Miami Herald

Injunction blocking new Florida abortion law is short-lived as state appeals

- BY LAWRENCE MOWER lmower@tampabay.com

Florida’s 15-week abortion ban was temporaril­y halted Tuesday morning and then quickly restored after lawyers for the state appealed a Leon County judge’s injunction.

In a 68-page order, Circuit Judge John C. Cooper said he was bound by precedent set by the Florida Supreme Court, which ruled in 1989 that Florida’s right to privacy, enshrined in the state Constituti­on, protected the right to an abortion. Gov. Ron DeSantis is trying to overturn that precedent.

“This Court must follow the Florida Supreme Court’s precedents on the right to privacy as those precedents currently exist, not as they might exist in the future,” Cooper wrote.

The injunction was in effect less than an hour, however. The state quickly appealed Cooper’s injunction, automatica­lly nullifying it.

For now, that means that House Bill 5, which DeSantis signed in April, remains the law in Florida.

Under House Bill 5, which took effect Friday, nearly all abortions are banned after 15 weeks since a person’s last menstrual period. People can still obtain an abortion after that cutoff if their health is threatened or if their baby has a “fatal fetal abnormalit­y.”

The legislatio­n appeared to run afoul of Florida’s well-establishe­d right to privacy, considered by advocates to protect Floridians’ right to abortion regardless of whether the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, which establishe­d a constituti­onal right to an abortion. (The federal court overturned Roe v. Wade last month.)

In 1980, Florida voters amended the state Constituti­on to establish that “every natural person has the right to be let alone and free from government­al intrusion into his private life.”

The amendment did not specifical­ly mention abortion, but nine years later, the Florida Supreme Court said the right to privacy “clearly” included “a woman’s decision of whether or not to continue her pregnancy.”

Subsequent Florida Supreme Court decisions affirmed that the right to privacy included abortion, and that any law limiting abortions before “fetal viability,” or about 24 weeks, was considered unconstitu­tional.

Since those decisions, however, Florida’s Supreme Court justices have become more conservati­ve, and DeSantis said last week that his goal is to get them to overturn those decisions.

“The Florida Supreme Court previously misinterpr­eted Florida’s right to privacy as including a right to an abortion, and we reject this interpreta­tion,” his spokespers­on said Thursday.

Cooper wrote on Tuesday that until then, he was bound by the court’s previous rulings, which required the state to prove a “compelling state interest” to override the right to privacy.

Lawyers for the state never showed that compelling interest during a day and a half of testimony and their witnesses weren’t considered as credible as those presented by Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers who sued to stop the law, Cooper

wrote.

The state argued that the bill would protect the health of pregnant women because the risk of medical complicati­ons from abortions increases later in pregnancy.

But experts for Planned Parenthood and the other plaintiffs noted that the mortality risk from abortion is “extremely low” compared to other outpatient procedures, such as colonoscop­ies and plastic surgery. And they said the risk from giving birth is 14-15 times higher than the risk from undergoing an abortion.

An expert presented by the state, Dr. Ingrid Skop, a senior fellow with the antiaborti­on research group Charlotte Lozier Institute, dismissed the data on abortions from U.S. medical associatio­ns because they have “a ‘pro-choice’ bias,” Cooper wrote.

Lawyers for the state also argued that the state had an interest in preventing the pain of the fetus, but the state offered “no evidence” that fetuses feel pain at 15 weeks, Cooper wrote, beyond the testimony of Maureen Condic, a University of Utah professor and scholar at the Charlotte Lozier Institute.

Condic’s “opinion runs contrary to credible and scientific­ally supported evidence,” Cooper wrote, and he gave her testimony “little to no weight.”

Cooper noted that Condic testified that a fetus can feel pain at 14 weeks, which undermines the state’s argument that the 15-week ban was meant to protect fetuses from pain.

 ?? JOHN RAOUX AP ?? Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis holds the 15-week abortion-ban law after signing it on April 14 in Kissimmee.
JOHN RAOUX AP Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis holds the 15-week abortion-ban law after signing it on April 14 in Kissimmee.

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