The Mercury News

Court: Immigrant teens can get abortion in custody

- By Jessica Gresko

WASHINGTON >> A federal court in Washington has told the Trump administra­tion that the government can’t interfere with the ability of pregnant immigrant teens being held in federal custody to obtain abortions.

A judge issued an order Friday evening barring the government from “interferin­g with or obstructin­g” pregnant minors’ access to abortion counseling or abortions, among other things, while a lawsuit proceeds. The order covers pregnant minors being held in federal custody after entering the country illegally.

Lawyers for the Department of Health and Human Services, which is responsibl­e for sheltering children who illegally enter the country unaccompan­ied by a parent, have said the department has a policy of “refusing to facilitate” abortions. And the director of the office that oversees the shelters has said he believes teens in his agency’s care have no constituti­onal right to abortion.

The American Civil Liberties Union brought a lawsuit on behalf of the minors, which the judge overseeing the case also Friday allowed to go forward as a class action lawsuit.

“We have been able to secure justice for these young pregnant women in government custody who will no longer be subject to the government’s policy of coercion and obstructio­n while the case continues,” said ACLU attorney Brigitte Amiri after the judge’s order became public.

The government can appeal the judge’s order. A Department of Justice spokesman didn’t immediatel­y respond to an emailed request for comment Friday evening.

The health department said in a statement Saturday that it “strongly maintains that taxpayers are not responsibl­e for facilitati­ng the abortion of unaccompan­ied minors who entered the country illegally and are currently in the government’s care.” It said it is “working closely with the Justice Department to review the court’s order and determine next steps.”

The ACLU and Trump administra­tion have been sparring for months over the government’s policy. In a highprofil­e case last year, the ACLU represente­d a teen who entered the U.S. illegally in September and learned while in federal custody in Texas that she was pregnant.

The teen, referred to in court paperwork as Jane Doe, obtained a state court order permitting her to have an abortion and secured private funding to pay for it, but federal officials refused to transport her or temporaril­y release her so that others could take her to get the procedure.

The teen was ultimately able to get an abortion in October as a result of the lawsuit, but the Trump administra­tion has accused the ACLU of misleading the government during the case, a charge the ACLU has denied.

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