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Los Angeles Times, June 29, 2005
High Court to
Again Hear Case on Abortion Clinic Protesters
Author : David G. Savage
DATELINE: WASHINGTON
Before leaving for its summer recess, the Supreme
Court announced Tuesday that it would take
up, for the third time, a long-running dispute
between aggressive antiabortion protesters
and the National Organization for Women.
At issue is whether the protesters can be sued
under the federal antiracketeering law with
conspiring to shut down abortion clinics.
The justices also said they would take up the
case of a Tennessee death row inmate to decide
whether new DNA evidence was sufficient reason
to require another trial.
As the high court added cases to be heard in
the fall, there was increasing reason to believe
that Chief Justice William H. Rehnquist planned
to be there to decide them.
Rehnquist, 80, defied expectations by not announcing
his retirement at the end of the court's term.
He could step down in the days or weeks ahead,
but a justice who plans to retire usually first
tells colleagues of his plans. Monday marked
the last time that justices were to gather
as a group until the fall.
Rehnquist, who is being treated for thyroid cancer,
struggled to deliver an opinion Monday. He
paused often to gasp for air. But the justices
have said that in their private meetings, he
has been in charge and on top of all of his
court work.
The new abortion protest case is an old one for
the court.
It began in the mid-1980s, a time of bombings,
break-ins and fires at abortion clinics around
the nation. NOW's lawyers maintained that a
small group of protesters -- including Joseph
Scheidler and the Pro-Life Action League --
were conspiring to shut down the clinics and
were using illegal means to do it.
NOW sued the group under the federal antiracketeering
law and, after a seven-week trial, a jury in
Chicago found the protesters guilty of multiple
acts of extortion, threats, conspiracy and
violence.
Besides awarding damages, a judge handed down
a nationwide order that barred protesters from
trespassing on or near abortion clinics.
The protesters, who denied that they had engaged
in violence, appealed to the Supreme Court,
contending that NOW's suit violated their free-speech
rights under the 1st Amendment. The justices
turned away their claim.
The protesters then argued that they could not
be sued as racketeers because they were not
seeking to extort money from clinics. The Supreme
Court rejected that argument in a 1994 ruling.
But two years ago, the high court switched course
and ruled that protesters could not be guilty
of extortion under federal law because they
were not trying to take over abortion clinics.
The federal extortion law was intended to deal
with mobsters who used threats and violence
to take over legitimate businesses.
Although the high court's ruling was seen as
likely to end the case, the U.S. appeals court
in Chicago refused to cancel the nationwide
order against abortion protesters. Its judges
said "acts or threats of physical violence"
were enough to keep the suit alive.
This year, lawyers for Scheidler asked the Supreme
Court to take up the case for the third time.
They said the judges in Chicago had shown a
"flagrant disregard" for the high
court's earlier ruling. The court said it would
hear the case of Scheidler vs. NOW in the fall.
Jay Sekulow, counsel for the American Center
for Law and Justice, said the case offered
"a critically important opportunity to
remove a dark cloud that has been hanging over
the pro-life community for nearly 20 years."
But Nancy Keegan, president of NARAL Pro-Choice
America, said the case offered another reminder
about the importance of Supreme Court justices.
Will they "support violence, vandalism
and intimidation, or will they side with the
American women?" she asked.
The DNA case involves Paul G. House, a convicted
sex offender who was found guilty of assaulting
and killing a neighbor in 1985. As House neared
execution, his lawyers came forward with new
DNA tests that showed the semen found on the
murder victim was from her husband.
Nonetheless, the U.S. appeals court in Cincinnati,
in an 8-7 decision, refused to order a new
trial and ruled that the circumstantial evidence
of House's guilt was strong.
The justices will reconsider that conclusion
in the fall.
After Monday's ruling limiting prominent displays
of the Ten Commandments in public buildings,
the justices let stand a series of lower court
rulings that had barred the display of the
biblical commandments in high schools and courthouses
in Ohio and Kentucky.
In one case, an Ohio judge was ordered to remove
a poster of the Ten Commandments from his courtroom.
<< Los Angeles Times 6/29/05
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