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Texas Sonogram Law: Judge Strikes Down Key Provisions Of Abortion Bill

Texas Sonogram Law

JIM VERTUNO   08/30/11 08:42 PM ET   AP

AUSTIN, Texas — A federal judge on Tuesday blocked key provisions of Texas' new law requiring a doctor to perform a sonogram before an abortion, ruling the measure violates the free speech rights of both doctors and patients.

U.S. District Judge Sam Sparks upheld the requirement that sonograms be performed, but struck down the provisions requiring doctors to describe the images to their patients and requiring women to hear the descriptions.

The law made exceptions for women who were willing to sign statements saying they were pregnant as a result of rape or incest or that their fetus had an irreversible abnormality. Sparks questioned whether the Republican-controlled Texas Legislature was trying to "permanently brand" women who are victims of sexual assault.

The law – one of dozens of anti-abortion measures that advanced through state capitals across the United States this year – takes effect Thursday. The New York-based Center for Reproductive Rights had sued to block it.

Supporters argued the law ensures women fully understand what an abortion entails and said some women have regretted having abortions. They said the law would lead to fewer abortions in Texas. About 81,000 abortions are performed every year in Texas.

Opponents argued that requiring doctors to describe a fetus' features would force them to say things against their will and would violate medical ethics requiring doctors to respect a patient's autonomy and act in the patient's best interest.

The Texas Medical Association opposed the law because it dictated when a doctor must perform a procedure and how the doctor must deal with a patient. While a pre-abortion ultrasound is routine, it is not considered medically necessary.

Sparks wrote that forcing doctors to discuss the results with a patient who may not want to listen "compels physicians to advance an ideological agenda with which they may not agree, regardless of any medical necessity and irrespective of whether the pregnant women wish to listen."

Sparks was particularly troubled by the requirement that victims of sexual assault or incest sign statements attesting to that fact to get around the provision. That would require women to disclose "extremely personal, medically irrelevant facts" that will be "memorialized in records that are, at best, semi-private," Sparks wrote.

"(It) is difficult to avoid the troubling conclusion the Texas Legislature either wants to permanently brand women who choose to get abortions, or views these certifications as potential evidence to be used against physicians and women," Sparks wrote.

Sparks also struck down several enforcement penalties for doctors who faced losing their medical license and possible criminal misdemeanor prosecution if they did not comply.

The ruling is a "huge victory for women in Texas and a clear signal to the state Legislature that it went too far when it passed this law," said Nancy Northup, president and CEO of the Center for Reproductive Rights.

The group said it had already received notice the state plans to appeal.

Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a Republican who is running for president, was critical of Tuesday's ruling. Perry had made the law one of his top priorities for the 2011 legislative session.

"Every life lost to abortion is a tragedy and today's ruling is a great disappointment to all Texans who stand in defense of life," Perry said in a statement.

State Sen. Dan Patrick, R-Houston, a key sponsor of the measure, said he was confident the law would be upheld on appeal.

"It is clear to me, from the inflammatory language in the order, that Judge Sparks was predisposed to this decision," Patrick said.

Sparks represented doctors and hospitals as an attorney for about 30 years before being appointed a federal judge in 1991.

A similar Oklahoma measure, passed in 2010, has been put on hold there pending legal challenges.

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AUSTIN, Texas — A federal judge on Tuesday blocked key provisions of Texas' new law requiring a doctor to perform a sonogram before an abortion, ruling the measure violates the free speech right...
AUSTIN, Texas — A federal judge on Tuesday blocked key provisions of Texas' new law requiring a doctor to perform a sonogram before an abortion, ruling the measure violates the free speech right...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Tracy Kline
08:04 PM on 09/06/2011
I don't think this is any more intrusive then sex-ed. Just as it's important to educate students on the reality of STD's, how much more important is it for mothers to get perspective through a sonogram on the life they're ending.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Chris Sanders
02:21 AM on 09/02/2011
Republicans are making everyone's insurance go up with all these unnecessary tests and visits.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Asuigeneris1
We are the music makers & the dreamers of dreams.
01:14 AM on 09/02/2011
Is it just me, or does it seem like this country is going backwards these days? o.0
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European1919
I am the Pigmâ’¶n
02:32 AM on 09/02/2011
Yup. Going nowhere fast in reverse gear.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Asuigeneris1
We are the music makers & the dreamers of dreams.
05:14 AM on 09/02/2011
...sigh : P
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rnmina
Mother, RN, Human rights advocate
12:51 PM on 09/02/2011
Yes, it does seem that way. America is going to a horrible place fast. What next, culling unborn fetuses for potential and performing tests on them in utero for various state reasons. The people of Texas should rid themselves of all these Republican anti-female reproductive rights legislators.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Asuigeneris1
We are the music makers & the dreamers of dreams.
08:19 PM on 09/02/2011
Just as we seem to make progress in one area of civil rights, with more equality for gays...other States seem to kick in to take away civil rights for another group.
This comment has been removed due to violations of our [Guidelines]
AstorsCatfish
Family entertainment? Bollucks!!
09:53 AM on 09/01/2011
I would much rather have doctors dictating to government how they should do their jobs than to have politicians playing doctor.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AAKAlan
Web Developer, photographer, artist, old fart.
05:34 AM on 09/01/2011
Perry, Bachman and the rest of the religious extremists running for the Republican nomination all believe, to some degree or another, in Dominionism - the replacement of the U. S. Constitution with biblical law (shades of the Taliban, shades of Sharia!).

They don't care that this onerous law is unconstitutional, since they don't believe in the Constitution, no matter how much lip service they pay to it.

Our Founding Fathers must be spinning in their graves. In general, they detested religion and were committed to creating a nation and a body of laws that was not subservient to the unelected clergy. Contrary to Bachman, and all the rest of the liars and frauds, they were NOT Christians. They didn't believe in the Bible, or the Immaculate Conception or even Christ as savior.

They were deists. They believed in an amorphous "greater power" that created the universe, but detested the trappings of religion. The deists include, among many others, Thomas Payne, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, Benjamin Franklin and Samuel Adams. Our nation was NEVER founded as a Christian nation, and all of this has just gone too far.

Do Americans realize that Perry, Bachman, Santorum, et al, want to overthrow our democracy and install a theocracy?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
treetracker
07:36 AM on 09/01/2011
There are two branches of the GOP -- the ones who want to turn the country over to the corporations and the ones who who want to turn us into a theocracy. Right now the latter group has control of the GOP. Both groups want control over the lives of others -- neither cares about the Constitution.

They've been lying to the American public since Nixon (at least). Of course, many Dems haven't done much better, but their goal has never been to overturn the government.

They have become so extreme now, that their agenda has become transparent. We can only hope their revisionist history is not bought up lock, stock, and barrel by an unsuspecting public.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Seven Teenatheart
Tolerance, peace, and sanity. Be your own person.
11:04 AM on 09/01/2011
Excellent post. Here's an article supporting your comment about the founding fathers, for anyone who wants to read up more on that:
http://freethought.mbdojo.com/foundingfathers.html
05:22 AM on 09/01/2011
What an outrageous attempt to control women and their choice. I am truly disturbed by my fellow Americans who would support such a bill. There are presently one million orphans in Iraq due to our "liberation" and it was reported that 1 in 5 American children suffer from hunger in present time Yet, republicans support the war and are against socialistic programs that would help feed our children. Oh the hypocrisy of the republican party; it is truly disheartening.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
terribyte
Party is the madness of many for the gain of a few
03:54 AM on 09/01/2011
It's nice to see a federal judge do the right thing.
I can't imagine what Perry's thinking, or the backward Oklahoma lawmakers who are up to this same emotional extortion and ham-fisted guilt-tripping they're trying to slip past the courts.

The GOP, Perry in particular, seems totally unaware of how repulsive their bullying force-fed morality is.

Either abortion is legal, or it's not.
This attempt to bring back the 'scarlet letter' as a means of utilizing shame in lieu of a legal recourse is unconstitutional and awkwardly transparent.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
giftsthatpurr
zestful life
09:40 PM on 09/01/2011
Excellent!!!
02:51 AM on 09/01/2011
Ok abortion has no room in politics it is a moral choice. No one has the right to tell another person what they can and cannot do with their body. No for me I could not have an abortions but I don’t condemn the women that do. So big brothers sit down and let the Americans have their rights back let us make choices for our own body. Big brother read the constitution. Realize that we the people have rights.
01:36 AM on 09/01/2011
So doctors, you are required to do the ultrasound when we, the government, tell you to do it and read from a script that we, the government, have written for you. I'm not surprised the doctors rebelled a bit. I've worked with enough to know that this wouldn't go over too well (all that medical school and other post-graduate training usually leads to the privilege of independent judgment).

On the other hand, if it is overturned on appeal, I still don't see how the non-intrusive government is going to enforce it. Are they planning to subpoena all the medical records to see what procedures each patient underwent and how it was documented? All the doctor has to do is say "reviewed ultrasound and discussed procedure with patient. She had no questions." How will they know the truth? Maybe Senator Patrick will then require that he sit in on every exam.
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MovieGuy2010
You can't fight in here..this is the war room!
12:21 PM on 09/01/2011
Well,. give the rights liking for "Sting" operations (ACORN) I would suspect they would get some Christian Women who is pregnant to "pretend" to want an abortion, and then SEE if the doctor goes through with it. She can then suddenly back out the abortion, with hidden tape in hand.

They would probably target doctors they "Suspect", probably any Doctor that disagrees with this policy and is verbal about it.

These people are fanatics, they will do anything, spying and lying needed. for the sake of their agenda.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Pax333
01:10 AM on 09/02/2011
A far simpler solution is for doctors to move out of Texas. They certainly have marketable skills that they can use in states with less inclination to become a theocracy.
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goatini
We are two-legged wombs, that’s all
04:39 PM on 09/01/2011
I used to work for Dan Patrick when he was a bar owner, and (1) he's not the Holy Joe that he purports to be, and (2) no one would want his creepy hypocritical visage in her medical exam room under any circumstances.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
PiedType
Old editors never die, they just revert to type
12:59 AM on 09/01/2011
"Scathing Ruling"? Come on, HP. That's a meaningles­s hyperbolic front page tease. Shame on you. It's a significan­t decision that blocks an onerous law. It's a lot of things, but it's not "scathing.­" Courts rarely resort to hyperbole. They don't need to. Their word is law.
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12:04 AM on 09/01/2011
Coming up next on the docket: a novel Ritual Human Sacrifice (=capital punishment) bill: death by GM into a fetus which is then aborted. The leavings of which (gotta stay Green) will be sold to certain interests in Japan where they pour some soya on it and watch it move.

I hear Baal gave this 2 talons.

And so it goes.
11:59 PM on 08/31/2011
It's just one more intrusive big-government Republican intrusion into people's lives. Corporations can do so, and the government can as long as it's oppressing women and not the wealthy. "Every fetus lost is a tragedy." Is every period a tragedy? There's such a thing as overpopulation. If we all had eight or ten babies, with current medical practices, we'd reach horrible awful levels of overpopulation. But that's what my body is capable of! Then there's such a thing as the quality of a mother's life, who has to juggle the cost of diapers and childcare and college, and who cannot possibly handle that at 17 or 23. We should not hold women hostage to the cellular functions happening in their bodies, and we should take into account the world we live in, and the quality of life for all other people on the planet. That is my late-night rant, toned down for HP, but how I feel all the same.
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majorg1000
One Nation, Underfed
12:03 AM on 09/01/2011
F&F!
02:46 AM on 09/01/2011
Have you thought about birth control? There are certainly enough methods now? Abortion should not be taxpayer funded birth control because you cannot control your "cellular functions". And yes, we should take into acount the world we live in, act like an adults and not run around having unprotected sex and getting pregnant followed by an abortion. If you don't want the "big-government" intrusion, then don't expect the taxpayers to pay for your abortion from your irresponsible decisions. If you don't want your precious quality of life impacted by a baby or the costs associated with that, then control your breeding tendencies and use birth control before sex, not killing a fetus after sex.
06:09 AM on 09/01/2011
seems all you people can talk about is your g/d money. unwanted pregnancies do happen. some dont even want to fund birth control. Overpopulation is going to destroy the environment and subsequently societies. It's a bit more than personal responsibility.
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joeyfoto
“Écraser l'infamie!”
08:51 AM on 09/01/2011
Abortion should not be taxpayer funded birth control because you cannot control your "cellular functions"­.

WOW! ignorance is cheap.Self-righteous indignation if free.

You know nothing about birth control or about the women who seek abortions, but you want to decide which health care procedures government programs fund — or even private insurance, if you side with the fanatics in congress. The answer is "NO."

I want to deduct the percentage fo my taxes used in the criminal war-effort in IRAQ. Guess what? I can't. Get used to it.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
knott wrench
11:45 PM on 08/31/2011
Hey "Prophet" Perry, Michelle Bachmann would probably say of this ruling:

"God" is trying to tell you something! Like doing the bidding ALEC and the Koch Brothers is NOT Christian!

Better check you cell phone battery and check your e-mails. He probably doesn't like waiting. He's other things on his mind.
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onehenry
Tea bags lose their flavor
11:31 PM on 08/31/2011
isn't this big government that the right hates so much.