NEW YORK — Edie Windsor cried with joy Wednesday when she learned that the Supreme Court used her lawsuit to strike down a federal provision that defined marriage as only between a man and a woman, and the spunky former IBM executive who recently turned 84 was all smiles two hours later when she faced a packed news conference.
"Wow. I'm honored. I'm humbled. I'm overjoyed to be here today," said Windsor, a Manhattan resident whose given name is Edith, her words sometimes barely audible above the loud snaps of cameras.
The court issued a decision Wednesday striking down the provision, which denied federal benefits to married gay couples. The ruling, seen as a historic victory for gay rights, came in the justices' review of the Windsor's case. She sued to challenge a $363,000 federal estate tax bill after her partner of 44 years died in 2009.
Windsor said she hoped that the decision would bring about "the beginning of the end of stigma, of lying about who we are."
Windsor recalled that she "lied all the time" about who she truly was during the 15 years she worked at IBM. In thinking back on those years a half-century ago, she said, "Some of it is almost incredible to me."
Minutes earlier, her lawyer, Roberta Kaplan, had pointed out her client's size — 5 feet tall and 100 pounds — as she described the huge impact her case had made in the nation's legal fabric, saying that Windsor had made it so that gay and lesbian couples could participate fully in society "after so many dark decades of living their lives hidden in the closet."
Windsor said she was not sure how the court would rule but she was confident of the common sense of her lawyers' arguments.
"Our arguments were sound and everyone else's were insane," she said.