The Sentinel-Record

States move to protect abortion from prosecutio­ns elsewhere

- JENNIFER MCDERMOTT, GEOFF MULVIHILL AND HANNAH SCHOENBAUM

PROVIDENCE, R.I. — Democratic governors in states where abortion will remain legal are looking for ways to protect any patients who travel there for the procedure — along with the providers who help them — from being prosecuted by their home states.

The Democratic governors of Colorado and North Carolina on Wednesday issued executive orders to protect abortion providers and patients from extraditio­n to states that have banned the practice.

Abortions are legal in North Carolina until fetal viability or in certain medical emergencie­s, making the state an outlier in the Southeast.

“This order will help protect North Carolina doctors and nurses and their patients from cruel rightwing criminal laws passed by other states,” Gov. Roy Cooper said in announcing the order.

The governors of Rhode Island and Maine also signed executive orders late Tuesday, stating that they will not cooperate with other states’ investigat­ions into people who seek abortions or health care providers that perform them.

Rhode Island Democratic Gov. Dan McKee said women should be trusted with their own health care decisions, and Democratic Lt. Gov. Sabina Matos said Rhode Island must do all it can to protect access to reproducti­ve health care as “other states attack the fundamenta­l right to choose.”

Maine Democratic Gov. Janet Mills said she will “stand in the way of any effort to undermine, rollback, or outright eliminate the right to safe and legal abortion in Maine.”

Their offices confirmed Wednesday that they are preemptive, protective moves, and that neither state has received a request to investigat­e, prosecute or extradite a provider or patient.

Their attempts to protect abortion rights come as tighter restrictio­ns and bans are going into effect in conservati­ve states after last month’s Dobbs v. Jackson ruling in the U.S. Supreme Court, which overturned the nearly half-century-old holding from Roe v. Wade that found that the right to abortion was protected by the U.S. Constituti­on. The issue reverts to the states, many of which have taken steps to curtail or ban abortions.

Several states have put new restrictio­ns already in place since the Supreme Court ruling and more are pressing to do so. In Louisiana on Wednesday, the state Supreme Court rejected the attorney general’s request to allow immediate enforcemen­t of laws against most abortions saying it was declining to get involved “at this preliminar­y stage.” Enforcemen­t was blocked by another court last week. Attorney General Jeff Landry tweeted that Wednesday’s decision “is delaying the inevitable. Our Legislatur­e fulfilled their constituti­onal duties, and now the Judiciary must. It is disappoint­ing that time is not immediate.”

The specific fears of Democratic officials are rooted in a Texas law adopted last year to ban abortions after fetal cardiac activity can be detected. The law lets any person other than a government official or employee sue anyone who performs an abortion or “knowingly engages in conduct that aids or abets” obtaining one.

The person filing the claim would be entitled to $10,000 for every abortion the subject was involved with — plus legal costs.

The U.S. Supreme Court has declined to hear challenges to the Texas law so far.

Bernadette Meyler, a professor at Stanford Law School, said it’s not clear whether judgments against out-of-state abortion providers would hold up in courts, especially if they are not advertisin­g their services in states with bans.

But she also said it’s not clear that the liberal states are on firm legal ground to protect their residents from any out-of-state litigation.

“Probably, they assume that some of the laws that they’re passing won’t be upheld or may not be upheld, and they’re trying to come up with as much as possible in order to resist the effects of the Dobbs decision,” Meyler said.

The resistance to cooperatin­g with abortion-related investigat­ions could hold up, though, she said. Places that declared themselves “sanctuary cities” and refused to cooperate with federal immigratio­n investigat­ions during former President Donald Trump’s presidency were able to carry out similar policies.

In Raleigh, North Carolina, Planned Parenthood President Alexis McGill Johnson said her group and other advocates for

abortion access are pushing for the protection­s. “Everywhere we can push the imaginatio­n of what a free and equal world looks like,” she said, “we are working with those governors.”

Connecticu­t was the first state to pass a law to protect abortion providers, patients and others from legal action taken by other states. Democratic Gov. Ned Lamont signed it in May, before the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.

“In accordance with Connecticu­t law, we will resist any attempt by another state to criminaliz­e or intrude on a woman’s private and lawful healthcare decisions,” Connecticu­t Attorney General William Tong said in a statement last week.

The Democratic governors of Minnesota, New Mexico, Nevada, California and Washington and the moderate Republican governor in liberal Massachuse­tts all signed executive orders within days of the ruling to prohibit cooperatio­n with other states that might interfere with abortion access.

“Residents seeking access will be protected, providers will be protected, and abortion is and will continue to be legal, safe and accessible, period,” said New Mexico Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham, who has described the order as a preventati­ve measure.

One of the largest abortion providers in Texas announced Wednesday that it’s planning to move its operations to bordering New Mexico. Whole Woman’s Health announced Wednesday that it is looking to establish a new clinic in a New Mexico city near the state line to provide first- and second-trimester abortions.

The Democratic-controlled Massachuse­tts House of Representa­tives approved a bill that aims to protect abortion providers and people seeking abortions from actions taken by other states. Delaware’s Democratic governor signed legislatio­n expanding abortion access, with various legal protection­s for abortion providers and patients, including out-of-state residents receiving abortions in Delaware.

New Jersey Democratic Gov. Phil Murphy signed two bills Friday that moved swiftly in the Democratic-led Legislatur­e following the ruling. The new laws aim to protect the right of those from outside the state to get abortion services within its borders and bar extraditio­n of people involved in reproducti­ve health care services should they face charges in another state.

Murphy said he was “overwhelmi­ngly angry” that he had to sign the bills, but equally as proud to do so.

“These laws will make New Jersey a beacon of freedom for every American woman,” he said during a signing ceremony in Jersey City, not far from the Statue of Liberty.

In Washington state, the governor prohibited the state patrol from cooperatin­g with out-of-state abortion investigat­ions or prosecutio­ns, but he noted that he didn’t have jurisdicti­on over local law enforcemen­t agencies. The executive in the county surroundin­g Seattle said Tuesday that its sheriff’s office and other executive branch department­s will not cooperate with outof-state prosecutio­ns of abortion providers or patients.

Oregon Gov. Kate Brown’s office has said the state will refuse non-fugitive extraditio­n for criminal prosecutio­ns around abortion, but said an executive order is not needed.

Some progressiv­e prosecutor­s around the U.S. have already declared that they won’t enforce some of the most restrictiv­e, punitive anti-abortion laws. Police in Nashville on Wednesday released a statement saying they “are not abortion police” a day after the city council passed a resolution calling on the department to make abortion investigat­ions a low priority.

City council members in two other liberal cities in conservati­ve states — New Orleans and Austin, Texas — have made called for similar resolution­s.

Hannah Schoenbaum is a corps member for the Associated Press/ Report for America Statehouse News Initiative. Report for America is a nonprofit national service program that places journalist­s in local newsrooms to report on undercover­ed issues. AP/Report for America corps member Claire Rush also contribute­d from Portland, Oregon. Mulvihill reported from Cherry Hill, New Jersey, and Schoenbaum reported from Raleigh, North Carolina. Contributi­ng to this report were Associated Press writers Jim Anderson in Denver; Gary Robertson in Raleigh, North Carolina; Morgan Lee in Santa Fe, New Mexico; Susan Montoya Bryan in Albuquerqu­e, New Mexico; Kimberlee Kruesi in Nashville; and Patrick Whittle in Portland, Maine.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? ■ North Carolina Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper speaks at the Executive Mansion on Wednesday in Raleigh, N.C., before signing an executive order designed to protect abortion rights in the state. The order in part prevents the extraditio­n of a woman who receives an abortion in North Carolina but may live in another state where the procedure is barred.
The Associated Press ■ North Carolina Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper speaks at the Executive Mansion on Wednesday in Raleigh, N.C., before signing an executive order designed to protect abortion rights in the state. The order in part prevents the extraditio­n of a woman who receives an abortion in North Carolina but may live in another state where the procedure is barred.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States