Partial-Birth Abortion Ban
Unconstitutional
By Gail Quinn
On August 26, a federal judge in Manhattan, Richard Conway Casey,
issued a ruling in which he called partial-birth abortion “gruesome,
brutal, barbaric and uncivilized.” Nonetheless, he believed
he was compelled to rule that a ban on the brutal procedure is unconstitutional.
The ban on partial-birth abortion was signed into law by President
Bush in November 2003. It was immediately challenged in three federal
court districts by the abortion industry. Earlier this summer a
judge in San Francisco, writing a decision in strong support of
partial-birth abortion, ruled the ban unconstitutional. The Nebraska
decision has yet to be issued. (Editor’s note: on Sept.
8, the Nebraska judge also ruled the ban unconstitutional.)
As one reads Judge Casey’s decision, you can almost feel
his utter distress about the procedure that was discussed in his
courtroom – its ethics, its brutality. He says
...the fetus’s arms and legs have been delivered outside
the uterus while the fetus is still alive. With the fetus’s
head lodged in the cervix, the physician punctures the skull with
scissors or crushes the head with forceps.... The physician then
drains the fetus’s skull by suctionor by using a finger,
and the skull collapses.
Judge Casey also explains that the fetus could be moving at the
time the skull is crushed, and that the procedure can “subject
fetuses to severe pain.”
How on earth, one may ask, if the Judge was aware of the horrible
and painful things done to kill unborn children by partial-birth
abortion, could he rule that banning it is unconstitutional?
The simple answer is the Supreme Court and its decisions in Roe
v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton (1973) and their progeny,
Stenberg v. Carhart (2000). Roe made abortion
legal but said it could be prohibited late in pregnancy, as long
as there is an exception for the mother’s health. But health,
as defined by the Supreme Court in Doe, was nothing more
than a farce. It defined health as including “all factors
– physical, emotional, psychological, familial, and the woman’s
age.”
Judge Casey called attention to the fact that purported safety advantages
offered by the abortionists in support of partial-birth abortion
“do not rise above the realm of the hypothetical.” And
he noted that their justifications for the procedure were “incoherent,”
“false,” or “merely theoretical.”
Still, the judge said he was faced with differing medical opinions,
and that the Supreme Court in Stenberg has ruled that where differing
medical opinions exist in regard to abortion, “a health exception
is constitutionally required.” Despite the sheer inhumanity
of the partial-birth abortion procedure, Casey said that lower court
judges who disagree with the higher court nevertheless have a constitutional
duty to obey its rulings.
This decision shows clearly how Roe v. Wade and the cases
that flow from it have taken out of the hands of the American people
the right to prohibit some of the most heinous and painful acts
committed on the youngest and most vulnerable in the human family.
Roe v. Wade must be overturned.
Gail Quinn is executive director of the Secretariat for Pro-Life
Activities of the US. Conference of Catholic Bishops, Washington,
DC. This article appears at www.usccb.org/prolife/publicat/lifeissues/082704.htm
and is reprinted with permission.
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