Trump pardons anti-abortion activists who blockaded clinic entrances
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[January 24, 2025]
By CHRISTINE FERNANDO
CHICAGO (AP) — President Donald Trump announced Thursday he would pardon
anti-abortion activists convicted of blockading abortion clinic
entrances.
Trump called it “a great honor to sign this.”
"They should not have been prosecuted," he said as he signed pardons for
"peaceful pro-life protesters.”
The people pardoned were involved in the October 2020 invasion and
blockade of a Washington clinic.
Lauren Handy was sentenced to nearly five years in prison for leading
the blockade by directing blockaders to link themselves together with
locks and chains to block the clinic’s doors. A nurse sprained her ankle
when one person pushed her while entering the clinic, and a woman was
accosted by another blockader while having labor pains, prosecutors
said. Police found five fetuses in Handy’s home after she was indicted.
Trump pardoned Handy and her nine co-defendants: Jonathan Darnel of
Virginia; Jay Smith, John Hinshaw and William Goodman, all of New York;
Joan Bell of New Jersey; Paulette Harlow and Jean Marshall, both of
Massachusetts; Heather Idoni of Michigan; and Herb Geraghty of
Pennsylvania.
In the first week of Trump’s presidency, anti-abortion advocates have
ramped up calls for Trump to pardon protesters charged with violating
the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act, which is designed to
protect abortion clinics from obstruction and threats. The 1994 law was
passed during a time where clinic protests and blockades were on the
rise, as was violence against abortion providers, such as the murder of
Dr. David Gunn in 1993.
Trump specifically mentioned Harlow in a June speech criticizing former
President Joe Biden’s Department of Justice for pursuing charges against
protesters involved in blockades.
“Many people are in jail over this,” he said in June, adding, ”We’re
going to get that taken care of immediately.”
Abortion rights advocates slammed Trump’s pardons as evidence of his
opposition to abortion access, despite his vague, contradictory
statements on the issue as he attempted to find a middle ground on the
campaign trail between anti-abortion allies and the majority of
Americans who support abortion rights.
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Anti-abortion activists Lauren Handy, front, with Terrisa Bukovinac,
from left, Jonathan Darnell, and Randall Terry, speak during a news
conference in Washington, April 5, 2022. (AP Photo/Manuel Balce
Ceneta, File)
“Donald Trump on the campaign trail tried to have it both ways —
bragging about his role in overturning Roe v. Wade while saying he
wasn’t going to take action on abortion,” said Ryan Stitzlein, vice
president of political and government relations for the national
abortion rights organization Reproductive Freedom for All. “We never
believed that that was true, and this shows us that we were right.”
SBA Pro-Life America President Marjorie Dannenfelser thanked Trump
for “immediately delivering on his promise” to pardon the
protesters, arguing their prosecutions were political.
The legal group Thomas More Society argued the FACE Act defendants
they represent had been “unjustly imprisoned” in a January letter to
Trump. The group had assured the defendants that Trump would review
their cases and pardon them when he took office, according to the
letter.
“Today, freedom rings in our great nation,” Steve Crampton, senior
counsel for the Thomas More Society, said Thursday, adding, ”What
happened to them can never be erased, but today’s pardons are a huge
step towards restoring justice.”
Republican Sen. Josh Hawley, among Trump’s most loyal supporters,
called the prosecution of anti-abortion protesters “a grotesque
assault on the principles of this country” and urged Trump to pardon
them while reading the stories of such anti-abortion protesters on
the Senate floor Thursday. He highlighted Eva Edl, who was involved
in a 2021 Tennessee clinic blockade and whose story has garnered
attention from the largest national anti-abortion groups.
Hawley said he “had a great conversation” Thursday morning with
Trump about the protesters.
The news of the pardons comes ahead of Friday’s annual anti-abortion
protest March for Life in Washington, where the president is
expected to address the crowd in a video.
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