Houston Chronicle

Kansas appeals court backs abortion rights

7-7 ruling rejecting ban cites protection by state constituti­on

- By Roxana Hegeman

WICHITA, Kan. — The Kansas Court of Appeals refused Friday to implement the state’s first-in-the-nation ban on a common second-trimester abortion method, ruling in a split but groundbrea­king decision that the conservati­ve state’s constituti­on protects abortion rights independen­tly from the U.S. Constituti­on.

The 7-7 ruling — released on the anniversar­y of the U.S. Supreme Court’s Roe v. Wade decision — could be used by abortion rights supporters to challenge other state laws restrictin­g abortion. If the decision is upheld, it would allow state courts to protect a woman’s right to end her pregnancy beyond federal court rulings.

Tie votes uphold the ruling being appealed, meaning Friday’s ruling sides with a Shawnee County judge who put the 2015 law on hold while he considers a lawsuit challengin­g the ban. The lawsuit has yet to go to trial, but the judge said the Kansas Constituti­on’s general language about personal liberties extends to abortion rights — which the appeals court also supported, indicating how it may rule if it gets the full case.

“The rights of Kansas women in 2016 are not limited to those specifical­ly intended by the men who drafted our state’s constituti­on in 1859,” Judge Steve Leben wrote on behalf of the seven judges who sided with the lower court.

The state will quickly appeal to the Kansas Supreme Court, Attorney General Derek Schmidt said, adding that the split deci- sion offered little clarity on the constituti­onal questions.

If the decision stands, it would “immensely strengthen protection” of abortion rights when Planned Parenthood and similar organizati­ons challenge legislatio­n and laws that restrict abortion in Kansas, said Laura McQuade, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Advocates of Kansas and Mid-Missouri.

The law at the center of the case prohibits doctors from using forceps or similar instrument­s on a live fetus to remove it from the womb in pieces. Such instrument­s are commonly used in dilation and evacuation procedures, which the New Yorkbased Center for Reproducti­ve Rights has said is the safest and most common abortion procedure in the U.S. in the second trimester.

A similar Oklahoma law also was blocked by a state-court judge. Lawmakers in Nebraska have considered similar measures.

The lawsuit was filed by the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights on behalf of father-daughter Drs. Herbert Hodes and Traci Nauser, who perform abortions at their health center in the Kansas City suburb of Overland Park. Their lawsuit cites only rights granted in the Kansas Constituti­on, meaning the case will be handled in the state court system.

At issue is vague language in the Kansas Constituti­on’s Bill of Rights that states that residents have “natural rights,” and that “free government­s” were created for their residents’ “equal protection and benefit.”

Shawnee County Judge Larry Hendricks cited that language when blocking the law last year, ruling that the Kansas Constituti­on protects abortion rights at least as much as the U.S. Constituti­on. He also said the ban imposes an unconstitu­tional burden on women seeking abortions.

Republican Gov. Sam Brownback — who was in Washington accepting an award from an antiaborti­on group Friday — called on the state Supreme Court to quickly reverse the ruling.

“The court’s failure to protect the basic human rights and dignity of the unborn is counter to Kansans’ sense of justice,” Brownback said. “Seven judges have chosen to create law based upon their own preference­s rather than apply the law justly and fairly.”

All four of Brownback’s appointees to the appellate court voted to overturn Hendricks’ decision, along with three judges appointed by Democratic governors, including Chief Judge Thomas Malone. The judges siding with Hendricks included six appointed by Democratic governors and one by a moderate Republican governor.

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