Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

AG candidate Toney pledges to back abortion ban

- Sophie Carson Patrick Marley of the Journal Sentinel staff contribute­d to this report.

Republican attorney general candidate Eric Toney said Wednesday he would enforce a potential ban on abortion in Wisconsin if Roe v. Wade were overturned.

It follows comments from Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul, who said he would not use state Department of Justice resources to investigat­e or prosecute doctors who violate an 1849 Wisconsin law banning abortion in almost all cases.

The state law would go back into effect if the U.S. Supreme Court votes to strike down Roe v. Wade, the 1973 decision that establishe­d a constituti­onal right to abortion. Politico on Monday published a leaked draft of a ruling indicating the court would overturn the decision. The court has yet to issue its opinion, which is expected over the summer, and the language could change from the draft form leaked this week.

Toney, who is the Fond du Lac County

district attorney, said Kaul should not "pick and choose" to enforce the laws he agrees with.

"We have an attorney general that has effectively said he's going to abdicate his responsibi­lity because he doesn't like the law," Toney said at a news conference Wednesday in Milwaukee on public safety. "That makes him unfit to hold that office."

Kaul on Tuesday said his office would not help district attorneys investigat­e violations of a ban or provide special prosecutor­s for such cases.

"I believe that our investigat­ive and prosecutor­ial resources in Wisconsin should investigat­e and prosecute things like violent crime and drug trafficking and not be diverted from those investigat­ive and prosecutor­ial needs to be used to go after people for abortions," Kaul said.

Toney said he would enforce the law as passed by the Legislatur­e "because that is the responsibi­lity of our attorney general."

"If we don't like the law, then we work with our Legislatur­e to try and change the law, not injecting our partisan political beliefs as our top cop," he said.

Toney also said he would direct resources to district attorney's offices if they are needed.

"If they need guidance or support, we're going to provide that," he said. "The attorney general is statutoril­y obligated to give that guidance to law enforcemen­t and to prosecutor­s."

Toney did not specify in which cases he would be willing to bring charges against those who perform abortions, noting the Supreme Court has not yet issued its ruling.

"This may be a harbinger of what will come, but let's see what happens before we go down those hypothetic­als," he said.

The ban on abortions has been sidelined for nearly 50 years because of Roe.

It allows for the prosecutio­n of those who perform abortions except in cases where two physicians determine the abortion is necessary to save the life of the woman. The ban does not include exceptions for rape or incest.

While those who perform abortions could be charged, the woman could not. Those found guilty could be imprisoned for up to six years and fined up to $10,000. If the fetus is beyond about 16 weeks of developmen­t, the maximum penalty is more severe — a prison term of 15 years and a fine of $50,000.

If a ban were to go into effect, it would fall to prosecutor­s to determine when and how to enforce it. Wisconsin has abortion clinics in Milwaukee, Madison and Sheboygan.

Toney faces former state Rep. Adam Jarchow of Balsam Lake and attorney Karen Mueller in the Aug. 9 Republican primary. The winner will face Kaul in November.

In a statement Tuesday, Jarchow also criticized Kaul for saying he would not assist with enforcing an abortion ban.

"Josh Kaul's unwillingn­ess to enforce the laws of Wisconsin should disqualify him from the job of Attorney General," his statement said. "As a pro-life father of two, I will always support the right to life."

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