provide the county clerk with evidence of parental consent
to the marriage."
A code revision commission — which fixes typographical and technical
errors in laws — had tried to correct the mistake, but a group of
legislators said Friday the commission went beyond its powers.
"You're either pregnant or you're not pregnant," Sen. Dave Bisbee said.
"Rarely will that be a typographical error."
The Arkansas Legislative Council asked the independent commission to
reverse its correction. Several lawmakers said a special session may be
necessary.
"We need a special session to fix this," Sen. Sue Madison said. "I am
concerned about pedophiles coming to Arkansas to find parents who are
willing to sign a very young child's consent."
Before the new law took effect July 31, girls could get married with
parental consent at 16 and boys at 17.
The Legislature formally adjourned its session in May and is not
scheduled to meet again until January 2009, unless Gov. Mike Beebe calls
a special session. Beebe said he wanted to look at all options for
correcting the error before deciding whether to call a special session.
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