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Today's News & Views
March 1, 2006
Abortion Laws Do Not Always
Require
Health Exceptions Appeals Panel Rules
In a decision that remains largely under the radar, a federal
appeals court has rejected a key weapon in the pro-abortion legal
arsenal. Last week, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court of Appeals said that
U.S. District Judge Susan Dlott had erred when she concluded that
every law which regulates abortion must contain a general health and
life exception.
Writing February 24 for a three-member panel, Judge David McKeague
said "close scrutiny of the case law reveals that no such blanket
requirement has been imposed." The panel also held that lower courts
may not strike down entire statutes when a narrower ruling is
possible, citing the Supreme Court's unanimous decision recently
handed down in Ayotte.
Legal commentators from all perspectives have tried to read the tea
leaves in Ayotte. Many speculated that one result might be that
pro-abortionists would not be able to just waltz into court, conjure
up a "parade of horribles" concerning the laws alleged effect on
maternal life or health, and have the law stricken in its entirety
prior to it ever going into effect. Likewise, the speculation has
been that courts might also be unwilling to gut a law in its
entirety if, when it takes effect, only a portion of the law proves
to be in conflict with Supreme Court rulings.
However, while rejecting what is called a "per se" requirement
[Judge Dlott's determination that every abortion statute must have
life and health exceptions], the panel did find Dlott's alternative
basis for invalidating the Ohio law at issue persuasive--that
plaintiffs were likely to succeed on the merits because substantial
medical evidence had been presented that there could be a
significant risk to at least some women's health or lives in certain
circumstances, if they were not allowed to have a chemically-induced
abortion, the two-drug RU486 abortion technique.
"There are some circumstances in which the surgical option is
considerably more risky for some women," wrote Judge McKeague, who
was joined by judges Karen Nelson Moore and John Rogers in the 3-0
decision. The implication is that if these specific circumstances
were taken into account, the statute would be constitutional Thus
the result of the panel's action was to vacate in part Dlott's
ruling and "remand for consideration of the appropriate scope of
injunctive relief in light of the United States Supreme Court's
recent decision in Ayotte v. Planned Parenthood of Northern New
England."
Ohio Attorney General Jim Petro said he welcomed the chance to
return to Judge Dlott to argue in favor of a "sensible and
mainstream state law." He told the Cincinnati Inquirer that the law
is designed to protect women from a potentially dangerous drug.
"We believe the state has a right and a duty to protect the health
of Ohio citizens," Petro said in a statement.
At issue in Planned Parenthood Cincinnati Region v. Taft is the
"off-label" use of RU486, which the state of Ohio tried to prevent
by passing a law in 2004. Some background into the history of the
introduction of RU486 is needed.
In 2000, after examining the results of its tests, the Food and Drug
Administration approved the manufacture and use of mifepristone
(RU486) for use in the United States. The FDA concluded its use was
safe up through 49 days' gestation.
Pro-abortionists began pushing the envelope almost immediately. The
so-called "Schaff protocol" is recommended by the National Abortion
Federation and Planned Parenthood and "has come to be widely
employed across the United States," according to Judge McKeague.
Named after Eric Schaff, whose research primarily led to its
development, the protocol makes two dramatic changes.
It lowers the amount of mifepristone/RU486 and increases the amount
of the prostaglandin (Misoprostol) used with RU486 to induce
contractions to expel the dead baby. And the span in which the
two-drug technique can be used is expanded from 49 days to 63 days.
Once a drug is FDA-approved, doctors may prescribe it in dosages
other than those expressly approved and for other
indications---known as "off-label" use--absent state regulation.
Ohio's legislators stepped in to do just that.
They "concluded that the FDA had only approved one specific protocol
for the administration of mifepristone because that was the only
safe and effective protocol," McKeague wrote. "Therefore, they
banned all other uses of mifepristone to protect Ohio women from
unsafe and ineffective mifepristone protocols."
The legislation was scheduled to go into effect September 23, 2004.
However, two abortionists and various Planned Parenthood chapters in
Ohio sued to stop the ban from taking effect, and Judge Dlott barred
its enforcement.
The panel's opinion was carefully written and traced both what was
said in a whole series of Supreme Court decisions and "The Supreme
Court's application of the health or life exception requirements,"
according to Judge McKeague. (Emphasis in the original) The latter
"further undermines the slender textual support for a per se
requirement."
McKeague then surveyed how other federal courts have addressed the
question, concluding, "Neither can support for a per se requirement
be found in any of the case from other circuits cited in the
[plaintiffs'] briefs."
If you have any comments, please send them to Dave Andrusko at
dandrusko@nrlc.org.
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