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Supreme Court voids part of pregnancy-center law

By: Associated Press//June 26, 2018//

Supreme Court voids part of pregnancy-center law

By: Associated Press//June 26, 2018//

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By MARK SHERMAN
Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Supreme Court says a California law that forces anti-abortion pregnancy centers to provide information about abortion probably violates the Constitution.

The 5-4 ruling Tuesday also casts doubts on similar laws in Hawaii and Illinois.

The California law took effect in 2016. It requires that centers that are licensed by the state tell clients about the availability of contraception, abortion and pre-natal care, at little or no cost. Centers that are unlicensed were required to post a sign that said so. The court struck down that part of the law.

The centers said they were singled out and forced to deliver a message with which they disagreed. California said the law was needed to let poor women know all their options.

Justice Clarence Thomas said in his majority opinion said the centers “are likely to succeed” in their constitutional challenge to the law.

“California cannot co-opt the licensed facilities to deliver its message for it,” Thomas wrote for himself and his conservative colleagues, Chief Justice John Roberts and Justices Anthony Kennedy, Samuel Alito and Neil Gorsuch.

He called the requirement for unlicensed centers “unjustified and unduly burdensome.”

Justice Stephen Breyer said among the reasons the law should be upheld is that the high court has previously upheld state laws requiring doctors to tell women seeking abortions about adoption services. “After all, the law must be evenhanded,” Breyer said in a dissenting opinion joined by his liberal colleagues, Justices Ruth Bader Ginsburg, Sonia Sotomayor and Elena Kagan.

The abortion-rights group NARAL Pro-Choice California was a prime sponsor of the law in California. NARAL contends that the centers mislead women about their options and try to pressure them to forgo abortion. Estimates put the number of crisis pregnancy centers in the U.S. at between 2,500 and more than 4,000. In contrast, there are fewer than 1,500 abortion providers, women’s rights groups said in a filing to the Supreme Court.

California’s law was challenged by the National Institute of Family and Life Advocates, an organization with ties to 1,500 pregnancy centers and 140 in California.

The court has previously upheld requirements calling on doctors in abortion clinics to tell patients about alternatives to abortion.

In another lawsuit over regulating pregnancy centers, a federal appeals court in New York had struck down parts of an ordinance passed by New York City, although it upheld the requirement calling on junlicensed centers to say that they lack a license.

Other states have laws that regulate what doctors can say when they are talking about abortions or related subjects. In Louisiana, Texas and Wisconsin, doctors must display a sonogram and provide a description of the fetus of a pregnant woman who is considering an abortion, according to the Guttmacher Institute, which supports abortion rights. Similar laws have been blocked in Kentucky, North Carolina and Oklahoma.

Doctors’ speech has also been questioned in non-abortion cases. A federal appeals court struck down parts of a law adopted in Florida in 2011 to prohibit doctors from talking about gun safety with their patients. Under the law, doctors faced fines and the possible loss of their medical licenses for discussing guns with patients.

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