A 15-weeks pregnant undocumented
teenager apprehended last month on the US-Mexico border must be allowed
to obtain an abortion “promptly and without delay,” a federal judge has
told the Trump administration.
“Jane Doe,” as the 17-year-old illegal immigrant is known in court
documents, has a constitutional right to an elective abortion, US
District Judge Tanya S. Chutkan, for the District of Columbia, ruled on
Wednesday.
Scott Stewart, a US deputy assistant attorney general, failed to
convince the Obama-nominated judge that the teenager, who remains in
government custody in Brownsville, Texas, should return to her home
country if she doesn’t want to carry the pregnancy to term, or otherwise
find a US sponsor.
“I am astounded by that position,” Chutkan said, according to the
Washington Post.
“I respectfully disagree that she’s entitled to an abortion” expedited
by the government, Stewart said, clarifying that Jane Doe’s situation
was not a medical emergency, the Post reported.
Chutkan ordered the government to transport Doe, or allow her guardian
or lawyer to transport her, “promptly and without delay to the abortion
provider closest” to the Brownsville shelter.
Under Texas law, in order to have an abortion, the woman must make two
trips to the provider, adhere to a waiting period between those visits,
and receive an ultrasound. Due to these restraints, as well as Texas
prohibiting most abortions after 20 weeks of pregnancy, the judge
ordered the US government facilitate the girl’s access to an abortion
provider by Thursday, and for the operation to occur by October 21,
depending on the availability and medical requirements of the provider.
The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU), which brought the case, had
also asked for a preliminary injunction to cover all similar cases of
undocumented immigrants in US custody seeking abortions. However, the
judge ruled only on this specific case.
Doe’s lawyers argued that she had abided by state and federal rules,
with a Texas judge granting permission for the abortion. The ACLU did
not request, nor did the judge’s ruling require, that any government
agency pay for the abortion or provide transportation. The US government
simply needs to process paperwork for the visit to the clinic, Chutkan
ruled.
That wasn’t too much to ask, Chutkan found, since federal agents had
already taken Doe “against her will” to a Christian pregnancy facility
for counseling and also informed Doe’s mother, the Post reported.
Chutkan added that these moves may have violated her rights to privacy
and other constitutional protections.
It remains unclear if the Department of Justice will appeal the ruling.
The Trump administration has “strong and constitutionally legitimate
interests in promoting childbirth, in refusing to facilitate abortion,
and in not providing incentives for pregnant minors to illegally cross
the border to obtain elective abortions while in federal custody,” the
government’s court filings read, according to the Post.
Although the girl was apprehended for illegally crossing the Mexican
border into the US last month, her country of origin is unknown, and so
is that country’s abortion law. |
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