
01.22.2010 9:14am EST
Lawyers for two same-sex couples challenging
California’s ban on same-sex marriage plan to wrap up their case Friday
following the incendiary testimony of a proponent who said he thinks gays are
more likely to be pedophiles and that allowing them to wed would lead to the
legalization of polygamy and incest.
Hak-Shing William Tam of San Francisco spent five hours testifying
Thursday as a hostile plaintiffs’ witness to prove that bias toward gays fueled
the 2008 campaign to pass the voter-approved measure, known as Proposition 8.
Tam, who was one of five individuals who signed
on as official proponents of the ban and whose names appeared alongside ballot
arguments for Proposition 8, acknowledged that he subscribes to beliefs about
an alleged link between homosexuality and pedophilia posted on the Internet by
a Chinese-American Christian group for which he serves as secretary.
“Do you believe that homosexuals are 12 times
more likely to molest children?” attorney David Boies asked.
“Yeah, based on the different literature that I
have read,” Tam replied.
Earlier in the trial, a Cambridge University
professor testified that there is no evidence to suggest that gays are more
likely to molest children than heterosexuals. Boies pressed Tam to cite books,
articles or authors he had read to substantiate the views, but Tam said he
could not remember specifics.
Others involved in promoting Proposition 8 have
tried to distance themselves from Tam. During a news conference outside court,
lawyer Andy Pugno, a lawyer for the coalition of religious and conservative
groups that backed the measure, said Tam had “next to nothing” to do with the
campaign.
Tam testified that he spent a lot of time
working on the campaign and communicated with its leaders but modestly added he
did not consider himself a major player. He said became an official proponent
because of his concern that legalizing same-sex marriage would encourage young
people to pursue gay partners.
“I think it is very important that children
won’t grow up to fantasize or think about should I marry Jane or John when I
grow up, because this is very important for Asian families.”
Under questioning by Boies, Tam also said he
agreed with a statement on the Web site for the Chinese-American Christian
group that said if same-sex marriage was treated as a civil right, “so would
pedophilia, polygamy and incest.”
“And that is what you were telling people in
encouraging them to vote for Proposition 8?” Boies asked.
“Yes,” Tam answered.
Tam said he drew that conclusion after reading
an Internet article that claimed incest and polygamy were legal in the
Netherlands, a country where same-same marriages became legal in 2001.
Boies: You are saying here that after same-sex
marriage was legalized, the Netherlands legalized incest and polygamy?”
Tam: “yeah, look at the date, Polygamy happened
afterward.
“Who told you that? Where did you get that
idea,” Boies asked incredulously.
“It’s the Internet,” he said. “Another person in
the organization found it and he showed me it…I looked at the document and I
thought it was true.”
Polygamy is not legal in the Netherlands, but
the idea that it is became an urban myth of sorts in 2005 after a man and two
women signed a private “cohabitation contract” while wearing wedding garb. Consensual
incest between adults is no longer prosecuted in the Netherlands, but close
relatives are not allowed to wed.
Under cross-examination from Nicole Moss, a
lawyer for Proposition 8’s sponsors, Tam said the opinions expressed on the Web
site were his own and had not been approved by ProtectMarriage.com, the
organization that ran the campaign, or submitted to its strategists for review.
“At any time during the campaign phrase or any
phase for Proposition 8 did you have a role in drafting the official message
for ProtectMarriasge.com?” Moss asked.
“No,” Tam answered, adding that his contact with
the campaign’s staff was minimal. “I was acting independently.”
Shortly before Tam left the witness stand, Boies
asked him if he had spoken to his lawyer during a 5-minute break in his
testimony. Tam said he had.
“I said I felt like naughty boy being put in
front of a classroom and being mocked at,” he said.
Plaintiffs lawyers expect to rest their case on
Friday with testimony from a University of California, Davis psychologist who
is scheduled to testify about prejudice against lesbians and gay men