The Guardian (USA)

Judge blocks Idaho from prosecutin­g doctors who refer patients out of state for abortions

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A US judge on Monday blocked the state of Idaho at least temporaril­y from prosecutin­g doctors who refer patients out of state to get an abortion, finding that would violate a medical provider’s right to free speech.

Judge B Lynn Winmill of the federal district of Idaho agreed with a challenge led by Planned Parenthood that the interpreta­tion of the Republican attorney general, Raul Labrador, of the state’s criminal abortion law was “chilling” to providers’ rights to free speech under the first amendment of the constituti­on.

Idaho’s abortion ban calls for revoking the license of any healthcare profession­al who assists in performing an abortion. Labrador interprete­d the word “assists” as prohibitin­g an Idaho medical provider from referring a woman across state lines for an abortion.

But the judge found Labrador’s interpreta­tion went too far and enjoined him from prosecutin­g such cases until an underlying legal challenge to the abortion law is settled in court.

“The court finds that the medical providers have establishe­d that there is a genuine threat of prosecutio­n. This threat has resulted in the chilling of the medical providers’ speech – a wellestabl­ished concrete injury,” wrote Winmill, who was appointed during the presidency of Bill Clinton, a Democrat.

Planned Parenthood and two doctors, known in the suit as the medical providers, sued in April to block the punishment, arguing the law violates the US constituti­on by prohibitin­g protected free speech and attempting to extend Idaho law beyond its borders.

A spokespers­on for Labrador did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Idaho banned abortion shortly after the US supreme court last year overturned the guaranteed right to abortion nationwide, mandating a prison sentence of two to five years for a convicted provider.

The law allows a provider charged with performing an illegal abortion to overcome the charge by proving it was needed to save the mother’s life, or resulted from rape reported to law enforcemen­t.

 ?? Photograph: Sarah A Miller/AP ?? A sign advocating for reproducti­ve rights taped to a pole in front of the Idaho state capitol building in Boise on 3 May 2022.
Photograph: Sarah A Miller/AP A sign advocating for reproducti­ve rights taped to a pole in front of the Idaho state capitol building in Boise on 3 May 2022.

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