Austin American-Statesman

Judge won’t tell officials to let teen get abortion

- By Sudhin Thanawala and Nomaan Merchant

A federal judge won’t order federal officials to allow a pregnant 17-year-old being held in a Texas facility for unaccompan­ied immigrant children to get an abortion.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Laurel Beeler ruled Wednesday that the legal challenge on behalf of the girl by the Amer- ican Civil Liberties Union of Northern California was not filed in the right court.

The ACLU says the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services is refusing to let the girl be taken to a facility for an abortion.

Beeler said the girl could raise the same issue in a new

ACLU attorney Brigitte Amiri said the group hadn’t decided its next step, but would continue to fight for the girl’s right to an abor- tion.

The girl may be up to 14 weeks’ pregnant, Rochelle Garza, a lawyer appointed to represent the girl’s legal interests, told The Associated Press on Tuesday. Texas law prohibits most abortions after 20 weeks.

Beeler told an attorney for the U.S. Department of Justice, Peter Phipps, that the urgent situation was entirely of the government’s making. Private groups that support abortion rights have raised money for the procedure, Garza said. The girl’s attorney has agreed to transport her, according to Beeler.

“You’re not being asked to do anything,” the judge told Phipps. “You’re not being asked to spend money. You’re really not being asked to transport. You’re just really being asked to stay out of the way.”

Phipps said the girl’s case was on a “shaky” procedural foundation. He said the government might propose having the case heard in Texas or Washington, D.C.

U.S. lawyers representi­ng the Department Health and Human Services have argued that the ACLU’s request for a temporary restrainin­g order allowing an abortion to go forward was wrong on technical grounds, since the original lawsuit argued the agency was violating the Constituti­on by allowing religious groups to allegedly refuse access to abortion. In this case, the 17-year-old is not being held in a facility with a religious affiliatio­n, government lawyers said.

Brigitte Amiri, an attorney for the ACLU, said she didn’t see the girl’s case as entirely new.

“In both scenarios, the federal government is acting unconstitu­tionally,” she said.

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, a strident opponent of abortion rights, argued in a separate court filing Tuesday that people in the U.S. illegally without some type of establishe­d ties to the country did not have a “constituti­onal right to an abortion on demand.”

If the court were to rule in the girl’s favor, “the ruling will create a right to abortion for anyone on earth who enters the U.S. illegally,” Paxton said in a statement. “And with that right, countless others undoubtedl­y would follow. Texas must not become a sanctuary state for abortions.”

Paxton was joined in filing the brief by the attorneys general of Louisiana, Missouri, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, and South Carolina.

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