The two appeared in court in the northeastern city of Metz
in a bid to overturn a law stipulating those parents and their children whether
natural or not cannot marry.
The law states that exceptions to the rule can be made by presidential decree for unions like the one envisaged by Holder and Lorentz, but only if they have the blessing of the person through whom they are linked.
In this case, that would be Holder's father and Lorentz's ex-husband, who is
now dead. The court in Metz will announce its ruling on 26 June. The law states that exceptions to the rule can be made by presidential decree for unions like the one envisaged by Holder and Lorentz, but only if they have the blessing of the person through whom they are linked.
"I hope we can ultimately marry and create a real reconstructed family
like thousands of others that exist today," Lorentz said after the
hearing.
Lorentz, who married Eric Holder's father in 2003 and divorced him in 2012, said she would take the fight "right up to the European Court of Human Rights if needed" and win her case.
Lorentz has a 17-year old daughter from Holder's father, while Eric Holder has a 22-year old daughter from a former marriage. Their lawyer Mathieu Ehrhardt said the French law was flawed, adding that the European Court of Human Rights had rapped Britain in 2005 over a similar case
Lorentz, who married Eric Holder's father in 2003 and divorced him in 2012, said she would take the fight "right up to the European Court of Human Rights if needed" and win her case.
Lorentz has a 17-year old daughter from Holder's father, while Eric Holder has a 22-year old daughter from a former marriage. Their lawyer Mathieu Ehrhardt said the French law was flawed, adding that the European Court of Human Rights had rapped Britain in 2005 over a similar case
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