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Associated Press , March 28,
2005
High Court Declines
to Review State Emergency Abortion Law
WASHINGTON -- The Supreme Court rejected an appeal
Monday to reinstate a state law requiring girls
under age 18 to get parental consent for abortions
except under the most dire of medical emergencies.
Without comment, justices let stand a lower court
ruling that struck down the Idaho law because
its provisions on emergency abortions were
too strict.
The Supreme Court in its landmark 1973 case,
Roe v. Wade, ruled that a woman has a constitutional
right to abortion before the fetus is viable
and to terminate her pregnancy if it poses
a risk to her health.
At issue was whether the Idaho law was unduly
burdensome on young mothers by limiting abortions
without consent to "sudden and unexpected"
instances of physical complications.
The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals said yes, saying there was no reasonable
explanation for the restriction. Other emergency
medical procedures are allowed on minors without
parental permission that do not fit the "sudden
and unexpected" category, it said. The
court said the rest of the law couldn't be
salvaged because the emergency provisions were
too important.
The justices' move Monday sidesteps a highly
charged issue amid continuing speculation about
a looming vacancy on the high court. At least
three justices on the high court have said
they believe Roe v. Wade should be overturned.
Liberal groups have vowed to fight any judicial
nominee that opposes the landmark ruling.
The last major abortion decision by the Supreme
Court came in 2000, when the court ruled 5-4
to strike down Nebraska's ban on so-called
"partial-birth" abortion because
it failed to provide an exception to protect
the mother's health.
The Idaho law had been challenged by Planned
Parenthood of Idaho and one of the four Idaho
doctors who performs abortions . Other states
also provide for parental consent for abortions
in many situations, but Idaho's is considered
more stringent than most.
In 2001, there were 738 abortions performed in
the state, a drop from 1980, when 2,553 were
performed, according to state statistics. (Wasden
v. Planned Parenthood of Idaho)
<< Associated Press -- 3/28/05 >>
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