Today's News & Views
December 8, 2008
 
Abortions Drop In South Dakota
Part Three of Three

The number of abortions in South Dakota dropped to 707 in 2007, according to the state health department. That toll represents the second lowest since 1973.

A related piece of good news is something we talked about last week: Citing the bad economy, "Planned Parenthood of Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota said the bad economy prompted it to eliminate 9.5 positions, including the director of its two South Dakota clinics,” the Associated Press reported. They are still performing abortions but with a smaller crew.

Part of the pro-abortion response to news of the decline in the number of abortions was to use it to lament once again that the state’s informed consent law is in effect. As discussed here, a 7-4 decision by the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals rendered last summer meant South Dakota could enforce House Bill 1166, passed in 2005.

The law was to take effect July 1, 2005, but Planned Parenthood raced to court and won a preliminary injunction from U.S. District Judge Karen Schreier of Rapid City, South Dakota. Her initial decision was later affirmed by a three-judge panel of the 8th Circuit, a decision which the full Court overturned June 27.

Part of HB 1166 requires that abortionists tell women contemplating an abortion that the “human embryo is a distinct individual human being, a complete separate member of the species Homo sapiens, and is recognizable as such.”

Mary Spaulding Balch, NRL State Legislative Director, told us at the time that she was delighted by the decision. “What’s at issue is what you can tell a pregnant woman contemplating an abortion to ensure that her decision is an informed decision,” she said. “The lopsided vote in our favor strongly affirms what common sense declares and abortionists try to obscure: that (as the statute says) ‘abortion will terminate the life of a whole, separate, unique, living human being.’”

Balch explained that the full federal appeals court rejected the linchpin of Planned Parenthood’s argument, one that is so old it’s practically covered with dust: The majority refused to accept this canard that “To state the simple biological truth about the unborn is by definition an ‘ideological’ statement on the part of the state that ‘dictates’ what the doctor (the abortionist) must say.”

Reading between the lines it was clear that the majority was not impressed by the caliber of the witnesses Planned Parenthood brought to the legal table or by the depth of their argument.

To buttress its claims that physician’s free speech rights were violated “by compelling them to deliver the State’s ideological message, rather than truthful and non-misleading information relevant to informed consent to abortion,” PPFA offered affidavits from only two witnesses.

One simply stated that the disclosure “are statements of ideology and opinion, not medicine or fact,” the majority wrote. The other expert contended there is no medical consensus that the unborn is a separate, unique, living human being.

By contrast the state of South Dakota provided a plethora of testimony from women who “felt their decisions would have been better informed if they had received from their abortion provider the information required by” the law and portions of HR 1166’s legislative history.

In addition a number of experts offered scientific evidence to support the conclusion that undergirds the disclosure--that the “human embryo is a distinct individual human being, a complete separate member of the species Homo sapiens, and is recognizable as such.”

After a careful perusal of its own prior rulings and the testimony, the court appeals court majority concluded that Planned Parenthood had not demonstrated that the disclosure was “untruthful or misleading” or that there was an “ideological message from which physicians need to disassociate themselves.”

Having vacated the preliminary injunction, the court remanded the case to Judge Schreier.

Please send your comments to daveandrusko@gmail.com  

Part One
Part Two