Three pairs of men in Minnesota's sex-offender treatment program are seeking to marry under the state's new same-sex marriage law, and state officials said Monday they will not stand in their way.
At least four of the six men live at the Moose Lake campus of the Minnesota Sex Offender Program (MSOP), a high-security facility for offenders considered too dangerous to live in the community.
While acknowledging that the requests raise novel questions, Deputy Human Services Commissioner Anne Barry said, "We don't intend to interfere with their right to marry one another."
The law, which took effect Aug. 1, has forced the agency to review its policies governing the program, which houses more than 600 offenders — all but one of them men. In the past, some offenders in the program have married women on the outside, but none have married other program residents.
"There'd be an awful lot of things to be sorted out before I could say it was a good idea or not," said Warren Maas, executive director of Project Pathfinder, which treats sex offenders and helps them make the transition into the community. "Clearly, we want people to form healthy relationships. But you have a number of unintended consequences."
One of those seeking a marriage license is Allen Pyron, who has been in the program for about six years and who has been engaged to another offender at Moose Lake for about a year.
Pyron, who has requested a marriage license application from the Carlton County Recorder's Office, said Monday that he is in love with his fiancé and that he has an emotional relationship that is more about intimacy and supporting each other than sex.
"We should be allowed to exercise our rights, our civil liberties," he said in a telephone interview. He said marrying and having a stable relationship would be a "very healthy" step in his treatment.