Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Appeals panel hears sides on abortion ban

- REBECCA SANTANA

NEW ORLEANS — A federal court that rejected Mississipp­i’s 15-week abortion ban should have let the state present evidence about whether a fetus experience­s pain, an attorney for the state argued Monday.

But a lawyer for Mississipp­i’s only abortion clinic said the Supreme Court has been clear that a woman has a right to have an abortion before the fetus is viable.

The arguments came during a hearing at the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals on a Mississipp­i law that would ban most abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy. It’s one of many laws pushed by conservati­ve states in recent years, aimed at trying to persuade the increasing­ly conservati­ve Supreme Court to further restrict the amount of time when abortion is legally available, or even to overturn the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision.

That decision said women have the right to terminate pregnancie­s until viability, when a fetus can survive outside the womb.

After Republican Gov. Phil Bryant signed Mississipp­i’s law in 2018, the Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on immediatel­y sued. U.S. District Judge Carlton Reeves blocked the law from taking effect, writing that it “unequivoca­lly” violates women’s constituti­onal rights because it bans abortion weeks before viability.

Reeves wrote that viability must be determined by trained medical profession­als, and the “establishe­d medical consensus” is that viability typically begins at 23 to 24 weeks after the pregnant woman’s last menstrual period.

Mississipp­i and its supporters appealed to the 5th Circuit. Mississipp­i contends that Reeves oversteppe­d his authority by only considerin­g the case through the prism of viability.

“From that point on the outcome of this case was preordaine­d,” Paul Barnes, a special assistant attorney general, told the three-judge panel.

Barnes also suggested the 15-week standard had little effect on the Jackson clinic because they already refuse to perform abortions after 16 weeks.

“It is a prohibitio­n for one week,” Barnes said.

Hillary Schneller, a lawyer from the Center for Reproducti­ve Rights which is representi­ng the clinic, argued that the Supreme Court has been clear through decades of case law about a woman’s right to an abortion before fetal viability.

“There is no dispute that 15 weeks is well before viability,” she said.

At least one of the 5th Circuit judges seemed skeptical that viability should be the only standard. James C. Ho repeatedly asked whether a fetus feeling pain could ever be a factor in determinin­g whether an abortion can be carried out. At one point, he asked if pain is “irrelevant.”

Ho also questioned why discussion of the fetal pain question wasn’t permitted during the lower court’s proceeding­s.

“Where would we get that factual evidence if not at trial?” he asked.

The other justices — Patrick E. Higginboth­am and James L. Dennis — asked few or no questions. Ho was nominated by President Donald Trump in 2017, Higginboth­am by President Ronald Reagan in 1982 and Dennis by President Bill Clinton in 1995.

The 5th Circuit handles cases from Mississipp­i, Louisiana and Texas, and it’s generally considered one of the most conservati­ve appeals courts in the U.S.

Louisiana passed a 15-week abortion ban in 2018, but it takes effect only if the appeals court upholds the Mississipp­i law.

Even as the court fight continues over the 15-week ban, Mississipp­i lawmakers passed another law this year banning most abortions at about six weeks, when fetal cardiac activity can be detected. Reeves also blocked that law, saying it “smacks of defiance to this court.” Attorneys are filing separate arguments about it to the 5th Circuit. The hearing Monday did not refer to the 6-week ban.

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