San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Arizona can’t prosecute abortion doctors, court says

- By Jack Healy

PHOENIX — Arizona cannot prosecute doctors under an 1864 ban on abortions that would have outlawed the procedure in nearly every circumstan­ce, a state appeals court ruled.

The ruling, which abortionri­ghts groups celebrated as a qualified victory, offers some clarity after months of uncertaint­y and legal fights over the fate of abortion in Arizona — and effectivel­y allows licensed doctors in Arizona to perform abortions through the 15th week of pregnancy.

The decision resolved, for the moment, the question of which abortion ban in Arizona would be the law of the land in the wake of the Supreme Court’s decision overturnin­g Roe v. Wade, which had guaranteed a constituti­onal right to abortion. The Supreme Court decision effectivel­y sent the issue back to states to decide, and many have been caught up in litigation over state bans.

In Arizona, one law predating statehood outlawed the procedure entirely, except to save the mother’s life. Meanwhile, a law passed earlier this year by the state’s Republican­controlled Legislatur­e allows abortions through the 15th week of pregnancy, when the majority of women get them.

The ruling Friday declared that doctors could not be prosecuted under the old territoria­lera law, effectivel­y rendering it toothless. The ruling also said the old and new laws were not in conflict, but that the new ban simply added another exception to the old one. The court said it sought to “harmonize” the state’s existing abortion laws.

Gov.-elect Katie Hobbs criticized the court’s ruling for keeping the 15-week ban in place, pointing out that it has no exceptions for rape or incest. “The decision to have a child should rest solely between a woman and her doctor, not the government or politician­s,” Hobbs said in a statement.

The outgoing attorney general, Mark Brnovich, a Republican, had argued that the 1864 ban could be enforced while abortion-rights groups fought to keep it from being revived.

During a few weeks over the summer when abortion providers believed they could be prosecuted under the territoria­l-era ban, abortions virtually ceased in Arizona and providers sent women out of state.

A court then temporaril­y blocked the 1864 ban from being enforced while the court case proceeded, allowing abortions to resume.

“It has been a really convoluted environmen­t,” said Brittany Fonteno, the president of Planned Parenthood Arizona. “It is very clear, with no uncertaint­y, that abortion is safe and legal in Arizona through 15 weeks of pregnancy. The attorney general’s attempts to take us back to 1864 are not going to be allowed in Arizona.”

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