Los Angeles Times

Judges strike down Idaho abortion law

- By Katie Shepherd katie.shepherd@latimes.com Twitter: @katemsheph­erd

Three federal judges have unanimousl­y struck down an Idaho law that banned abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy.

A panel of the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals upheld a previous ruling by the U.S. District Court for Idaho, which also found portions of the law unconstitu­tional.

Jennie McCormack, the plaintiff in the case, was arrested in 2011 for taking a pack of five pills she had obtained through the Internet to end a pregnancy. Police in Pocatello had learned through a tip that she had taken the pills to induce an abortion. Surgical abortions were not available in southeast Idaho, where she lived, according to court documents.

Instead of undergoing an inpatient procedure, which would have required McCormack to travel more than150 miles, crossing the Utah state line, to Salt Lake City, she used a combinatio­n of medicine to induce an abortion in her home.

A physician determined that the fetus was between 19 and 23 weeks, which put McCormack’s abortion on a fine line legally.

The Circuit Court’s opinion released Friday reasoned that the law violated women’s rights because it “categorica­lly bans some abortions before viability” by prohibitin­g abortions before the 24-to-28-week viability benchmark.

Federal judges have stopped similar pre-viability abortion bans in Texas, Arizona, Georgia, Arkansas and North Dakota.

A state court dismissed the criminal charges against McCormack because the case against her lacked probable cause. McCormack fired back at Mark Hiedeman, then-prosecutin­g attorney for Bannock County, with a class-action lawsuit that made its way through the District of Idaho federal court and then to the 9th Circuit.

In addition to striking down the 20-week limitation, the court ruled against a provision requiring hospitaliz­ation for women seeking second-trimester abortions. The regulation “places an undue burden on a woman’s ability to obtain an abortion,” the court said in its opinion.

The case opens the path for challenges to similar laws in other states. As many as 12 states outlawed the procedure after a fetus reaches 20 weeks, according to data from the Guttmacher Institute, which studies reproducti­ve health. Among those states are Texas, Arizona, Kansas, Mississipp­i and Indiana. West Virginia, the most recent state to join this list, passed a law Tuesday limiting abortions to before the 20-week mark.

The violation that McCormack was accused of was a felony offense in Idaho. The law said that women or doctors who violated its statutes could be sentenced to one to five years in prison.

Other elements of the Idaho law, including a statute that required physicians performing abortions to make “satisfacto­ry arrangemen­ts” with nearby hospitals, violated women’s rights by being “unconstitu­tionally vague,” the court said.

 ?? Kim Murphy Los Angeles Times ?? JENNIE McCORMACK, shown with attorney Richard Hearn, was arrested in 2011 for taking pills she had obtained through the Internet to end a pregnancy.
Kim Murphy Los Angeles Times JENNIE McCORMACK, shown with attorney Richard Hearn, was arrested in 2011 for taking pills she had obtained through the Internet to end a pregnancy.

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