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- SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
- --------
- No. 90-985
- --------
- JAYNE BRAY, et al., PETITIONERS v. ALEXANDRIA
- WOMEN'S HEALTH CLINIC et al.
- on writ of certiorari to the united states court of
- appeals for the fourth circuit
- [January 13, 1993]
-
- Justice Stevens, with whom Justice Blackmun joins,
- dissenting.
- After the Civil War, Congress enacted legislation impos-
- ing on the Federal Judiciary the responsibility to remedy
- both abuses of power by persons acting under color of state
- law and lawless conduct that state courts are neither fully
- competent, nor always certain, to prevent. The Ku Klux
- Act of 1871, 17 Stat. 13, was a response to the massive,
- organized lawlessness that infected our Southern States
- during the post-Civil War era. When a question concerning
- this statute's coverage arises, it is appropriate to consider
- whether the controversy has a purely local character or the
- kind of federal dimension that gave rise to the legislation.
- Based on detailed, undisputed findings of fact, the
- District Court concluded that the portion of 2 of the Ku
- Klux Act now codified at 42 U. S. C. 1985(3) provides a
- federal remedy for petitioners' violent concerted activities
- on the public streets and private property of law-abiding
- citizens. National Organization for Women v. Operation
- Rescue, 726 F. Supp. 1483 (ED Va. 1989). The Court of
- Appeals affirmed. National Organization for Women v.
- Operation Rescue, 914 F. 2d 582 (CA4 1990). The holdings
- of the courts below are supported by the text and the
- legislative history of the statute and are fully consistent
- with this Court's precedents. Admittedly, important
- questions concerning the meaning of 1985(3) have been left
- open in our prior cases, including whether the statute
- covers gender-based discrimination and whether it provides
- a remedy for the kind of interference with a woman's right
- to travel to another State to obtain an abortion revealed by
- this record. Like the overwhelming majority of federal
- judges who have spoken to the issue, I am persuaded that
- traditional principles of statutory construction readily
- provide affirmative answers to these questions.
- It is unfortunate that the Court has analyzed this case as
- though it presented an abstract question of logical deduc-
- tion rather than a question concerning the exercise and
- allocation of power in our federal system of government.
- The Court ignores the obvious (and entirely constitutional)
- congressional intent behind 1985(3) to protect this Nation's
- citizens from what amounts to the theft of their constitu-
- tional rights by organized and violent mobs across the
- country.
- The importance of the issue warrants a full statement of
- the facts found by the District Court before reaching the
- decisive questions in this case.
- I
- Petitioners are dedicated to a cause that they profoundly
- believe is far more important than mere obedience to the
- laws of the Commonwealth of Virginia or the police power
- of its cities. To achieve their goals, the individual petition-
- ers ``have agreed and combined with one another and with
- defendant Operation Rescue to organize, coordinate and
- participate in `rescue' demonstrations at abortion clinics in
- various parts of the country, including the Washington
- Metropolitan area. The purpose of these `rescue' demon-
- strations is to disrupt operations at the target clinic and
- indeed ultimately to cause the clinic to cease operations
- entirely.''
- The scope of petitioners' conspiracy is nationwide; it far
- exceeds the bounds or jurisdiction of any one State. They
- have blockaded clinics across the country, and their
- activities have been enjoined in New York, Pennsylvania,
- Washington, Connecticut, California, Kansas, and Nevada,
- as well as the District of Columbia metropolitan area. They
- have carried out their ``rescue'' operations in the District of
- Columbia and Maryland in defiance of federal injunctions.
- Pursuant to their overall conspiracy, petitioners have
- repeatedly engaged in ``rescue'' operations that violate local
- law and harm innocent women. Petitioners trespass on
- clinic property and physically block access to the clinic,
- preventing patients, as well as physicians and medical staff,
- from entering the clinic to render or receive medical or
- counseling services. Uncontradicted trial testimony
- demonstrates that petitioners' conduct created a ``substan-
- tial risk that existing or prospective patients may suffer
- physical or mental harm.'' Petitioners make no claim that
- their conduct is a legitimate form of protected expression.
- Petitioners' intent to engage in repeated violations of law
- is not contested. They trespass on private property,
- interfere with the ability of patients to obtain medical and
- counseling services, and incite others to engage in similar
- unlawful activity. They also engage in malicious conduct,
- such as defacing clinic signs, damaging clinic property, and
- strewing nails in clinic parking lots and on nearby public
- streets. This unlawful conduct is ``vital to [petitioners']
- avowed purposes and goals.'' They show no signs of
- abandoning their chosen method for advancing their goals.
- Rescue operations effectively hinder and prevent the
- constituted authorities of the targeted community from
- providing local citizens with adequate protection. The
- lack of advance warning of petitioners' activities, combined
- with limited police department resources, makes it difficult
- for the police to prevent petitioners' ambush by ``rescue''
- from closing a clinic for many hours at a time. The trial
- record is replete with examples of petitioners overwhelming
- local law enforcement officials by sheer force of numbers.
- In one ``rescue'' in Falls Church, Virginia, the demonstrators
- vastly outnumbered the police department's complement of
- 30 deputized officers. The police arrested 240 rescuers, but
- were unable to prevent the blockade from closing the clinic
- for more than six hours. Because of the large-scale, highly
- organized nature of petitioners' activities, the local au-
- thorities are unable to protect the victims of petitioners'
- conspiracy.
- Petitioners' conspiracy had both the purpose and effect of
- interfering with interstate travel. The number of patients
- who cross state lines to obtain an abortion obviously
- depends, to some extent, on the location of the clinic and
- the quality of its services. In the Washington Metropolitan
- area, where interstate travel is routine, 20 to 30 percent of
- the patients at some clinics were from out of State, while at
- least one clinic obtained over half its patients from other
- States. The District Court's conclusions in this regard bear
- repetition:
- ``[Petitioners] engaged in this conspiracy for the pur-
- pose, either directly or indirectly, of depriving women
- seeking abortions and related medical and counselling
- services, of the right to travel. The right to travel
- includes the right to unobstructed interstate travel to
- obtain an abortion and other medical services. . . .
- Testimony at trial establishes that clinics in Northern
- Virginia provide medical services to plaintiffs' members
- and patients who travel from out of state. Defendants'
- activities interfere with these persons' right to unim-
- peded interstate travel by blocking their access to
- abortion clinics. And, the Court is not persuaded that
- clinic closings affect only intra-state travel, from the
- street to the doors of the clinics. Were the Court to
- hold otherwise, interference with the right to travel
- could occur only at state borders. This conspiracy,
- therefore, effectively deprives organizational plaintiffs'
- non-Virginia members of their right to interstate
- travel.''
- To summarize briefly, the evidence establishes that
- petitioners engaged in a nationwide conspiracy; to achieve
- their goal they repeatedly occupied public streets and
- trespassed on the premises of private citizens in order to
- prevent or hinder the constituted authorities from protect-
- ing access to abortion clinics by women, a substantial
- number of whom traveled in interstate commerce to reach
- the destinations blockaded by petitioners. The case
- involves no ordinary trespass, nor anything remotely
- resembling the peaceful picketing of a local retailer. It
- presents a striking contemporary example of the kind of
- zealous, politically motivated, lawless conduct that led to
- the enactment of the Ku Klux Act in 1871 and gave it its
- name.
- II
- The text of the statute makes plain the reasons Congress
- considered a federal remedy for such conspiracies both
- necessary and appropriate. In relevant part the statute
- contains two independent clauses which I separately
- identify in the following quotation:
- ``If two or more persons in any State or Territory
- conspire or go in disguise on the highway or on the
- premises of another, [first] for the purpose of depriving,
- either directly or indirectly, any person or class of
- persons of the equal protection of the laws, or of equal
- privileges and immunities under the laws; or [second]
- for the purpose of preventing or hindering the consti-
- tuted authorities of any State or Territory from giving
- or securing to all persons within such State or Terri-
- tory the equal protection of the laws; . . . in any case of
- conspiracy set forth in this section, if one or more
- persons engaged therein do, or cause to be done, any
- act in furtherance of the object of such conspiracy,
- whereby another is injured in his person or property, or
- deprived of having and exercising any right or priv-
- ilege of a citizen of the United States, the party so in-
- jured or deprived may have an action for the recovery
- of damages occasioned by such injury or deprivation,
- against any one or more of the conspirators.'' 42
- U. S. C. 1985(3).
- The plain language of the statute is surely broad enough
- to cover petitioners' conspiracy. Their concerted activities
- took place on both the public ``highway'' and the private
- ``premises of another.'' The women targeted by their
- blockade fit comfortably within the statutory category
- described as ``any person or class of persons.'' Petitioners'
- interference with police protection of women seeking access
- to abortion clinics ``directly or indirectly'' deprived them of
- equal protection of the laws and of their privilege of
- engaging in lawful travel. Moreover, a literal reading of the
- second clause of the statute describes petitioners' proven
- ``purpose of preventing or hindering the constituted authori-
- ties of any State or Territory'' from securing ``to all persons
- within such State or Territory the equal protection of the
- laws.''
- No one has suggested that there would be any constitu-
- tional objection to the application of this statute to
- petitioners' nationwide conspiracy; it is obvious that any
- such constitutional claim would be frivolous. Accordingly,
- if, as it sometimes does, the Court limited its analysis to
- the statutory text, it would certainly affirm the judgment of
- the Court of Appeals. For both the first clause and the
- second clause of 1985(3) plainly describe petitioners'
- conspiracy.
- III
- The Court bypasses the statute's history, intent, and
- plain language in its misplaced reliance on prior precedent.
- Of course, the Court has never before had occasion to
- construe the second clause of 1985(3). The first clause,
- however, has been narrowly construed in Collins v. Hardy-
- man, 341 U. S. 651 (1951), Griffin v. Breckenridge, 403
- U. S. 88 (1971), and Carpenters v. Scott, 463 U. S. 825
- (1983). In the first of these decisions, the Court held that
- 1985(3) did not apply to wholly private conspiracies. In
- Griffin the Court rejected that view but limited the applica-
- tion of the statute's first clause to conspiracies motivated by
- discriminatory intent to deprive plaintiffs of rights constitu-
- tionally protected against private (and not just governmen-
- tal) deprivation. Finally, Carpenters re-emphasized that the
- first clause of 1985(3) offers no relief from the violation of
- rights protected against only state interference. 463 U. S.,
- at 830-834. To date, the Court has recognized as rights
- protected against private encroachment (and, hence, by
- 1985(3)) only the constitutional right of interstate travel
- and rights granted by the Thirteenth Amendment.
- For present purposes, it is important to note that in each
- of these cases the Court narrowly construed 1985(3) to
- avoid what it perceived as serious constitutional problems
- with the statute itself. Because those problems are not at
- issue here, it is even more important to note a larger point
- about our precedent. In the course of applying Civil War
- era legislation to civil rights issues unforeseeable in 1871,
- the Court has adopted a flexible approach, interpreting the
- statute to reach current concerns without exceeding the
- bounds of its intended purposes or the constitutional powers
- of Congress. We need not exceed those bounds to apply
- the statute to these facts.
- The facts and decision in Griffin are especially instructive
- here. In overruling an important part of Collins, the Court
- found that the conduct the plaintiffs alleged-a Mississippi
- highway attack on a white man suspected of being a civil
- rights worker and the two black men who were passengers
- in his car-was emblematic of the antiabolitionist violence
- that 1985(3) was intended to prevent. A review of the
- legislative history demonstrated, on the one hand, that
- Congress intended the coverage of 1985(3) to reach purely
- private conspiracies, but on the other hand, that it wanted
- to avoid the ``constitutional shoals'' that would lie in the
- path of a general federal tort law punishing an ordinary
- assault and battery committed by two or more persons. The
- racial motivation for the battery committed by the defen-
- dants in the case before the Court placed their conduct
- ``close to the core of the coverage intended by Congress.''
- 403 U. S., at 103. It therefore satisfied the limiting con-
- struction that the Court placed on the reference to a
- deprivation of ``equal'' privileges and immunities in the first
- clause of the Act. The Court explained that construction:
- ``The constitutional shoals that would lie in the path of
- interpreting 1985(3) as a general federal tort law can
- be avoided by giving full effect to the congressional
- purpose-by requiring, as an element of the cause of
- action, the kind of invidiously discriminatory motiva-
- tion stressed by the sponsors of the limiting amend-
- ment. See the remarks of Representatives Willard and
- Shellabarger, quoted supra, at 100 [Cong. Globe, 42d
- Cong., 1st Sess., App. 69 (1871)]. The language requir-
- ing intent to deprive of equal protection, or equal
- privileges and immunities, means that there must be
- some racial, or perhaps otherwise class-based, invidi-
- ously discriminatory animus behind the conspirators'
- action.'' Id., at 101-102.
- A footnote carefully left open the question ``whether a
- conspiracy motivated by invidiously discriminatory intent
- other than racial bias would be actionable under the portion
- of 1985(3) before us.'' Id., at 102, n. 9 (emphasis added).
- Neither of our two more recent opinions construing 1985
- (3) has answered the question left open in Griffin or has
- involved the second clause of the statute.
- After holding that the statute did apply to such facts, and
- that requiring a discriminatory intent would prevent its
- over-application, the Griffin Court held that 1985(3) would
- be within the constitutional power of Congress if its
- coverage were limited to constitutional rights secured
- against private action. The facts in that case identified two
- such grounds.
- One ground was 2 of the Thirteenth Amendment. The
- other was the right to travel. The Court explained how the
- petitioners could show a violation of the latter. As with the
- class-based animus requirement, the Court was less
- concerned with the specifics of that showing than with the
- constitutionality of 1985(3); it emphasized that whatever
- evidence they presented had to ``make it clear that the peti-
- tioners had suffered from conduct that Congress may reach
- under its power to protect the right of interstate travel.''
- Id., at 106.
- The concerns that persuaded the Court to adopt a narrow
- reading of the text of 1985(3) in Griffin are not presented
- in this case. Giving effect to the plain language of 1985(3)
- to provide a remedy against the violent interference with
- women exercising their privilege-indeed, their right-to
- engage in interstate travel to obtain an abortion presents
- no danger of turning the statute into a general tort law.
- Nor does anyone suggest that such relief calls into question
- the constitutional powers of Congress. When the Griffin
- Court rejected its earlier holding in Collins, it provided both
- an ``authoritative construction'' of 1985(3), see ante, at 1-2
- (Souter, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part), and
- a sufficient reason for rejecting the doctrine of stare decisis
- whenever it would result in an unnecessarily narrow
- construction of the statute's plain language. The Court
- wrote:
- ``Whether or not Collins v. Hardyman was correctly
- decided on its own facts is a question with which we
- need not here be concerned. But it is clear, in the light
- of the evolution of decisional law in the years that have
- passed since that case was decided, that many of the
- constitutional problems there perceived simply do not
- exist. Little reason remains, therefore, not to accord to
- the words of the statute their apparent meaning.'' 403
- U. S., at 95-96.
- Once concerns about the constitutionality of 1985(3) are
- properly put aside, we can focus more appropriately on
- giving the statute its intended effect. On the facts disclosed
- by this record, I am convinced that both the text of the
- statute and its underlying purpose support the conclusion
- that petitioners' conspiracy was motivated by a discrimina-
- tory animus and violated respondents' protected right to
- engage in interstate travel.
- IV
- The question left open in Griffin-whether the coverage
- of 1985(3) is limited to cases involving racial bias-is
- easily answered. The text of the statute provides no basis
- for excluding from its coverage any cognizable class of
- persons who are entitled to the equal protection of the laws.
- This Court has repeatedly and consistently held that
- gender-based classifications are subject to challenge on
- constitutional grounds, see, e. g., Reed v. Reed, 404 U. S. 71
- (1971); Mississippi University for Women v. Hogan, 458
- U. S. 718 (1982). A parallel construction of post-Civil War
- legislation that, in the words of Justice Holmes, ``dealt with
- Federal rights and with all Federal rights, and protected
- them in the lump,'' United States v. Mosley, 238 U. S. 383,
- 387 (1915), is obviously appropriate.
- The legislative history of the Act confirms the conclusion
- that even though it was primarily motivated by the lawless
- conduct directed at the recently emancipated citizens, its
- protection extended to ``all the thirty-eight millions of the
- citizens of this nation.'' Cong. Globe, 42d Cong., 1st Sess.,
- 484 (1871). Given then prevailing attitudes about the
- respective roles of males and females in society, it is
- possible that the enacting legislators did not anticipate
- protection of women against class-based discrimination.
- That, however, is not a sufficient reason for refusing to
- construe the statutory text in accord with its plain mean-
- ing, particularly when that construction fulfills the central
- purpose of the legislation. See Union Bank v. Wolas, 502
- U. S. ___, ___ (1991) (slip op., at 4).
- The gloss that Justice Stewart placed on the statute in
- Griffin, then, did not exclude gender-based discrimination
- from its coverage. But it does require us to resolve the
- question whether a conspiracy animated by the desire to
- deprive women of their right to obtain an abortion is ``class-
- based.''
- V
- The terms ``animus'' and ``invidious'' are susceptible to
- different interpretations. The Court today announces that
- it could find class-based animus in petitioners' mob violence
- ``only if one of two suggested propositions is true: (1) that
- opposition to abortion can reasonably be presumed to reflect
- a sex-based intent, or (2) that intent is irrelevant, and a
- class-based animus can be determined solely by effect.''
- Ante, at 5.
- The first proposition appears to describe a malevolent
- form of hatred or ill-will. When such an animus defends
- itself as opposition to conduct that a given class engages in
- exclusively or predominantly, we can readily unmask it as
- the intent to discriminate against the class itself. See ante,
- at 4-5. Griffin itself, for instance, involved behavior
- animated by the desire to keep African-American citizens
- from exercising their constitutional rights. The defendants
- were no less guilty of a class-based animus because they
- also opposed the cause of desegregation or rights of African-
- American suffrage, and the Court did not require the
- plaintiffs in Griffin to prove that their beatings were
- motivated by hatred for African-Americans. Similarly, a
- decision disfavoring female lawyers, female owners of
- liquor establishments, or pregnant women may appro-
- priately be characterized as ``invidiously discriminatory''
- even if the decisionmakers have goals other than-or in
- addition to-discrimination against individual women.
- The second proposition deserves more than the Court's
- disdain. It plausibly describes an assumption that intent
- lies behind the discriminatory effects from which Congress
- intended 1985(3) to protect American citizens. Congress
- may obviously offer statutory protections against behavior
- that the Constitution does not forbid, including forms of
- discrimination that undermine 1985(3)'s guarantee of
- equal treatment under the law. Regardless of whether the
- examples of paternalistic discrimination given above involve
- a constitutional violation, as a matter of statutory construc-
- tion it is entirely appropriate to conclude that each would
- satisfy the class-based animus requirement because none of
- them poses any danger of converting 1985(3) into a general
- tort law or creating concerns about the constitutionality of
- the statute.
- Both forms of class-based animus that the Court proposes
- are present in this case.
-
- Sex-Based Discrimination
-
- It should be noted that a finding of class-based animus in
- this case does not require finding that to disfavor abortion
- is ``ipso facto'' to discriminate invidiously against women.
- See ante, at 6. Respondents do not take that position, and
- they do not rely on abstract propositions about "opposition
- to abortion" per se, see ante, at 4-5. Instead, they call our
- attention to a factual record showing a particular lawless
- conspiracy employing force to prevent women from exercis-
- ing their constitutional rights. Such a conspiracy, in the
- terms of the Court's first proposition, may ``reasonably be
- presumed to reflect a sex-based intent.'' See ante, at 5.
- To satisfy the class-based animus requirement of
- 1985(3), the conspirators' conduct need not be motivated
- by hostility toward individual women. As women are
- unquestionably a protected class, that requirement-as well
- as the central purpose of the statute-is satisfied if the
- conspiracy is aimed at conduct that only members of the
- protected class have the capacity to perform. It is not
- necessary that the intended effect upon women be the sole
- purpose of the conspiracy. It is enough that the conspiracy
- be motivated ``at least in part'' by its adverse effects upon
- women. Cf. Personnel Administrator of Mass. v. Feeney,
- 442 U. S. 256, 279 (1979); Arlington Heights v. Metropolitan
- Housing Development Corp., 429 U. S. 252, 265-266 (1977).
- The immediate and intended effect of this conspiracy was
- to prevent women from obtaining abortions. Even assum-
- ing that the ultimate and indirect consequence of petition-
- ers' blockade was the legitimate and nondiscriminatory
- goal of saving potential life, it is undeniable that the con-
- spirators' immediate purpose was to affect the conduct of
- women. Moreover, petitioners target women because of
- their sex, specifically, because of their capacity to become
- pregnant and to have an abortion.
- It is also obvious that petitioners' conduct was motivated
- ``at least in part'' by the invidious belief that individual
- women are not capable of deciding whether to terminate a
- pregnancy, or that they should not be allowed to act on
- such a decision. Petitioners' blanket refusal to allow any
- women access to an abortion clinic overrides the individual
- class member's choice, no matter whether she is the victim
- of rape or incest, whether the abortion may be necessary to
- save her life, or even whether she is merely seeking
- advice or information about her options. Petitioners'
- conduct is designed to deny every woman the opportunity to
- exercise a constitutional right that only women possess.
- Petitioners' conspiracy, which combines massive defiance of
- the law with violent obstruction of the constitutional rights
- of their fellow citizens, represents a paradigm of the kind
- of conduct that the statute was intended to cover.
- The Court recognizes that the requisite animus may
- ``readily be presumed'' on the basis of the relationship
- between the targeted activity and membership in the
- targeted class. Ante, at 5. But the Court insists that
- opposition to an act engaged in exclusively by members of
- a protected class does not involve class-based animus unless
- the act itself is an ``irrational object of disfavor.'' Ibid. The
- Court's view requires a subjective judicial interpretation
- inappropriate in the civil rights context, where what seems
- rational to an oppressor seems equally irrational to a
- victim. Opposition to desegregation, and opposition to the
- voting rights of both African-Americans and women, were
- certainly at one time considered ``rational'' propositions.
- But such propositions were never free of the class-based
- discrimination from which 1985(3) protects the members
- of both classes.
- The activity of traveling to a clinic to obtain an abor-
- tion is, of course, exclusively performed by women. Opposi-
- tion to that activity may not be ``irrational,'' but violent
- interference with it is unquestionably ``aimed at'' women.
- The Court offers no justification for its newly crafted
- suggestion that deliberately imposing a burden on an
- activity exclusively performed by women is not class-based
- discrimination unless opposition to the activity is also
- irrational. The Court is apparently willing to presume
- discrimination only when opposition to the targeted activity
- is-in its eyes-wholly pretextual: that is, when it thinks
- that no rational person would oppose the activity, except as
- a means of achieving a separate and distinct goal. The
- Court's analysis makes sense only if every member of a
- protected class exercises all of her constitutional rights, or
- if no rational excuse remains for otherwise invidious
- discrimination. Not every member of every protected class
- chooses to exercise all of his or her constitutional rights; not
- all of them want to. That many women do not obtain
- abortions-that many women oppose abortion-does not
- mean that those who violently prevent the exercise of that
- right by women who do exercise it are somehow cleansed of
- their discriminatory intent. In enacting a law such as
- 1985(3) for federal courts to enforce, Congress asked us to
- see through the excuses-the ``rational'' motives-that will
- always disguise discrimination. Congress asked us to
- foresee, and speed, the day when such discrimination, no
- matter how well disguised, would be unmasked.
-
- Statutory Relief from Discriminatory Effects
-
- As for the second definition of class-based animus,
- disdainfully proposed by the Court, ante, at 5, there is no
- reason to insist that a statutory claim under 1985(3) must
- satisfy the restrictions we impose on constitutional claims
- under the Fourteenth Amendment. A congressional statute
- may offer relief from discriminatory effects even if the Four-
- teenth Amendment prevents only discriminatory intent.
- The Court attempts to refute the finding of class-based
- animus by relying on our cases holding that the governmen-
- tal denial of either disability benefits for pregnant women
- or abortion funding does not violate the Constitution. That
- reliance is misplaced for several reasons. Cases involving
- constitutional challenges to governmental plans denying
- financial benefits to pregnant women, and cases involving
- Equal Protection challenges to facially neutral statutes with
- discriminatory effects, involve different concerns and reach
- justifiably different results than a case involving citizens'
- statutory protection against burdens imposed on their
- constitutional rights.
- In Geduldig v. Aiello, 417 U. S. 484 (1974), we faced the
- question whether a State's disability insurance system
- violated the Fourteenth Amendment by excluding benefits
- for normal pregnancy. A majority of the Court concluded
- that the system did not constitute discrimination on the
- basis of sex prohibited by the Equal Protection Clause.
- Geduldig, of course, did not purport to establish that, as a
- matter of logic, a classification based on pregnancy is
- gender-neutral. As an abstract statement, that proposition
- is simply false; a classification based on pregnancy is a sex-
- based classification, just as, to use the Court's example, a
- classification based on the wearing of yarmulkes is a
- religion-based classification. Nor should Geduldig be
- understood as holding that, as a matter of law, pregnancy-
- based classifications never violate the Equal Protection
- Clause. In fact, as the language of the opinion makes clear,
- what Geduldig held was that not every legislative classifica-
- tion based on pregnancy was equivalent, for equal protec-
- tion purposes, to the explicitly gender-based distinctions
- struck down in Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U. S. 677
- (1973), and Reed v. Reed, 404 U. S. 71 (1971). That
- Geduldig must be understood in these narrower terms is
- apparent from the sentence which the Court quotes in part:
- ``While it is true that only women can become pregnant, it
- does not follow that every legislative classification concern-
- ing pregnancy is a sex-based classification like those
-
- considered in Reed, supra, and Frontiero, supra.'' Geduldig,
- 417 U. S., at 496, n. 20 (emphasis added).
- Central to the holding in Geduldig was the Court's belief
- that the disability insurance system before it was a plan
- that conferred benefits evenly on men and women. Later
- cases confirmed that the holding in Geduldig depended on
- an analysis of the insurance plan as a benefit program with
- an overall nondiscriminatory effect. Nashville Gas Co.
- v. Satty, 434 U. S. 136 (1977), applied a statute without an
- intent requirement to an employer's policy denying accumu-
- lated seniority to employees returning from pregnancy
- leave. Notwithstanding Geduldig, the Court found that the
- policy burdened only women, and therefore constituted
- discrimination on the basis of sex. The Court stated that
- ``petitioner has not merely refused to extend to women a
- benefit that men cannot and do not receive, but has
- imposed on women a substantial burden that men need not
- suffer. The distinction between benefits and burdens is
- more than one of semantics.'' 434 U. S., at 142. The
- distinction between those who oppose abortion, and those
- who physically threaten women and obstruct their access to
- abortion clinics, is also more than semantic. Petitioners in
- this case form a mob that seeks to impose a burden on
- women by forcibly preventing the exercise of a right that
- only women possess. The discriminatory effect of
- petitioners' conduct is beyond doubt.
- Geduldig is inapplicable for another reason. The issue of
- class-based animus in this case arises in a statutory, not a
- constitutional, context. There are powerful reasons for
- giving 1985(3) a reading that is broader than the constitu-
- tional holdings on which the Court relies. In our consti-
- tutional cases, we apply the intent standard to determine
- whether a constitutional violation has occurred. In cases
- under 1985(3), we apply the class-based animus test not to
- determine whether a constitutional violation has
- occurred-the violation is independently established-but
- to determine whether that violation can be remedied.
- Given the differing roles the intent standard and the class-
- based animus requirement play in our jurisprudence, there
- is no justification for applying the same stringent standards
- in the context of 1985(3) as in our constitutional cases.
- As a matter of statutory interpretation, I have always
- believed that rules that place special burdens on pregnant
- women discriminate on the basis of sex, for the capacity to
- become pregnant is the inherited and immutable character-
- istic that ``primarily differentiates the female from the
- male.'' General Electric Co. v. Gilbert, 429 U. S. 125, 162
- (1976) (Stevens, J., dissenting). I continue to believe that
- that view should inform our construction of civil rights
- legislation.
- That view was also the one affirmed by Congress in the
- Pregnancy Discrimination Act, 92 Stat. 2076, which
- amended Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42
- U. S. C. 2000e et seq. The Act categorically expressed
- Congress' view that ``discrimination based on a woman's
- pregnancy is, on its face, discrimination because of her sex.''
- Newport News Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co. v. EEOC, 462
- U. S. 669, 684 (1983). Geduldig had held that a pregnancy-
- based classification did not constitute forbidden sex discrim-
- ination if the classification related to benefits and did not
- have a discriminatory effect. In the Pregnancy Discrimina-
- tion Act, Congress rejected Geduldig's focus on benefits and
- overall impact, instead insisting that discrimination on the
- basis of pregnancy necessarily constitutes prohibited sex
- discrimination. See H. R. Rep. No. 95-948, pp. 2-3 (1978).
- The statements of the bill's proponents demonstrate their
- disapproval of the Court's reluctance in Gilbert and Ge-
- duldig to recognize that discrimination on the basis of
- pregnancy is always gender-based discrimination. See, e.g.,
- 123 Cong. Rec. 10581 (1977) (remarks of Rep. Hawkins)
- (``[I]t seems only commonsense, that since only women can
- become pregnant, discrimination against pregnant people is
- necessarily discrimination against women . . .'').
- Two Terms ago, in Automobile Workers v. Johnson
- Controls, 499 U. S. ___ (1991), the Court again faced the
- question whether a classification based on child-bearing
- capacity violated a statutory ban on discrimination. That
- case, arising under Title VII, concerned Johnson Controls'
- ``fetal-protection policy,'' which excluded all women ``capable
- of bearing children'' from jobs requiring exposure to lead.
- Johnson Controls sought to justify the policy on the basis
- that maternal exposure to lead created health risks for a
- fetus. The first question the Court addressed was whether
- the policy was facially discriminatory or, alternatively,
- facially neutral with merely a discriminatory effect. The
- Court concluded that the policy was facially discriminatory.
- The policy was not neutral, the Court held, ``because it does
- not apply to the reproductive capacity of the company's
- male employees in the same way as it applies to that of the
- females.'' Id., at ___ (slip op., at 10). Johnson Controls, I
- had thought, signaled the Court's recognition that classifica-
- tions based on ability to become pregnant are necessarily
- discriminatory.
- VI
- Respondents' right to engage in interstate travel is
- inseparable from the right they seek to exercise. That
- right, unduly burdened and frustrated by petitioners'
- conspiracy, is protected by the Federal Constitution, as we
- recently reaffirmed in Planned Parenthood of Southeastern
- Pennsylvania v. Casey, 505 U. S. ___ (1992). Almost two
- decades ago, the Court squarely held that the right to enter
- another State for the purpose of seeking abortion services
- available there is protected by the Privileges and Immuni-
- ties Clause, U. S. Const., Art. IV, 2. Doe v. Bolton, 410
- U. S. 179, 200 (1973). A woman's right to engage in
- interstate travel for this purpose is either entitled to special
- respect because she is exercising a constitutional right, or
- because restrictive rules in her home State may make
- travel to another State imperative. Federal courts are
- uniquely situated to protect that right for the same reason
- they are well suited to protect the privileges and immuni-
- ties of those who enter other States to ply their trade. See,
- e.g., Blake v. McClung, 172 U. S. 239, 248-256 (1898).
- The District Court's conclusion that petitioners intended
- to interfere with the right to engage in interstate travel is
- well-supported by the record. Interference with a woman's
- ability to visit another State to obtain an abortion is
- essential to petitioners' achievement of their ultimate
- goal-the complete elimination of abortion services through-
- out the United States. No lesser purpose can explain their
- multi-state ``rescue'' operations.
- Even in a single locality, the effect of petitioners' blockade
- on interstate travel is substantial. Between 20 and 30
- percent of the patients at a targeted clinic in Virginia were
- from out of State and over half of the patients at one of the
- Maryland clinics were interstate travelers. 726 F. Supp., at
- 1489. Making their destination inaccessible to women who
- have engaged in interstate travel for a single purpose is
- unquestionably a burden on that travel. That burden was
- not only a foreseeable and natural consequence of the
- blockades, but indeed was also one of the intended conse-
- quences of petitioners' conspiracy.
- Today the Court advances two separate reasons for
- rejecting the District Court's conclusion that petitioners
- deliberately deprived women seeking abortions of their
- right to interstate travel. First, relying on an excerpt from
- our opinion in United States v. Guest, 383 U. S. 745, 760
- (1966), the Court assumes that ```the predominant pur-
- pose''' or ``the very purpose'' of the conspiracy must be to
- impede interstate travel. Ante, at 9-10. Second, the Court
- assumes that even an intentional restriction on out-of-state
- travel is permissible if it imposes an equal burden on
- intrastate travel. The first reason reflects a mistaken
- understanding of Guest and Griffin, and the second is
- unsupported by precedent or reason.
- In the Guest case, the Court squarely held that the
- Federal Constitution protects the right to engage in
- interstate travel from private interference. Not a word in
- that opinion suggests that the constitutional protection is
- limited to impediments that discriminate against non-
- residents. Instead, the Court broadly referred to the federal
- commerce power that ``authorizes Congress to legislate for
- the protection of individuals from violations of civil rights
- that impinge on their free movement in interstate com-
- merce.'' 383 U. S., at 759. It then held that the right of
- interstate travel was one of the federal rights protected
- from private interference by the criminal statute that had
- been enacted as 6 of the Enforcement Act of 1870, 16 Stat.
- 141, later codified at 18 U. S. C. 241. That statute had
- previously been construed to contain a ``stringent scienter
- requirement'' to save it from condemnation as a criminal
- statute failing to provide adequate notice of the proscribed
- conduct. 383 U. S., at 785 (Brennan, J., concurring in part
- and dissenting in part); see also id., at 753-754. The Guest
- opinion then explained why this history would limit the
- coverage of 18 U. S. C. 241:
- ``This does not mean, of course, that every criminal
- conspiracy affecting an individual's right of free inter-
- state passage is within the sanction of 18 U. S. C. 241.
- A specific intent to interfere with the federal right
- must be proved, and at a trial the defendants are
- entitled to a jury instruction phrased in those terms.
- Screws v. United States, 325 U. S. 91, 106-107 [1945].
- Thus, for example, a conspiracy to rob an interstate
- traveler would not, of itself, violate 241. But if the
- predominant purpose of the conspiracy is to impede or
- prevent the exercise of the right of interstate travel, or
- to oppress a person because of his exercise of that
- right, then, whether or not motivated by racial discrim-
- ination, the conspiracy becomes a proper object of the
- federal law under which the indictment in this case
- was brought.'' 383 U. S., at 760.
- Today the Court assumes that the same sort of scienter
- requirement should apply to 1985(3) because 18 U. S. C.
- 241 is its ``criminal counterpart.'' Ante, at 9.
- The Court is mistaken. The criminal sanctions that were
- originally included in 2 of the Ku Klux Act were held
- unconstitutional over a century ago. United States v.
- Harris, 106 U. S. 629 (1883); Baldwin v. Franks, 120 U. S.
- 678 (1887). The statute now codified at 18 U. S. C. 241
- was enacted in 1870, a year earlier than the Ku Klux Act.
- The texts of the two statutes are materially different. Even
- if that were not so, it would be inappropriate to assume
- that a strict scienter requirement in a criminal statute
- should be glibly incorporated in a civil statute. But what
- is most significant is the dramatic difference between the
- language of 18 U. S. C. 241, which includes an unequivocal
- ``intent'' requirement and the language of 1985(3), which
- broadly describes a purpose to deprive another of a protect-
- ed privilege ``either directly or indirectly.'' An indirect
- interference with the right to travel may violate 1985(3)
- even if it would not violate 241.
-
- The Court interpreted the right to interstate travel more
- generously in Griffin. It wrote:
- ``Under these allegations it is open to the petitioners to
- prove at trial that they had been engaging in interstate
- travel or intended to do so, that their federal right to
- travel interstate was one of the rights meant to be
- discriminatorily impaired by the conspiracy, that the
- conspirators intended to drive out-of-state civil rights
- workers from the State, or that they meant to deter the
- petitioners from associating with such persons. This
- and other evidence could make it clear that the peti-
- tioners had suffered from conduct that Congress may
- reach under its power to protect the right of interstate
- travel.'' Griffin, 403 U. S., at 106.
- In that paragraph the Court mentions that the plaintiffs'
- federal right to travel may have been ``discriminatorily''
- impaired. The use of that word was appropriate because of
- the Court's earlier discussion of the importance of class-
- based discriminatory animus in interpreting the statute,
- but was entirely unnecessary in order to uphold the
- constitutionality of the statute as applied to conduct that
- ``Congress may reach under its power to protect the right of
- interstate travel.'' Ibid. Moreover, ``in the light of the
- evolution of decisional law,'' id., at 95-96, in recent years,
- today no one could possibly question the power of Congress
- to prohibit private blockades of streets and highways used
- by interstate travelers, even if the conspirators indiscrimi-
- nately interdicted both local and out-of-state travelers.
- The implausibility of the Court's readings of Griffin and
- Guest is matched by its conclusion that a burden on
- interstate travel is permissible as long as an equal burden
- is imposed on local travelers. The Court has long recog-
- nized that a burden on interstate commerce may be invalid
- even if the same burden is imposed on local commerce. See
- Pike v. Bruce Church, Inc., 397 U. S. 137 (1970); Dean Milk
- Co. v. Madison, 340 U. S. 349, 354, n. 4 (1951); Southern
- Pacific Co. v. Arizona ex rel. Sullivan, 325 U. S. 761 (1945).
- The fact that an impermissible burden is most readily
- identified when it discriminates against nonresidents does
- not justify immunizing conduct that even-handedly disrupts
- both local and interstate travel. The defendants in Griffin,
- for example, could not have refuted the claim that they
- interfered with the right to travel by demonstrating that
- they indiscriminately attacked local civil rights activists as
- well as nonresidents.
- In this case petitioners have deliberately blockaded access
- to the destinations sought by a class of women including
- both local and interstate travelers. Even though petitioners
- may not have known which of the travelers had crossed the
- state line, petitioners unquestionably knew that many of
- them had. The conclusion of the District Court that
- petitioners ``engaged in this conspiracy for the purpose,
- either directly or indirectly, of depriving women seeking
- abortions and related medical counselling services, of the
- right to travel,'' 726 F. Supp., at 1493, is abundantly
- supported by the record.
- Discrimination is a necessary element of the class-based
- animus requirement, not of the abridgement of a woman's
- right to engage in interstate travel. Perhaps nowhere else
- in its opinion does the Court reject such obvious assump-
- tions of the authors of 1985(3). The Reconstruction
- Congress would have been startled, I think, to learn that
- 1985(3) protected freed slaves and their supporters from
- Klan violence not covered by the Thirteenth Amendment
- only if the Klan members spared local African-Americans
- and abolitionists their wrath. And it would have been
- shocked to learn that its law offered relief from a Klan
- lynching of an out-of-state abolitionist only if the plaintiff
- could show that the Klan specifically intended to prevent
- his travel between the States. Yet these are the impossible
- requirements the Court imposes on a 1985(3) plaintiff who
- has shown that her right to travel has been deliberately
- and significantly infringed. It is difficult to know whether
- the Court is waiting until only a few States have abortion
- clinics before it finds that petitioners' behavior violates the
- right to travel, or if it believes that petitioners could never
- violate that right as long as they oppose the abortion a
- woman seeks to obtain as well as the travel necessary to
- obtain it.
- VII
- Respondents have unquestionably established a claim
- under the second clause of 1985(3), the state hindrance
- provision. The record amply demonstrates petitioners'
- successful efforts to overpower local law enforcement
- officers. During the ``rescue'' operations, the duly consti-
- tuted authorities are rendered ineffective, and mob violence
- prevails. A conspiracy that seeks by force of numbers to
- prevent local officials from protecting the victims' constitu-
- tional rights presents exactly the kind of pernicious
- combination that the second clause of 1985(3) was de-
- signed to counteract. As we recognized in Griffin, the
- second clause of 1985(3) explicitly concerns such interfer-
- ence with state officials and for that reason does not
- duplicate the coverage of the first clause. Griffin, 403 U. S.,
- at 99.
- Petitioners' conspiracy hinders the lawful authorities
- from protecting women's constitutionally protected right to
- choose whether to end their pregnancies. Though this may
- be a right that is protected only against state infringement,
- it is clear that by preventing government officials from
- safeguarding the exercise of that right, petitioners' conspir-
- acy effects a deprivation redressable under 1985(3). See
- Carpenters v. Scott, 463 U. S. 825, 830 (1983); id., at 840,
- n. 2 (Blackmun, J., dissenting); see also Great American
- Federal Savings & Loan Assn. v. Novotny, 442 U. S., at 384
- (Stevens, J., concurring). A conspiracy that seeks to
- interfere with law enforcement officers' performance of their
- duties entails sufficient involvement with the State to
- implicate the federally protected right to choose an abortion
- and to give rise to a cause of action under 1985(3).
- We have not previously considered whether class-based
- animus is an element of a claim under the second clause of
- 1985(3). We have, however, confronted the question
- whether the class-based animus requirement developed in
- Griffin should extend to another part of the Ku Klux Act,
- the portion now codified at 1985(2). That provision, which
- generally proscribes conspiracies to interfere with federal
- proceedings, was enacted as part of the same paragraph of
- the Ku Klux Act that also contained what is now
- 1985(3). For that reason, in Kush v. Rutledge, 460 U. S.
- 719 (1983), the defendants contended that the plaintiffs had
- the burden of proving that the alleged conspiracy to
- intimidate witnesses had been motivated by the kind of
- class-based animus described in Griffin. The Court of
- Appeals rejected this contention. Its reasoning, which we
- briefly summarized in Kush, is highly relevant here:
- ``Noting the Federal Government's unquestioned constitu-
- tional authority to protect the processes of its own courts,
- and the absence of any need to limit the first part of
- 1985(2) to avoid creating a general federal tort law, the
- Court of Appeals declined to impose the limitation set forth
- in Griffin v. Breckenridge.'' 460 U. S., at 723.
- Kush suggests that Griffin's strictly construed class-based
- animus requirement, developed for the first clause of
- 1985(3), should not limit the very different second clause.
- We explained:
- ``Although Griffin itself arose under the first clause
- of 1985(3), petitioners argue that its reasoning should
- be applied to the remaining portions of 1985 as well.
- We cannot accept that argument for three reasons.
- First, the scope of the Griffin opinion is carefully
- confined to `the portion of 1985(3) now before us,'
- [Griffin, 403 U. S.,] at 99; see also id., at 102, n. 9.
- There is no suggestion in the opinion that its reasoning
- applies to any other portion of 1985. Second, the
- analysis in the Griffin opinion relied heavily on the fact
- that the sponsors of the 1871 bill added the `equal
- protection' language in response to objections that the
- `enormous sweep of the original language' vastly
- extended federal authority and displaced state control
- over private conduct. Id., at 99-100. That legislative
- background does not apply to the portions of the
- statute that prohibit interference with federal officers,
- federal courts, or federal elections. Third, and of
- greatest importance, the statutory language that
- provides the textual basis for the `class-based, invidi-
- ously discriminatory animus' requirement simply does
- not appear in the portion of the statute that applies to
- this case.'' 460 U. S., at 726.
- It is true, of course, that the reference to ``equal pro-
- tection'' appears in both the first and the second clauses of
- 1985(3), but the potentially unlimited scope of the former
- is avoided by the language in the latter that confines its
- reach to conspiracies directed at the ``constituted authorities
- of any State or Territory.'' The deliberate decision in
- Griffin that ``carefully confined'' its holding to ``the portion
- of 1985(3) now before us,'' coupled with the inapplicability
- of Griffin's rationale to the second clause, makes it entirely
- appropriate to give that clause a different and more natural
- construction. Limited to conspiracies that are sufficiently
- massive to supplant local law enforcement authorities, the
- second clause requires no further restriction to honor the
- congressional purpose of creating an effective civil rights
- remedy without federalizing all tort law. The justification
- for a narrow reading of Griffin's judicially crafted require-
- ment of class-based animus simply does not apply to the
- state hindrance clause. An action under that clause entails
- both a violation of the victims' constitutional rights and
- state involvement. This situation is so far removed from
- the question whether facially neutral legislation constitutes
- a violation of the Equal Protection Clause that the strict
- intent standards developed in that area can have no
- application.
- In the context of a conspiracy that hinders state officials
- and violates respondents' constitutional rights, class-based
- animus can be inferred if the conspirators' conduct burdens
- an activity engaged in predominantly by members of the
- class. Indeed, it would be faithful both to Griffin and to the
- text of the state hindrance clause to hold that the clause
- proscribes conspiracies to prevent local law enforcement
- authorities from protecting activities that are performed
- exclusively by members of a protected class, even if the
- conspirators' animus were directed at the activity rather
- than at the class members. Thus, even if yarmulkes, rather
- than Jews, were the object of the conspirators' animus, the
- statute would prohibit a conspiracy to hinder the consti-
- tuted authorities from protecting access to a synagogue or
- other place of worship for persons wearing yarmulkes. Like
- other civil rights legislation, this statute should be broadly
- construed to provide federal protection against the kind of
- disorder and anarchy that the States are unable to control
- effectively.
- With class-based animus understood as I have suggested,
- the conduct covered by the state hindrance clause would be
- as follows: a large-scale conspiracy that violates the victims'
- constitutional rights by overwhelming the local authorities
- and that, by its nature, victimizes predominantly members
- of a particular class. I doubt whether it would be possible
- to describe conduct closer to the core of 1985(3)'s coverage.
- This account would perfectly describe the conduct of the Ku
- Klux Klan, the group whose activities prompted the
- enactment of the statute. This description also applies to
- petitioners, who have conspired to deprive women of their
- constitutional right to choose an abortion by overwhelming
- the local police and by blockading clinics with the intended
- effect of preventing women from exercising a right only they
- possess. The state hindrance clause thus provides an
- independent ground for affirmance.
- VIII
- In sum, it is irrelevant whether the Court is correct in its
- assumption that ``opposition to abortion'' does not necessar-
- ily evidence an intent to disfavor women. Many opponents
- of abortion respect both the law and the rights of others to
- make their own decisions on this important matter.
- Petitioners, however, are not mere opponents of abortion;
- they are defiant lawbreakers who have engaged in mas-
- sive concerted conduct that is designed to prevent all
- women from making up their own minds about not only
- the issue of abortion in general, but also whether they
- should (or will) exercise a right that all women-and only
- women-possess.
- Indeed, the error that infects the Court's entire opinion
- is the unstated and mistaken assumption that this is a case
- about opposition to abortion. It is not. It is a case about
- the exercise of Federal power to control an interstate
- conspiracy to commit illegal acts. I have no doubt that
- most opponents of abortion, like most members of the
- citizenry at large, understand why the existence of federal
- jurisdiction is appropriate in a case of this kind.
- The Court concludes its analysis of 1985(3) by suggest-
- ing that a contrary interpretation would have condemned
- the massive ``sit-ins'' that were conducted to promote
- desegregation in the 1960's-a ``wildly improbable result.''
- See ante, at 14. This suggestion is profoundly misguided.
- It assumes that we must totally reject the class-based
- animus requirement to affirm the District Court, when, in
- fact, we need only construe that requirement to satisfy its
- purpose. Moreover, the demonstrations in the 1960's were
- motivated by a desire to extend the equal protection of the
- laws to all classes-not to impose burdens on any disadvan-
- taged class. Those who engaged in the nonviolent ``sit-ins''
- to which the Court refers were challenging ``a political and
- economic system that had denied them the basic rights of
- dignity and equality that this country had fought a Civil
- War to secure.'' NAACP v. Claiborne Hardware Co., 458
- U. S. 886, 918 (1982). The suggestion that there is an
- analogy between their struggle to achieve equality and
- these petitioners' concerted efforts to deny women equal
- access to a constitutionally protected privilege may have
- rhetorical appeal, but it is insupportable on the record
- before us, and does not justify the majority's parsimonious
- construction of an important federal statute.
- I respectfully dissent.
-