Austin American-Statesman

Immigrant teen's abortion OK void

Court vacates order that let Texas detainee have procedure.

- By Chuck Lindell clindell@statesman.com

Siding with the Trump administra­tion Monday, the U.S. Supreme Court vacated a lower court’s order that allowed a teenage immigrant to have an abortion in October while she was being detained in Texas after illegally crossing the border with Mexico.

The court, however, declined a U.S. Justice Department request to discipline the immigrant’s attorneys over allegation­s that they had misled government lawyers about the timing of the 17-yearold’s abortion, denying a chance to block the procedure on appeal.

The long-awaited ruling, a unanimous but unsigned five-page opinion, determined that the matter was moot because the teen, identified in court records as Jane Doe, had already received an abortion.

Justice Department lawyers, supported by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, sought to void the appeals court order allowing Doe to have an abortion, arguing that it “should not be left on the books,” where it could help in legal battles by pregnant teen immigrants in a similar situation.

Paxton praised the ruling to vacate an order, saying it could have created“a right to abortion for anyone who enters the U.S.

illegally.”

“The previous ruling not only cost a life but could have paved the way for extending American citizens’ rights to all unlawfully present aliens with no substantia­l connection to this country. Texas will not become a sanctuary state for abortions, and will continue the fight to protect and promote fetal life,” Paxton said.

Officials with the American Civil Liberties Union, which led Doe’s legal fight, said Monday’s ruling will have no impact on their Central American client or on a related but wider effort to overturn the Trump administra­tion’s policy of refusing to let pregnant minors leave federal immigratio­n custody to obtain an abortion.

At the ACLU’s request, a federal district court in Washington, D.C., issued a preliminar­y injunction in March that blocked the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt, which is responsibl­e for unaccompan­ied minors in federal detention, from continuing policies that strip teen immigrants “of their right to make their own reproducti­ve choices.”

“The district court has blocked the Trump administra­tion’s cruel policy of obstructin­g unaccompan­ied immigrant minors’ access to abortion while the case continues, and we won’t stop until we strike it down once and for all,” said Brigitte Amiri, deputy director of the ACLU Reproducti­ve Freedom Project.

In Monday’s ruling, the Supreme Court declined to wade into allegation­s that ACLU lawyers lied about the timing of Doe’s abortion to avoid an appeal that could have blocked the procedure.

Administra­tion attorneys accused Doe’s lawyers of indicating that her abortion was scheduled for Oct. 26 after a state-mandated counseling session at the clinic Oct. 25.

Instead, Doe’s Oct. 25 appointmen­t was moved from 7:30 a.m. to 4:15 a.m. when her original abortion doctor became available. Because Doe already had the counseling session with that doctor in preparatio­n for an earlier, canceled abortion, she was able to have the procedure a day earlier than expected, the government lawyers said.

The misdirecti­on thwarted plans to try to block Doe’s abortion with an appeal to the Supreme Court, the Justice Department said.

ACLU lawyers argued that their notice to the Justice Department complied with federal and state law, adding that they were under no obligation to delay Doe’s abortion so the government could have time to appeal.

Although Monday’s opinion acknowledg­ed that the Supreme Court takes allegation­s of ethical violations by lawyers seriously, it said there was no need to delve into the dispute to decide whether the lower court’s order for Doe’s abortion was moot.

“On the one hand, all attorneys must remain aware of the principle that zealous advocacy does not displace their obligation­s as officers of the court,” the ruling said. “On the other hand, lawyers also have ethical obligation­s to their clients, and not all communicat­ion breakdowns constitute misconduct.”

David Cole, national legal director of the ACLU, said he was gratified that the court rejected the request to discipline his lawyers.

“In protecting a woman’s access to abortion, the lower courts did what they are supposed to do. And the ACLU did what lawyers are supposed to do — namely, pursue the best interests of our clients,” he said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States