Orlando Sentinel

Florida fights attempt to block abortion ban

- By Jim Saunders

TALLAHASSE­E — Attorneys for the state are fighting an attempt to block a 15-week abortion limit slated to take effect July 1.

Lawyers in Attorney General Ashley Moody’s office filed a document Monday urging Leon Circuit Judge John Cooper to reject a request by abortion clinics and a doctor for a temporary delay of the law, which Gov. Ron DeSantis signed in April.

Cooper will hear arguments June 27 on the proposed temporary injunction in a case that could ultimately test whether a privacy clause in the Florida Constituti­on will protect abortion rights in the future.

“At a minimum, the state’s interest is compelling in situations where the effect of HB 5 (the new law) is to encourage women to schedule their abortions earlier and results in a less dangerous medical procedure,” the state’s lawyers wrote in the filing. “As to protecting children in utero, the state defendants’ experts will show that a 15-week-old child is a distinct living being who is conscious and experience­s pain.”

But the plaintiffs focused on Florida Supreme Court rulings that date back more than three decades that have protected abortion rights based on the privacy clause in the state Constituti­on.

“Plaintiffs have a substantia­l likelihood of success on the merits because HB 5 is unconstitu­tional on its face,” the plaintiffs’ June 1 motion for a temporary injunction said. “Simply put, the right to privacy enshrined in the Florida Constituti­on protects the right to obtain an abortion before fetal viability, and the act (HB 5) contravene­s that right by banning abortion months before viability.”

The Republican-controlled Legislatur­e passed the law during the legislativ­e session that ended in March. The 15-week restrictio­n is similar to a Mississipp­i law that is being considered by the U.S. Supreme Court. A draft opinion leaked in the Mississipp­i case indicated

justices could be poised to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade abortion-rights decision.

Several abortion clinics and a doctor filed a lawsuit June 1 in Leon circuit court challengin­g the new Florida law, which does not include exceptions for rape or incest. It does allow for abortions after 15 weeks if they are needed to save pregnant women’s lives. The 15-week limit is dated from women’s last menstrual periods.

While a potential U.S. Supreme Court ruling that strikes down Roe v. Wade could play a role in the case, the plaintiffs have focused heavily on the privacy clause in the Florida Constituti­on. Also, they argued in the motion for a temporary injunction that preventing abortions after 15 weeks could endanger women’s health by requiring them to give birth.

“In fact, the Florida Supreme Court has held repeatedly that the right to terminate a pregnancy is not just covered, but central among those liberties guaranteed by the privacy clause,” the motion said.

While the Supreme Court has cited the privacy clause in the past, the makeup of the court has changed dramatical­ly in recent years. It is now controlled by a solid conservati­ve majority that, at least on some issues, has shown a willingnes­s to toss out court precedents.

In the filing Monday, lawyers in Moody’s office raised a series of arguments to try to convince Cooper to reject a temporary injunction. In part, they contended that the plaintiffs don’t have legal standing and would not suffer “irreparabl­e harm” from the law.

Also, the state’s lawyers argued that the vast majority of abortions are performed before 15 weeks. The filing said 79,817 abortions were done in Florida in 2021, with 74,967 during the first trimester of pregnancy.

“In other words, for most women seeking an abortion, HB 5 will have no effect at all, much less cause a ‘significan­t restrictio­n,’’’ the filing said, quoting a legal precedent.

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