Planned
Parenthood wins round in U.S. court against Utah
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[September 30, 2015]
By Peg McEntee
SALT LAKE CITY (Reuters) - Planned
Parenthood's Utah chapter won an initial round in court on Tuesday
challenging an attempt by the governor to cut off its funding, with a
federal judge ruling that the public's interest favors keeping the
women's health organization open.
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U.S. District Judge Clark Waddoups issued a temporary restraining
order barring Governor Gary Herbert from carrying out his directive
for state agencies to revoke their contracts through which Planned
Parenthood receives federal dollars.
Herbert ordered the cut-off citing the recent release of secretly
recorded videos that Planned Parenthood's critics say show officials
from the group in Texas and other states discussing the illegal sale
of aborted fetal tissue.
Anti-abortion activists and their Republican allies in Congress have
seized on the videos to challenge Planned Parenthood's continued
eligibility for federal funds on Capitol Hill.
Planned Parenthood says the videos have been used to distort the
issue of fetal tissue donations the group makes for scientific
research, insisting there is nothing unlawful or unethical about the
reimbursements it receives to cover the costs of those donations.
Supporters say efforts to defund the group would restrict women's
access to reproductive healthcare and disproportionately hurt
low-income patients.
The judge echoed that argument in his restraining order, issued
after a hearing in Salt Lake City on Planned Parenthood's request to
block Herbert's directive.
"The programs carried out by plaintiff target at-risk individuals
and the reduction of communicable diseases," he wrote. "These are
strong public interests that outweigh the defendants' stated
interests in defunding" the group.
The judge also sided with Planned Parenthood in finding "a
substantial likelihood" that it would prevail on the merits of its
arguments that Herbert, a Republican, had violated its
constitutional rights to equal protection and freedom of
association.
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The plaintiffs were singled out based on their "association with an
organization against whom accusations have been made of illegal
conduct," the judge said. "Those accusations are still under
investigation and have not been proved."
A spokeswoman for the governor, Aimee Edwards, said he "stands by
his actions," adding: "Today's procedural action does not deter
Governor Herbert's resolve to carry out his directive."
Karrie Gallaway, president of the Planned Parenthood Association of
Utah, accused Herbert of "playing politics with health."
The organization has filed similar legal actions challenging
defunding efforts in Arkansas, Alabama and Louisiana.
(Reporting by Peg McEntee; Writing and additional reporting by Steve
Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Eric Beech)
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