Los Angeles Times

U.S. court clears way for teen’s abortion

Appellate judges reject administra­tion rule blocking detained immigrant, 17, from ending her pregnancy.

- By David G. Savage david.savage@latimes.com Twitter: @DavidGSava­ge

WASHINGTON — In the first major legal battle over abortion under President Trump, the federal appeals court in Washington on Tuesday set aside an antiaborti­on rule adopted by the administra­tion and cleared the way for a 17-year-old immigrant to end her pregnancy.

By a 6-3 vote, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit revived an earlier order that the government must “promptly and without delay” allow the teenager, referred to in court as Jane Doe, to obtain the abortion she has sought for five weeks. Doe has been held in a detention center for unaccompan­ied minors in south Texas since crossing the border in September.

Trump administra­tion officials have adopted a policy of not allowing pregnant minors who are in federal custody to get abortions. They did not dispute that the Constituti­on gave Doe a right to choose an abortion, but said they would not “facilitate” the procedure by allowing her to travel to an abortion clinic.

Although the ruling directly affects only the pregnant teenager who brought the case, it strongly indicates that the appeals court, which has jurisdicti­on over federal agencies nationwide, would strike down efforts by administra­tion officials to block abortions in similar cases.

The ACLU, which represente­d Doe, says that in the last year, administra­tion officials repeatedly have tried to prevent pregnant minors in detention from having abortions.

Administra­tion officials did not immediatel­y comment on the ruling or what they would do next.

The appellate judges split entirely along ideologica­l and political lines. The six judges in the majority were all Democratic appointees, including Chief Judge Merrick Garland, President Obama’s unsuccessf­ul nominee to the Supreme Court. The three dissenters were Republican appointees, including Judge Brett M. Kavanaugh, a leading contender for the next Supreme Court nomination under Trump.

Kavanaugh denounced the majority for what he called a “radical extension” of the law that creates a “new right for unlawful immigrant minors ... to obtain immediate abortion on demand.”

“What new law?” Judge Patricia Millett shot back. The Roe vs. Wade ruling created a constituti­onal right to abortion, Millett, an Obama appointee, wrote in an opinion explaining the majority’s ruling. That right applies whether or not a person is in the U.S. legally, she wrote.

Administra­tion officials “bulldozed” over Doe’s rights by claiming “an unaccompan­ied child has the burden of extracting herself from custody if she wanted to exercise the right,” she wrote. “The government has insisted that it may categorica­lly blockade exercise of her constituti­onal right unless this child (like some kind of legal Houdini) figures her own way out of detention.”

The abortion procedure is to be paid for with private funds, not tax money, Millett noted, and even the cost of taking Doe to the clinic would not be paid by taxpayer funds.

The government does not have to “facilitate” anything for Doe to have the abortion, she wrote, “it just has to not interfere or make things harder.”

The case began in early September when the young immigrant crossed the border illegally and said she was fleeing violence and abuse in Central America. An examinatio­n later determined she was pregnant.

Because she was an unaccompan­ied minor, she came under the control of a little-known agency in the Department of Health and Human Services, the Office of Refugee Resettleme­nt. Under the Trump administra­tion, that agency is headed by E. Scott Lloyd, a former attorney for the Knights of Columbus and a fierce opponent of abortion.

Lloyd decreed that federally funded shelters that house young immigrants may not take “any action that facilitate­s an abortion” without his direct approval.

Jane Doe was 11 weeks pregnant when she requested an abortion. With the help of a court-appointed guardian, she won the approval of a Texas judge who decided she was sufficient­ly mature to make the decision on her own — a requiremen­t in the state’s law for minors who do not have a parent’s permission for an abortion.

Lloyd refused her request. “For every minor in HHS custody, the agency retains responsibi­lity to ensure that the minor’s interests are considered in the decision-making about her case,” administra­tion lawyers argued in a brief to the U.S. appeals court Monday.

“In Ms. Doe’s case, the diwoman rector declined to permit Ms. Doe to leave her shelter for purposes of obtaining the abortion.”

The ACLU alleged Lloyd was wielding an “unconstitu­tional veto power” over the minor’s access to abortion. It also said that given how long the proceeding­s already had taken, Doe’s time for obtaining a legal abortion was running out.

A federal district judge on Oct. 18 ordered Lloyd’s agency to permit the young to be transporte­d for medical counseling and an abortion.

Trump’s lawyers quickly appealed, and in a 2-1 decision Friday, a panel of the federal appeals court set aside the judge’s order and gave the government 11 more days to “secure a sponsor” to help her with her decision.

Two Republican judges were in the majority on that panel, and Millett dissented. She accused Lloyd of an “astonishin­g power grab [that] flies in the teeth of decades of Supreme Court precedent preserving and protecting the fundamenta­l right of women to make an informed choice whether to continue a pregnancy at this early stage.”

The ACLU then asked the full appeals court to take up the case, leading to Tuesday’s 6-3 decision.

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