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- <text id=91TT1829>
- <title>
- Aug. 19, 1991: Abortion:The Feds vs. a Federal Judge
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- Aug. 19, 1991 Hostages:Why Now? Who's Next?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 22
- ABORTION
- The Feds vs. a Federal Judge
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A U.S. court bars pro-lifers from obstructing Wichita clinics,
- but the Justice Department sides with the demonstrators
- </p>
- <p>John Elson--Reported by Julie Johnson/Washington and Bud Norman/
- Wichita
- </p>
- <p> "They should say farewell to their family and bring their
- toothbrush, and I mean it, because they are going to jail." The
- author of that hardball warning is--or was until recently--a churchgoing Roman Catholic. Like several other public figures
- of the faith, notably New York's Democratic Governor Mario
- Cuomo, federal District Judge Patrick F. Kelly, 62, believes
- that his personal views on abortion, which he refuses to
- disclose, should not affect his responsibility to enforce the
- law of the land. Meaning, on this issue, Roe v. Wade. The
- judge's determination to stop pro-life activists from closing
- three abortion clinics in Wichita last week led to threats on
- his life and a confrontation with the Justice Department. The
- explosive, passion-stirring legal battle may take the U.S.
- Supreme Court to resolve.
- </p>
- <p> And Wichita may never be quite the same. Tucked
- comfortably away in the middle of America's "flyover country,"
- this conservative, image-conscious city (pop. 304,000) prefers
- to resolve its internal disputes--which customarily involve
- school-board squabbles or debates over nude dancing in bars--away from the glare of media attention. Thus there was some
- local discomfort in mid-July, when Operation Rescue, an
- aggressive antiabortion group based in Binghamton, N.Y., set up
- blockades outside three local clinics; one of them is among the
- few that perform late abortions. TV cameras soon followed, since
- the protests turned out to be anything but passive. As they have
- done in other cities, the Operation Rescue vigilantes physically
- tried to prevent employees and patients from entering the
- clinics, harassing them all the while with slogans like
- "Abortion stops a beating heart."
- </p>
- <p> As tensions rose, two of the clinics petitioned Kelly to
- stop the blockades, basing their legal argument on sections of
- an 1871 law popularly known as the Ku Klux Klan Act. Although
- the act was initially designed to protect freed slaves from
- intimidation by Southern whites, some federal courts have ruled
- that it may also be used to shield women seeking abortions from
- pro-lifers' wrath. With this as precedent, Kelly on July 23
- enjoined Operation Rescue from blocking entrance to the clinics.
- </p>
- <p> Hundreds of pickets have ignored the ruling, and more than
- 2,000 arrests have been made. Many protesters have been hauled
- off more than once. Early last week Kelly ordered federal
- marshals to get tougher with the demonstrators and issued his
- jail-or-else warning. In support, abortion-rights advocates
- outside one of the clinics began to wave toothbrushes at
- Operation Rescue volunteers. Meanwhile, the judge accepted
- protection from federal marshals: anonymous threats had been
- phoned and mailed to his office and home. "This has been the
- most awkward and stressful time of my life," Kelly said. "It's
- scary."
- </p>
- <p> Adding to his burden was an unexpected intervention by the
- Department of Justice. While Operation Rescue lawyers asked the
- 10th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals to vacate Kelly's
- antiharassment injunction, the U.S. Attorney for Kansas, Lee
- Thompson, filed an amicus curiae brief contending that federal
- courts had no jurisdiction over the case. Kelly, in an almost
- unprecedented TV interview on ABC's Nightline about the
- proceedings, angrily charged the Justice Department with giving
- its "imprimatur" to "a license for mayhem."
- </p>
- <p> Administration officials denied siding with the pro-lifers
- on abortion's legality. Instead, they said, they were merely
- arguing some finer points of law. Because Operation Rescue
- targets all those involved in the abortion process, male as well
- as female, the KKK Act's protection of a class of persons
- suffering discrimination is not involved. In addition, says
- Justice, the clinics' proper avenue of redress was in state
- courts, not federal ones. "Nothing drove this other than
- consistency," said a former White House official, noting that
- the Justice Department had filed a similar brief in another
- case, now before the Supreme Court, involving Operation Rescue's
- tactics at abortion clinics in northern Virginia.
- </p>
- <p> Although that case will have no direct impact on Roe v.
- Wade, there are four disputes pending in the lower courts that
- pro-lifers hope the Supreme Court will eventually use to either
- overturn or further limit the landmark 1973 ruling. One of them
- is Louisiana's tough new antiabortion law, which was struck down
- by a federal district judge last week.
- </p>
- <p> Pro-choice advocates agreed with Judge Kelly's outraged
- view that Washington's meddling in the Wichita case was, as he
- put it, "political." Having already made its point in the
- Operation Rescue case before the Supreme Court, the
- Administration had no new legal arguments to make other than,
- apparently, to underline its already well-known distaste for
- Roe. Vacationing in Kennebunkport, Me., President Bush was asked
- whether the Justice Department's actions condoned the pro-life
- pickets' defiance of court orders. Not so, he answered:
- "Everyone has the right to protest, but it ought to be done
- within the law." Fair enough. But there is not much doubt about
- which law the Administration would like to see changed.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
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