Now the clinic, which staunchly opposes abortion, is among of a
group of Christian-based facilities, known as crisis pregnancy
centers, involved in a major case that goes before the U.S. Supreme
Court on Tuesday.
They are challenging a California law that forces centers that are
licensed as family planning facilities to post notices that the
state has programs offering free or low-cost birth control and
abortion services, a requirement they argue violates their free
speech rights under the U.S. Constitution's First Amendment.
The law requires unlicensed facilities with no medical provider on
staff to disclose that fact.
"They're forcing us to use our walls as a billboard to promote
abortion," Pregnancy Care Clinic Executive Director Josh McClure
said in an interview.
McClure, whose facility is licensed, compared California's law to
forcing the American Lung Association to tell people where to buy
cigarettes.
California said in legal papers some of these centers try to prevent
women from accessing abortions by using incomplete or false medical
advice. Some try to resemble medical clinics down to lab coats worn
by staff, giving the impression they offer abortion services while
employing no actual medical professionals, California said.
The centers say they offer legitimate services and that their
mission is to persuade women to forego abortion.
The case is one of several the Supreme Court is tackling during its
current term in which conservative legal groups are invoking the
First Amendment and asserting that governments are
unconstitutionally compelling people to say or do things they
oppose.
Similar cases this term involve plaintiffs who argue that the First
Amendment protects them from having to make a wedding cake for a gay
couple or pay fees to unions representing public employees to fund
collective bargaining.
These cases may have a sympathetic audience on a court with a 5-4
conservative majority that already has been receptive to First
Amendment arguments.
The Supreme Court is deciding six free speech cases this term.
Three, like this one, involve claims of unlawful "compelled speech."
If the court strengthens protections against compelled speech, that
could benefit conservative causes including limiting the reach of
its 2015 decision legalizing gay marriage or freeing corporations
from certain regulations.
"A victory in each of these cases would signal that there are ...
situations where a free speech claim might prevail against the
government that might not have 20 years ago," said attorney Ken
Klukowski of the First Liberty Institute conservative legal group.
'VIOLATION OF CONSCIENCE'
Abortion rights advocates say the roughly 2,700 U.S. anti-abortion
pregnancy centers, including around 200 in California, far outnumber
facilities providing abortions.
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California's Reproductive FACT Act was passed by a Democratic-led
legislature in 2015 and signed by Democratic Governor Jerry Brown.
The San Francisco-based 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals upheld it
in 2016, finding it did not discriminate based on viewpoint. The
pregnancy centers appealed that ruling to the Supreme Court.
Attorney Kristen Waggoner of the conservative legal group Alliance
Defending Freedom, which represents the centers, said the law
targets only these facilities. "Pointing the way to abortion is a
violation of conscience," Waggoner added.
Republican President Donald Trump's administration partially backed
the centers, opposing California's requirements toward licensed
facilities while not objecting to the requirements for unlicensed
centers.
The El Cajon facility serves about 800 clients annually and has
medical staff including doctors and nurses. It calls itself a "front
line ministry" supported by churches and other donors, and offers
Bible study for clients and opportunities for volunteers to spread
the gospel to visitors to the facility.
"Once they have accepted Christ," the clinic's website says, "we
begin a discipleship program with them and contact a partner church
to hand them off to."
Its website address, www.unplannedparenthood.org, resembles Planned
Parenthood, which provides healthcare services and abortions in
clinics around the country. McClure said his facility's name was
chosen because most clients have unplanned pregnancies.
Adrienne Kimmell, a vice president at the abortion rights group
NARAL, said the name was not coincidental, adding, "Almost all of
these places have names that are really confusing and they're
usually in the same city block as other centers that actually do
provide a full range of reproductive healthcare options."
McClure denied these facilities use deception. Regarding abortion,
McClure said, "We are very upfront that it is not a service we are
going to provide."
The American Medical Association told the justices McClure's
facility appears to be acting unethically because information it
provides on the debated link between abortion and breast cancer is
"likely to prove misleading."
Waggoner said the clinic's website is accurate and California has
presented no evidence of actual deception or confusion.
(Reporting by Andrew Chung; Editing by Will Dunham)
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