Marriage license hearing set for inmate
HARRISBURG - The state Superior Court has ordered a county judge to look for the least expensive way to accommodate a convicted murderer who wants to get married but can't afford the cost of being transported to the courthouse to apply for a license.
Alfie K. Coats, 36, now serving a life sentence in the State Correctional Institution at Mahanoy, appealed after a Schuylkill County judge ruled that clerks in the county Orphans' Court, which issues the licenses, did not have to come to the county's four prisons to do so.
State law requires marriage-license applicants to appear in person to vouch for the legality of the marriage, but Coats and fiancee Sandra Lee Jackson argued that they could not afford to pay deputies to drive him from the prison outside Frackville to the Pottsville courthouse.
The Superior Court panel on Monday voted 2-1 to order a new hearing within 60 days "to determine the least costly method to achieve the necessary face-to-face interview" among such alternatives as video conferencing, deputizing prison staff to do the license interview, or sending a marriage clerk into the prison.