Monday was the first day that Planned Parenthood, which operates the only abortion business in South Dakota, had to comply with a new state law telling women the truth about abortion. Rather than tell women abortion kills children and has numerous risks, Planned Parenthood closed its doors.
07/ 22/08Last year, Planned Parenthood performed more than 250,000 abortions, which account for about 1 in 5 of our country's total. Of all abortions, those performed for black women accounted for about a third of the procedures. It's also worth noting that a majority of Planned Parenthood's clinics are in minority neighborhoods.
07/ 15/08Day Gardner: Planned Parenthood has basically bought off Barack Obama
07/ 15/08Democratic and Republican candidates must reject donations from Planned Parenthood this election year, and Congress should end all federal funding for the abortion provider, according to black pro-life leaders who held two press conferences last week in Washington, D.C., at Democratic and Republican Party Committee headquarters.
07/ 03/08For the last few decades, evangelicals repeatedly have mobilized and demonstrated to oppose the operation of abortion clinics. Over the years, many have believed that being anti-abortion had become a litmus test for their support of politicians and policies, which vie for evangelical votes.
07/ 03/08Exit poll after exit poll in election after election shows the Democratic Party is staunchly supported by an overwhelming majority of African-American voters, many of whom are much more socially conservative on issues like abortion than their party leadership.
07/ 03/08Corporation's willingness to accept race-based contributions cited
07/ 02/08Press release from Kansas for Life
06/ 27/08During the last few years, everyone in the nation has come to understand that things are not always the way they appear with individuals or organizations. While all of us struggle to live up to our ideals, some groups live permanently in the land of personal or professional compromise.
06/ 23/08Don’t look now, but as the business Planned Parenthood is in (unrestricted abortion) becomes less popular, the abortion leader aims to distract.
06/ 23/08Abortion Provider Goes Upscale; Aid For Poor Questioned
06/ 23/081916: Margaret Sanger opens America's first birth control clinic, in Brooklyn, N.Y., at a time when contraceptive information and materials are illegal on grounds of obscenity. Today's Planned Parenthood traces its roots to that clinic.
06/ 23/08Planned Parenthood, the nation’s leading provider of surgical abortions, could save millions of dollars on abortion related drugs if a new war funding bill passes through the House this year, according to pro-life groups.
06/ 17/08Many of us expected this delay, delay, delay, until these misdemeanor charges will be allowed to go away. This was the entire plan when AG Morrison threw out all of the serious charges that meant something which were brought forth with probable cause.
06/ 17/08This is a great timeline to help follow what has happened in the Kansas legal case involving Planned Parenthood.
06/ 03/08Wednesday, May 07, 2008
TOPEKA, Kan. — The state's highest court Tuesday allowed a grand jury to keep investigating one of the few U.S. doctors who performs late-term abortions but limited its power to subpoena his patients' records.
The Supreme Court refused to strike down the law abortion opponents used to force Sedgwick County to convene the grand jury to investigate whether Dr. George Tiller violated state restrictions on abortion.
The high court also declined to quash subpoenas it issued to Tiller and Attorney General Steve Six.
But in its unanimous ruling, the Supreme Court said there are limits on the grand jury's power.
The justices set guidelines and ordered the presiding district court judge to follow the new standards in determining whether the subpoenas should be enforced.
"The court should satisfy itself that the grand jury has not engaged in an arbitrary fishing expedition and that the targets were not selected and subpoenas issued out of malice or with intent to harass," Justice Lee Johnson wrote for court. "If so, the court should quash the subpoenas."
The Supreme Court said the district court must determine whether the documents sought are relevant to the grand jury's investigation, whether its subpoenas are too broad and whether complying would create too great a burden for Tiller and his clinic. It also must determine whether the subpoenas represent harassment, the justices said.
After that, the Supreme Court said, the presiding judge must protect patients' privacy. Tiller's clinic must be allowed to edit out information identifying patients, and what the court receives can be shared only with the grand jury, the justices said.
Abortion opponents generally were pleased with the ruling, though some said they had to review the court's decision. Anti-abortion groups had feared that the Supreme Court would quash the subpoenas or even dissolve the grand jury.
A Six spokeswoman and attorneys for Tiller and a national group representing his patients praised the court for limiting the grand jury's power. They said the justices' rules should protect patient privacy.
The grand jury targeted records from about 2,000 Tiller patients, including women who had been to the clinic but not obtained abortions, though an attorney for the panel said it would settle for far fewer documents. The panel also sought the edited copies of 30 records obtained by the attorney general's office in a previous investigation.
The attorney general's office already has filed 19 misdemeanor charges against Tiller in Sedgwick County, alleging that the doctor failed to obtain a second opinion for some late-term procedures from an independent physician, as required by law. Many abortion opponents believe Six should be pursuing more serious charges, which is why they forced the grand jury to convene.
Kansas is one of six states that allows residents to petition to form grand juries, and the court ruled Tuesday that the practice was constitutional.
Tiller attorney Lee Thompson said that he still believes the grand jury law is unconstitutional, but he was pleased that the court set guidelines.
"It's a very good decision recognizing that the grand jury does not have unfettered powers and the grand jury subpoenas require a degree of judicial oversight," Thompson said.
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Associated Press Writer Carl Manning also contributed to this report.
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