Landmark Case

  • Dismantling White Supremacy

Frontiero v. Richardson

Case Number: 71-1694
Date Filed:
December 23, 1970
Date(s) of Disposition:

12/23/1970: Complaint filed in District Court

04/05/1972: Relief denied (341 F. Supp. 201)

05/14/1973: United States Supreme Court decided in favor of plaintiff (411 U.S. 677)

Court where filed:
United States Supreme Court
Plaintiffs:
Air Force Lieutenant Sharron Frontiero and her husband Joseph, a veteran and full-time student
Defendants:
Elliot Richardson, U. S. Secretary of Defense

Equality in the Armed Forces

Lieutenant Sharron Frontiero joined the Air Force in 1968. She married Joseph, a full-time student receiving veteran’s benefits, in 1969. The newlyweds simply asked for the same housing, medical, and dental benefits provided to married male officers but were denied.

In 1970, the Center helped the Frontieros sue the Department of Defense to extend those benefits to married servicewomen and their spouses. They argued that there was no rational basis for the regulation on which the denial of benefits was based.

In 1973, the United States Supreme Court ruled that the Air Force regulation was discriminatory and violated the 5th Amendment’s guarantee of due process under the law. The case became the first successful sex discrimination lawsuit against the federal government.

The landmark decision helped pave the way for servicewomen to receive equal benefits and for all women to receive equal treatment under the law.