Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Appeals Court Narrows Bar on Enforcing Idaho Abortion Statute

Abortion: 20 weeks
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http://www.abortioninstruments.com/

In May 2011, Mark Hiedeman, the prosecuting attorney in Bannock County, Idaho, brought criminal charges against Jennie Linn McCormack, a low-income, unmarried mother of three, after she purchased medications over the Internet in 2010 to induce an abortion. There are no licensed healthcare providers who offer abortions in southeastern Idaho and Ms. McCormack, who didn’t want to have additional children, claimed the medications were prescribed by a physician outside of Bannock County.

The criminal charges were dismissed last September, but Ms. McCormack subsequently challenged Idaho’s law in a federal lawsuit, saying it was unconstitutional.

On Wednesday, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit agreed with a district court that Ms. McCormack is likely to succeed with her constitutional challenge to the law. However, the appeals court narrowed an injunction prohibiting the prosecutor from enforcing the law, saying it can only apply to Ms. McCormack’s case, not others.

The appellate panel, in part, disagreed with the prosecuting attorney’s reading of prior U.S. Supreme Court decisions — including the landmark Roe v. Wade case — that a state may prohibit anyone other than a licensed physician from performing an abortion.

“These principles, embraced by the Supreme Court, recognize that women’s health is an important interest for the state and one that is considered in crafting abortion statutes,” Judge Harry Pregerson wrote in the 37-page opinion.

He went on,
These principles, however, in no way recognize, permit, or stand for the proposition that a state may prosecute a pregnant woman who seeks an abortion in a manner that may not be authorized by the state’s statute, including when a pregnant woman receives physician- prescribed medication to terminate her pregnancy. Hiedeman’s reading of Roe and Casey expands these Supreme Court holdings to reach an unintended result.
The circuit also found that Ms. McCormack was likely to succeed in her case, saying the Idaho law “heaps yet another substantial obstacle” on Ms. McCormack and other pregnant women in deciding whether to obtain an abortion.

“There can be no doubt that requiring women to explore the intricacies of state abortion statutes to ensure that they and their provider act within the Idaho abortion statute framework, results in an ‘undue burden’ on a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus,” Judge Pregerson said.
Mr. Hiedeman and lawyers for Ms. McCormack didn’t immediately return phone calls seeking comment Wednesday.

A spokeswoman for the Idaho attorney general’s office, which is defending the law, said the office is reviewing the decision and declined further comment.

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