FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: Friday, September 12, 2003
CONTACT:
| Lorraine Kenny |
212-549-2634 |
| ACLU National
Office |
|
| |
|
| Jack Van
Valkenburgh |
208-344-5243
ext. 203 |
| ACLU of Idaho |
|
| |
|
| Rebecca Poedy |
208-376-9300
ext. 13 |
| Planned
Parenthood of Idaho |
|
SEATTLE –Planned Parenthood and the American Civil Liberties
Union today urged a federal appeals court to strike down Idaho’s
parental consent law, calling it one of the most dangerous and
extreme laws of its kind in the nation.
"This law heartlessly prevents teens with serious medical
conditions from getting the abortions they need to protect their
health and lives," said Rebecca Poedy, President of Planned
Parenthood of Idaho. "And in the process, it threatens to put
doctors in jail for providing critical emergency care to their
patients."
The law in question prevents teens under 18 from having an
abortion unless they get the written consent of a parent or, for
those who cannot tell a parent, permission from a judge. Contrary to
U.S. Supreme Court rulings, the law lacks an adequate exception to
protect teens’ health and lives. In addition, the law subjects a
doctor who provides an emergency abortion to criminal penalties and
the loss of his or her license, and it fails to guarantee that teens
who need to go to court will be represented by an attorney and
receive a timely hearing.
"Most teens involve their parents in their abortion decisions,
but for those teens who can’t because they have good reason to
believe that they will get beat up or forced to leave home, the law
lacks an adequate alternative," said Helene Krasnoff, an attorney
with Planned Parenthood Federation of America, who argued the case
today before the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit. "By
expecting teens to appear in court without attorneys who will argue
on their behalf and allowing judges to indefinitely delay deciding a
teen’s request to have an abortion, the law forsakes the most
vulnerable young women."
In December 2001, a federal district court in Idaho struck down
many sections of the law. For example, the court struck a
requirement that judges must inform the police about teenagers who
seek a court waiver so that their teenage boyfriends can be
prosecuted for statutory rape. The court also blocked a provision
that gave teens only two days to appeal the denial of a parental
consent waiver from a judge. The court, however, failed to strike
down the entire law. Both sides appealed that decision. Planned
Parenthood and the ACLU urged the court today to uphold the lower
court’s decision blocking sections of the law and asked the court to
strike what remains of this extreme and unconstitutional measure.
"Idaho’s law is uniquely and unnecessarily Draconian and
restrictive, even for a parental involvement law," said Jack Van
Valkenburgh, Executive Director of the ACLU of Idaho. "No other
parental consent law in the country obstructs teens’ access to
emergency abortions in this way and no other law penalizes young
women who have to go to court by turning their boyfriends over to
the police. The state should be safeguarding teens’ health, not
jeopardizing it."
In support of Planned Parenthood and the ACLU’s challenge,
leading medical groups, including the American Public Health
Association and the Society for Adolescent Medicine, filed a
friend-of-the-court brief opposing this unsafe law.
Today's case is Planned Parenthood v. Lance, Case Nos. 02-35700
and 02-35714. Lawyers on the brief include Krasnoff, Roger Evans,
and Dara Klassel of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America,
and Jennifer Dalven and Louise Melling of the ACLU Reproductive
Freedom Project.