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  • 2018-10-10 (xsd:date)
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  • Did Brett Kavanaugh Rule That a Raped Immigrant Teen Must Delay Her Abortion in Order to 'Think About it Maturely'? (en)
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  • In October 2018, before the controversial confirmation of Judge Brett Kavanaugh as a Supreme Court Justice, the left-wing Facebook page The Other 98% posted a meme which hinted at a degree of irony or hypocrisy in one of Kavanaugh's past opinions: As indicated in the meme, this argument originated in a 2 October tweet by a Twitter user called @maydaymindy9: Part of the point of this tweet was to present a level of irony or even hypocrisy on the part of Kavanaugh. In September 2018, Dr. Christine Blasey Ford came forward with an allegation that Kavanaugh sexually assaulted her in the early 1980s, when she was 15 years old and Kavanaugh was 17 years old -- the same age as the pregnant girl at the heart of the court case in question. If Kavanaugh's stance towards the girl was that she must be forced to delay her abortion because he believed she needed to contemplate that what you do at 17 follows you forever, then according to the implicit logic of the tweet, Kavanaugh ought to have the same rigorous moral judgment applied to his alleged actions as a 17-year-old. The tweet, and the Other 98% meme which followed, are indeed based on an opinion given by Kavanaugh in a case that came before the District of Columbia Circuit of the U.S. Court of Appeals in the autumn of 2017. And Kavanaugh did indeed rule that the young woman could be forced to further delay obtaining an abortion until she was placed with her immigration sponsor. However, the meme embellished certain parts of the case and overlooked significant nuance in Kavanaugh's argument. Background The case in question revolved around a young woman from Central America known as Jane Doe, who unlawfully entered the United States in September 2017 at the age of 17. Her court-appointed legal guardian and attorney, Rochelle Garza, gave the following account of her circumstances in written testimony that she later presented to the Senate Judiciary Committee in opposition to Kavanaugh's confirmation to the Supreme Court: What followed was weeks of somewhat complicated legal wrangling involving the Office of Refugee Resettlement (an agency of the Department of Health and Human Services), the Department of Justice, and the young woman's lawyers, as various government actors insisted that she undergo counselling, ultrasounds, and other delays and preconditions before terminating her pregnancy. On 13 October 2017, Garza and the American Civil Liberties Union sued Eric Hargan, the acting Health and Human Services Secretary, and other government agencies and officials, seeking (on Jane Doe's behalf) a federal court injunction preventing the government from further delaying or obstructing Jane Doe's access to an abortion. The plaintiffs argued that the federal government was violating the young woman's constitutional right to an abortion, as set out in the landmark Supreme Court decision in Roe v. Wade, maintaining that although the state has a right to insist on certain requirements before an abortion can take place (such as counselling, parental consent, and 24-hour waiting periods), the obstacles put before Jane Doe had amounted to an undue burden -- a legal standard set out in another major abortion-related Supreme Court decision, Planned Parenthood v. Casey. In the 13 October lawsuit, Jane Doe's lawyers wrote that: The United States District Court in the District of Columbia sided with Jane Doe's attorneys, and on 18 October they granted the restraining order against the government, whose lawyers immediately appealed, thus sending the case to the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (the D.C. Circuit). Kavanaugh's Role On 20 October 2017, three judges on the D.C. Circuit -- Brett Kavanaugh, Karen Henderson and Patricia Millett -- ruled 2-1 in favor of the government's appeal, ordering a pause on the restraining order which was set to clear the way for Jane Doe's abortion. Judge Millett dissented from the ruling, which read: Under the terms of the 20 October ruling, the government would be given 11 days (until 31 October) to find a sponsor for Jane Doe (typically a relative or friend already living in the United States) and transfer her into their custody before allowing her to obtain the abortion. If no sponsor could be found by then, the D.C. Circuit Court could re-enter their restraining order against the government, paving the way for Jane Doe's abortion, while the government could once again appeal, potentially bringing the case before the Court of Appeals for a second time. Two days later, the ACLU asked for the government's appeal to be reconsidered, this time by a full court of all eleven D.C. Circuit judges. Two days after that, on 24 October, the court overturned the three-judge panel's ruling and dismissed the government's appeal. According to Garza's testimony, Jane Doe obtained an abortion the next day, when she was 15 weeks pregnant. In his dissent from the 24 October ruling, Kavanaugh essentially argued that insisting Jane Doe be transferred into the custody of her immigration sponsor before being allowed to obtain an abortion was not an undue burden on her, so long as the transfer is expeditious. Thus, he argued, the government had not violated her constitutional right to an abortion by seeking this precondition: Garza would later reject one of the premises of this argument, that Jane Doe should be placed in more comfortable and stable surroundings before making her decision, insisting that her client became resolved in her decision to have an abortion as soon as she discovered she was pregnant, several weeks before the Court of Appeals ruling and Kavanaugh's dissent: Conclusion It is true that Judge Kavanaugh issued a ruling on 20 October 2017 which would have forced an unlawful immigrant 17-year-old to further delay her abortion, but his reasoning was not precisely that she must wait until she really really thought about it maturely because what you do at 17 follows you forever, as Mayday Mindy's tweet described it. In his dissent, Kavanaugh did write that the girl was faced with a major life decision, and that it might be preferable for her to make that decision in the custody of an immigration sponsor rather than in the less stable and more isolated environment of federal detention. However, in legal terms Kavanaugh was specifically ruling that it would not violate the girl's constitutional right to an abortion for the state to insist on transferring her into the custody of an immigration sponsor first, provided that process was expeditious. Finally, the girl's pregnancy does not appear to have been the result of a rape, despite Mayday Mindy's claim. None of the court records we examined, nor Rochelle Garza's testimony before the Senate Judiciary Committee, contained any reference to Jane Doe's having been raped. (en)
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