In Griswold v. Connecticut (1965), the Supreme Court invalidated a state law proscribing what as applied to married couples?
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Griswold v. Connecticut, the Supreme Court invalidated a state law forbidding contraception as applied to married couples. The state of Connecticut had a provision, a 'Comstock Law,' that essentially made anything that prevented contraception illegal. The court ruled against the state saying that there is the concept of privacy in intimate setting, particularly when it came to marriage. The state law was a clear intrusion of that privacy. Not only was this an official recognition by the court of the right to privacy, but it also was a big victory for pro-choice advocates, a heated debate even today.
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