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185 lines
8.8 KiB
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The following article is from the Spring/Summer 1988 issue
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of CIVIL LIBERTIES, a newspaper published by the American
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Civil Liberties Union. It is presented for the purpose of
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editorial critique. The opinions of the authors are not
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necessarily those of this presenter.
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BOYFRIENDS AND HUSBANDS USE COURTS
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TO BLOCK WOMEN'S ABORTIONS
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By Dawn Johnsen and Lynn Paltrow
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(Staff Attorneys, "ACLU Reproductive Freedom Project")
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During the last several months, the anti-abortion forces
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have implemented a new strategy in their systematic campaign
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to deprive women of their reproductive freedom. In cases in
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Indiana, Utah, and Pennsylvania, individual men, represented
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by anti-choice lawyers, have sought and obtained temporary
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restraining orders ("TROs") from state courts enjoining
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women from exercising their right to choose to have an
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abortion. Three cases were recently brought by men who
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claimed to be the women's "boyfriends" and two were brought
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by the women's husbands.
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These cases, usually orchestrated by anti-choice activists,
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only arise where there is a problem in the marriage or the
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relationship. They frequently reflect not a concern for the
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woman or the baby that might be, but rather a hurt or
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spurned lover's desire to continue or control the
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relationship. Husbands and boyfriends, of course, have
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every right to express their views on pregnancy from the
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beginning of the relationship and to seek a different
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relationship if the couple's views on childbearing do not
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coincide. Partners who disagree about terminating a
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pregnancy should seek help from a professional counselor not
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a court order from a judge.
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Thus far, these cases have been concentrated in Indiana,
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where courts have issued three TROs in the last two months.
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This strategy was devised by Indiana attorney James Bopp,
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Jr., who is general counsel to the National Right to Life
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Committee. Bopp has stated that his ultimate goal is to
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bring one of these cases to the U.S. Supreme Court as a
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device to have Roe vs. Wade, and the many subsequent cases
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recognizing a woman's right to choose to have an abortion,
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overturned. Bopp has made available at no cost, and is
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advertising nationwide, what he calls a "Father's Rights
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Litigation Kit." It contains all of the legal documents
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necessary to bring a case seeking to enjoin a woman from
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having an abortion. In addition to the Indiana cases, this
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litigation kit has already been used by a "boyfriend" to
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obtain a TRO against a pregnant woman in Philadelphia.
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Anti-choice lawyers have issued ominous warnings of more
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cases to come.
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WITHOUT A HUSBAND'S CONSENT
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Although the pregnant women in the five current (and any
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future) cases are almost certain to prevail in the end,
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these women have and will suffer devastating constitutional
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deprivations prior to their ultimate victory. Ordering a
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woman not to end an unwanted pregnancy directly conflicts
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with a long line of U.S. Supreme Court decisions recognizing
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the constitutional right of every individual to decide
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whether and when to have a child. The Court specifically
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held in 1976 that a woman has the right to have an abortion
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without her husband's consent. And every lower federal
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court to address the issue has ruled that requiring spousal
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consent or notification is unconstitutional; spousal consent
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laws are ultimately just a mechanism for harming pregnant
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women through delay and/or harassment.
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The harms to pregnant women are clear from the experiences
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of the women in the first two Indiana cases. On April 4,
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1988, a court in Vigo County, Indiana, issued a TRO
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prohibiting a young unmarried woman from obtaining an
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abortion. Clinics and physicians were also ordered not to
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perform an abortion on her. The woman, identified as Jane
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Doe, had no prior notice and no opportunity to oppose the
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court order which was requested by an man identified as John
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Smith, allegedly Jane's boyfriend.
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Three days later, the court held a hearing to determine
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whether it would permanently order Jane not to have an
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abortion. The court permitted John to testify about the
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most intimate details of Jane's life, with the judge
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personally evaluating her sexual relationships, her use of
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birth control, and the degree to which Jane and her
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boyfriend allegedly loved each other. The court also
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permitted three other people to testify on John's behalf.
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Jane herself refused to be subjected to the embarrassment of
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testifying and being cross-examined, properly maintaining
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that her reasons for wanting an abortion were highly
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personal and the court was acting unlawfully in seeking to
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examine those reasons.
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BOYFRIEND OF THREE MONTHS
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The Vigo court ignored the Constitution and controlling
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Supreme Court precedent and issued a permanent injunction
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ordering Jane to bear a child. Forcing nine months of
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pregnancy, labor, childbirth, and unwanted motherhood on
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anyone is an awesome and intolerable burden. Moreover, Jane
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was only 18 years old, John claimed to have been her
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boyfriend for only three months, and his responsibility for
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the pregnancy was challenged.
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Based solely on the testimony of John and his three
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witnesses, the court found that Jane's reasons (never
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articulated by her) for wanting an abortion were not good
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enough. The court trivialized the abortion decision by
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focusing on, for example, John's claim that Jane simply
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"wishes to look nice in a bathing suit this summer,"
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ignoring the many obvious reasons such as age, length of
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relationship, life plans, and health which undoubtedly
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influenced Jane's decision to have an abortion. By the time
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of the court order, her abortion had been delayed at least
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five days and though abortion is safer than childbirth at
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all stages, each week of delay increases by 50 percent the
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physical risks to a woman's life and by 30 percent the risks
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to her health.
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On April 13, Jane notified the Indiana Supreme Court that
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she had terminated her pregnancy despite the court order;
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like the millions of women who sought and obtained illegal
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abortions before Roe vs. Wade, Jane would not tolerate the
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unconstitutional invasion of her rights and the risks to her
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physical and emotional health that the court order imposed.
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The issue, however, is not over.
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As briefs were being filed in Jane's case, yet another
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Indiana court issued a TRO ordering a woman not to have an
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abortion, again at the request of an alleged "boyfriend."
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Although the court ultimately dismissed the court order,
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properly finding that the woman had a clearly established
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constitutional right to make the decision to choose to have
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an abortion, the boyfriend immediately requested a further
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court order from the Indiana Court of Appeals, then from the
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Indiana Supreme Court, and then from two U.S. Supreme Court
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Justices, all of whom denied his request. This case, which
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took a total of sixteen days before the woman was no longer
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under a court order not to have an abortion, exemplifies the
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extreme tenacity of the opponents of reproductive freedom.
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THE BURDEN OF PREGNANCY
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The so-called right-to-lifers' attempts to justify their
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harassment of these women as a desire to simply balance
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legitimate rights of the men involved is unconvincing.
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There is not way to balance the burden of pregnancy; it is
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not possible for the woman to carry the fetus for four-and -
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a-half months and then give it to the man to carry for four-
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and-a-half months. As the Supreme Court has recognized, as
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long as the fetus is inside the woman's body, she must be
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the one to decide. Moreover, it is clear that Bopp and
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others taking these cases seek to prohibit ALL abortions
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whether the husbands and boyfriends agree or not.
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Certainly every individual has the constitutional right to
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decide, free from government interference, whether or not to
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have a child. This right, however, clearly does not give a
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man the right to force a particular woman to have his child.
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To the contrary, the Constitution guarantees that the power
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of the government will not be used to compel anyone, male or
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female, to be an unwilling participant in procreation. If
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men can force women to continue pregnancies, then men could
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just as easily get court orders to force women to have
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abortions, and women could force men to produce sperm or
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undergo vasectomies.
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The ACLU's Reproductive Freedom Project is working with the
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Indiana Civil Liberties Union to represent the women in the
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first two Indiana cases. Bopp is representing the men. The
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ACLU also has alerted its affiliates to watch for further
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such attempts to deprive pregnant women of their
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constitutional rights and has distributed a model brief to
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help defeat this latest attack on the right of ALL people to
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reproductive freedom.
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(Dawn Johnsen and Lynn Paltrow are staff attorneys for the
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ACLU's Reproductive Freedom Project.)
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Jane's boyfriend.
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Thr
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