Judge halts move against Planned Parenthood in La.
NEW ORLEANS — Louisiana must continue providing Medicaid funding to Planned Parenthood clinics for 14 more days while a legal battle continues over Gov. Bobby Jindal’s recent order to block the funding, a federal judge ruled.
U.S. District Judge John deGravelles in Baton Rouge heard arguments Friday. His order was signed Sunday and made public Monday morning. Without his ruling, funding was expected to end Monday. A hearing date will be set after a Monday afternoon conference call, according to the order.
Planned Parenthood had challenged the state’s right to end funding for cancer screenings, gynecology exams and other health services.
Jindal, vying for the GOP presidential nomination, began the defunding effort after videos were released by the anti-abortion Center for Medical Progress.
The center said the videos showed that Planned Parenthood illegally sells fetal tissue for profit. Planned Parenthood, which does not provide abortions in Louisiana, denies the allegation and says the videos are misleading.
Lawyers for Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast, the Planned Parenthood arm that provides medical services in Louisiana, argued that Jindal’s fight is politically motivated.
“In fact, uncontradicted evidence in the record at this time is that PPGC does not perform abortions in Louisiana, is not involved in the sale of fetal tissue and none of the conduct in question occurred at the PPGC’s two Louisiana facilities,” deGravelles wrote in his 59-page ruling. He said it appears likely Planned Parenthood will be able to prove that the funding cutoff was being attempted for reasons unrelated to the organization’s competence.
Planned Parenthood says 5,200 low-income Medicaid patients obtain services such as cancer screenings and gynecological exams through their two Louisiana clinics. The organization doesn’t provide abortions in Louisiana.
“It is shameful that Governor Jindal is trying to score political points by blocking women’s access to critical health care,” Melissa Flournoy, state director of Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast, said in a statement hailing the order as a victory.
In reacting to the judge’s ruling, Mike Reed, a spokesman for Gov. Jindal, said Planned Parenthood was engaging in misdirection regarding the millions they have repaid in Medicaid fraud and their own admissions in the videos.
Carter has said the clinics were reimbursed nearly $730,000 during the organization’s last budget year for services provided to Medicaid patients.
Jimmy Faircloth, an attorney for the state, said the videos were a catalyst for a hard look at Planned Parenthood’s practices. But, he emphasized that the move to cut off Medicaid money was based on other factors.
For instance, the state cites a $4.3 million settlement in Texas of claims that the organization billed government programs for services that weren’t medically necessary or that weren’t provided.
Planned Parenthood did not admit any wrongdoing in that 2013 settlement and says Louisiana officials knew about it even before it was formally entered in court. DeGravelles agreed that the settlement was no cause for ending funding.