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jpak

(41,760 posts)
Fri Jul 31, 2015, 03:56 PM Jul 2015

How Alabama gave a jailed woman’s fetus a lawyer, forbid an abortion

http://bangordailynews.com/2015/07/31/news/how-alabama-gave-a-jailed-womans-fetus-a-lawyer-forbid-an-abortion/

In 2006, Alabama lawmakers passed a bill aimed at punishing parents who turned their kitchens and garages into do-it-yourself meth labs, exposing their children to toxic chemicals and noxious fumes. Support was bipartisan, the vote was unanimous, and the bill was quickly signed into law.

Nine years later, authorities in Lauderdale County in northern Alabama have sought to use that same law to deny a 29-year-old pregnant inmate in the local jail — accused of exposing her fetus to drugs — the right to have an abortion. In doing so, they have pushed the abortion wars into uncharted territory and highlighted just how central the issue of drug use in pregnancy has become to the battle over Roe v. Wade.

The case of the woman, identified only as Jane Doe, is extraordinary in many ways, including how abruptly it seems to have ended — or maybe hasn’t. Earlier this month, after the woman told jail officials she was in her first trimester and wanted an abortion, the Lauderdale district attorney took the unprecedented step of petitioning a juvenile court to strip her of parental rights to her unborn child. Doe’s fetus was given a court-appointed lawyer. The proceedings, like most everything that happens in juvenile court, were secret.

The American Civil Liberties Union filed a federal lawsuit on the woman’s behalf, demanding that she be granted a medical furlough or supervised travel to a Huntsville abortion clinic for appointments she made before her arrest. “I am very distraught,” woman said in a declaration in the ACLU case. “ do not want to be forced to carry this pregnancy to term.”

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How Alabama gave a jailed woman’s fetus a lawyer, forbid an abortion (Original Post) jpak Jul 2015 OP
I can't see how a federal court could not rule in her favor. CTyankee Jul 2015 #1

CTyankee

(63,926 posts)
1. I can't see how a federal court could not rule in her favor.
Fri Jul 31, 2015, 04:09 PM
Jul 2015

A nonviable fetus cannot in any way be construed a "child." And she's in her first trimester.

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