The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Clinic scrambles before doors close

Ruling unlikely to keep last clinic open in Mississipp­i.

- By Emily Wagster Pettus

JACKSON, MISS. — Mississip- pi’s only abortion clinic has been buzzing with activity in the chaotic days since the U.S. Supreme Court upended abortion rights nationwide — a case that originated in this conservati­ve Deep South state and with this brightpink medical facility that is closing its doors Wednesday.

Physicians at Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on have been trying to see as many patients as possible before today, when, unless there’s an unlikely interventi­on by the state’s conservati­ve Supreme Court, Missis- sippi will enact a law to ban most abortions.

Clashes intensifie­d We d nesday b etween anti-abortion protesters and volunteers escorting patients into the clinic, best known as the Pink House.

When Dr. Cheryl Hamlin, who has traveled from Boston for five years to perform abortions, walked outside the Pink House, an abortion opponent used a bullhorn to yell at her. “Repent! Repent!” shouted Doug Lane.

His words were drowned out by abortion rights supporter Beau Black, who repeatedly screamed: “Hypocrites and Pharisees! Hypocrites and Pharisees!”

Abortion access has become increasing­ly limited across wide swaths of the U.S. as conservati­ve states enact restrictio­ns or bans that took effect when the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, the landmark 1973 ruling that legalized abortion nationwide.

The court, reshaped by three conservati­ve justices appointed by former President Donald Trump, issued that ruling June 24. But the Mississipp­i clinic has been inundated with patients since September, when Texas enacted a ban on abortion early in pregnancy.

Cars with license plates from Mississipp­i, Louisiana, Arkansas and Texas have been driving through Jackson’s Fondren neighborho­od to bring women and girls— some of whom appeared to be teenagers — to the Pink House. Drivers parked on side streets near the clinic in the shade of pink and purple crepe myrtles, their car air-conditione­rs blasting as they waited.

Diane Derzis, who has owned the Mississipp­i clinic since 2010, drove to Jackson to speak at the Pink House hours after the Supreme Court ruling overturnin­g Roe v. Wade.

“It’s been such an honor and a privilege to be in Mississipp­i. I’ve come to love this state and the people in it,” Derzis told those gath- ered in the sweltering heat.

The Supreme Court ruling was in a case called Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on — the clinic’s challenge of a 2018 Missis- sippi law to ban most abortions after 15 weeks. The Pink House had been doing abor- tions through 16 weeks, but under previous U.S. Supreme Court rulings, abortion was allowed to the point of fetal viability at about 24 weeks.

Mississipp­i’s top public health official, Dr. Thomas Dobbs, was named in the lawsuit, but he has not taken a public position about the case. The state’s Republican attorney general urged justices to use the case to over- turn Roe v. Wade and give states more power to regu- late or ban abortion.

Derzis told The Associated Press after the ruling that she didn’t regret filing the lawsuit that eventually undercut nearly five decades of abortion case law.

didn’t have a choice. And if it hadn’t been this lawsuit, it would have been another one,” said Derzis, who also owns abortion clin- ics in Georgia and Virginia, and lives in Alabama.

The Mississipp­i clinic uses out-of-state physicians like Hamlin because no in-state doctors will work there.

Dr. Hamlin said she worries about women living in deep poverty in parts of the state with little access to health care.

“People say, ‘Oh, what am I supposed to do?’” Hamlin said. “And I’m like, ‘Vote.’”

 ?? ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP ?? Clinic security officers attempt to keep anti-abortion activist Doug Lane (left) from a physical confrontat­ion with abortion rights supporters, who are using noisemaker­s to drown out Lane’s bullhorn Wednesday at the Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on clinic. The clinic is the only facility that performs abortions in Mississipp­i.
ROGELIO V. SOLIS/AP Clinic security officers attempt to keep anti-abortion activist Doug Lane (left) from a physical confrontat­ion with abortion rights supporters, who are using noisemaker­s to drown out Lane’s bullhorn Wednesday at the Jackson Women’s Health Organizati­on clinic. The clinic is the only facility that performs abortions in Mississipp­i.

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