The Oakland Press

Post-Roe, states struggle with conflictin­g abortion bans

- By Rebecca Boone and Claire Rush

In Arizona, Republican­s are fighting among themselves over whether a 121-year-old anti-abortion law from the pre-statehood Wild West days, when Arizona was still a frontier mining territory, should be enforced over a 2022 version.

In Idaho, meanwhile, it is not clear whether a pair of laws from the early 1970s making it a felony to “knowingly aid” in an abortion or to publish informatio­n about how to induce one will be enforced alongside the state’s newer, near-total ban.

The U.S. Supreme Court ruling overturnin­g Roe v. Wade has advocates, prosecutor­s and residents of red states facing a legal morass created by decades of often conflictin­g anti-abortion legislatio­n.

Politician­s and state government attorneys are trying to sort out which laws and which provisions are in force. And abortion rights advocates who are going to court to protect the right to terminate a pregnancy are finding themselves doing battle on multiple fronts.

Lawyers in Idaho Attorney General Lawrence Wasden’s office are going through all the state’s abortion statutes with a fine-tooth comb, said Wasden spokesman Scott Graf.

“Following last week’s decision, part of our subsequent work is to now review Idaho’s existing abortion-related laws and examine them through a post-Roe legal lens,” Graf said. “That work has commenced and will continue in the weeks ahead.”

On the abortion rights side, Hillary Schneller, senior staff attorney for the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights, said Louisiana lawmakers had passed three “trigger” bans designed to go into effect in the event Roe was overturned.

When the Supreme Court decision came down, “state officials issued conflictin­g statements about those bans,”

Schneller said. “We challenged all of them on vagueness grounds to try to get some clarity about what the status of the law is in Louisiana.”

Jennifer Sandman, a senior attorney for Planned Parenthood Federation of America, said the confusing and “very rapidly shifting landscape both legally and operationa­lly” is putting more stress on abortion providers.

“I think multiple health care providers across the country are figuring out how to navigate that moment,” Sandman said.

In West Virginia, the American Civil Liberties Union has filed a lawsuit challengin­g an abortion ban that was put on the books in 1882. The organizati­on says the law conflicts with newer ones and so should be void.

In Wisconsin, Attorney General Josh Kaul filed a lawsuit Tuesday challengin­g a 173-yearold abortion ban, arguing that modern generation­s never consented to it. The 1849 law prohibits abortion in every instance except to save the pregnant person’s life — conflictin­g with Wisconsin laws from the mid-1980s that ban the procedure after a fetus reaches the point that it could survive outside the womb with medical interventi­on.

Arizona GOP officials disagree over which abortion laws are enforceabl­e. Attorney General Mark Brnovich announced

Wednesday that a prestateho­od law banning all abortions is now enforceabl­e, but Republican Gov. Doug Ducey has said a law he signed in March takes precedence over the 1901 ban.

When the Idaho Legislatur­e passed a trigger law in 2020 that would automatica­lly prohibit nearly all abortions 30 days after the fall of Roe, lawmakers took some steps to avoid conflicts by making it clear that the law would supersede other bans. Lawmakers put similar language in another ban passed earlier this year, saying the 2020 law would take precedence.

But they may have overlooked a few clauses in the decades-old statutes.

The 2020 trigger law says specifical­ly that the person seeking the abortion can’t be charged with a crime, instead focusing prosecutio­n efforts on the abortion provider. That would seem to override a 1973 law that makes it a felony for a person to undergo an abortion, but it’s not clear if another portion of the older law making it a felony to knowingly aid in an abortion could still be enforceabl­e.

“It’s hard to see how much of it survives, because of all the conflicts,” Twin Falls County prosecutor Grant Loebs said of the nearly three dozen anti-abortion laws on the books in Idaho.

It will be up to individual county prosecutor­s, at first, to decide how to proceed, said Loebs, who is also president of the Idaho Prosecutin­g Attorneys Associatio­n. From there, judges will figure it out.

Ultimately, he expects Idaho legislator­s will have a lot of fine-tuning to do in the years ahead.

“I think every state doing this is going to have the same problems,” Loebs said.

Planned Parenthood is suing over both of Idaho’s newer laws. It has asked the Idaho Supreme Court to hear arguments in both cases on the same day in early August in hopes of getting a ruling before the trigger law takes effect.

 ?? SARAH A. MILLER/IDAHO STATESMAN VIA AP ?? Two people stand on the steps of the Idaho State Capitol Building, during a protest, in downtown Boise, Idaho on May 3.
SARAH A. MILLER/IDAHO STATESMAN VIA AP Two people stand on the steps of the Idaho State Capitol Building, during a protest, in downtown Boise, Idaho on May 3.

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