Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Texas AG told to testify in abortion case

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AUSTIN, Texas — A federal judge has ordered Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton to testify in a high-profile abortion case, a week after the Republican reportedly fled his McKinney home to avoid being served with a subpoena.

On Tuesday, U.S. District Judge Robert Pitman wrote that Paxton needs to clarify how his office will enforce the state’s sweeping new abortion ban that carries possible penalties of prison time and six-figure fines.

In late August, Texas abortion funds filed a lawsuit seeking protection­s to resume paying for people’s flights, hotels and other expenses to travel out of state for the procedure. The eight funds paused the work after the reversal of Roe v. Wade, which triggered a near-total abortion ban in Texas and threats of criminal prosecutio­n from Paxton and other officials.

Paxton, who is up for a third term in November, has fought testifying in the case.

Last week, a process server attempted to deliver a subpoena at his home, but wrote in an affidavit that the attorney general drove off quickly, refusing to accept the document. Paxton said he avoided the server out of safety concerns.

Initially, Pitman quashed the subpoena. But on Tuesday he reversed course, knocking down the assertion that Paxton had been notified only at “the eleventh hour” and saying that only the attorney general can clarify the office’s conflictin­g approaches to the law.

“In this case, Paxton has inserted himself into this dispute by repeatedly tweeting and giving interviews about the Trigger Ban,” Pitman wrote.

“It is challengin­g to square the idea that Paxton has time to give interviews threatenin­g prosecutio­ns but would be unduly burdened by explaining what he means to the very parties affected by his statements,” he said.

Pitman set a deadline of Oct. 11 for the two sides to agree on the particular­s of how Paxton will testify.

While the suit centers on the funds’ activities, it could also help clarify legal questions about the state’s anti-abortion laws, such as whether Texans can be penalized for helping someone get the procedure in a state where it’s still allowed.

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