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Mayes tells Supreme Court no one has legal standing to defend old abortion law

Mayes tells Supreme Court no one has legal standing to defend old abortion law

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abortion, Roe v. Wade, Supreme Court, Yavapai County
Attorney General Kris Mayes in new legal filings told the Arizona Supreme Court that the decision by her office not to defend a territorial-era law regarding abortion leaves no one with legal standing to do so. If the justices agree, that would leave in place a 2022 state law that permits but regulates abortion through the first 15 weeks of pregnancy. (Photo by Deposit Photos)

The legal right of Arizona women to have an abortion could turn on the question of whether anyone still has legal standing to argue that the procedure should once again be all but outlawed, as it was in territorial days.

In new legal filings, Attorney General Kris Mayes told the Arizona Supreme Court that the decision by her office not to defend the old law leaves no one with legal standing to do so.

If the justices agree, that would leave in place a 2022 state law that allows but regulates abortion through the first 15 weeks of pregnancy. More to the point, it would remove any danger that doctors who are now performing the procedure in that time frame would end up in prison.

Whether the Arizona justices agree depends on how they view actions that actually go back more than five decades.

In 1971, when the state’s abortion ban was first challenged by Planned Parenthood, a trial judge in Pima County appointed a “guardian ad litem” empowered to represent the legal interests of the fetus of a woman identified only as “Jane Roe” who was a plaintiff in the case and wanted to terminate her pregnancy. The judge also said that guardian also could represent other fetuses that were “similarly situated” at the time.

Arizona courts refused to overturn the law, leaving in place a statute that dates to territorial days making the process a crime except to save the life of the mother.

Mayes, abortion, territorial era, Arizona Supreme Court, 15 weeks, pregnancy
Kris Mayes, newly elected state attorney general, arrives for the formal inaugural ceremonies Jan. 5, 2023, outside the state Capitol. (Capitol Media Services photo by Howard Fischer)

All that, however, became moot when the U.S. Supreme Court issued Roe v. Wade in 1973 saying women have a constitutional right to terminate a pregnancy.

But the Arizona case was resurrected last year after the high court overturned the 1973 decision, once again giving each state permission to establish its own abortion restrictions.

Mark Brnovich, the state attorney general at the time, then asked a judge here to reinstate the territorial-era ban whose only exception is to save the life of the mother. That judge also agreed to allow Dr. Eric Hazelrigg, medical director of Choices Pregnancy Center, to serve in that guardian position.

But Mayes, on taking office in January, reversed the state’s official stance. And that leaves only Hazelrigg to argue that Arizona should reinstate the old law.

Now attorneys for Mayes want the justices to remove him from the case, saying he is not a “proper party” and that his appointment as guardian “was without legal basis.”

If the justices grant the motion, that would leave no one to argue that Arizona should once again outlaw virtually all abortions. And that, in turn, would cement in place last year’s law specifically allowing abortions through 15 weeks.

At the heart of the legal debate is a decision by the Republican-controlled Legislature last year — before Roe was overturned — to enact a law outlawing abortions after 15 weeks.

That was based on a prediction by GOP lawmakers that the U.S. Supreme Court would uphold a similar Mississippi law. So, abortion foes sought to have something virtually identical in place.

Instead, the nation’s high court went farther, voiding Roe v. Wade entirely. And that led Brnovich to argue that restored the original territorial-era restriction.

But the state Court of Appeals ruled last year that would mean ignoring that more recent 15-week statute. So, the judges ruled that doctors can perform the procedure through 15 weeks, with the older law — and its prison term — applying only to those who are not medical professionals.

That sent the case to the state Supreme Court. But Mayes, now attorney general, concluded that the old law — and Brnovich’s argument seeking its reinstatement — is not legally defensible.

And that, for the moment, leaves only Hazelrigg seeking to overturn the appellate court ruling and go back to the territorial-era law, which is why Mayes is asking the justices to dismiss him from the case.

There are statutes allowing a judge to appoint someone as a guardian for minors for legal purposes in certain limited cases. That includes cases involving termination of parental rights, where a minor is seeking to be legally “emancipated,” and when a pregnant minor asks a court to allow her to bypass state laws requiring parental consent for an abortion.

But here, Mayes’ attorneys argue, Hazelrigg is seeking represent “an undefined class of hypothetical and dissimilar fetuses.”

They argue that the only reason the judge in the original 1971 case appointed a guardian was because of “Jane Roe” seeking to terminate her pregnancy. Only thing is, the woman in that case was dismissed five decades ago.

“Now, there is no plaintiff seeking an abortion, and therefore no individual fetus or ‘similarly situated’ fetuses for petitioner to represent,” the attorneys for Mayes are telling the justice. “How that there be a guardian when there are no wards?”

And they say it’s even more complex than that, saying it is not clear which fetuses Hazelrigg purports to represent.

“Does his appointment cover all fetuses that exist in Arizona right now?” the lawyers ask.

“Fetuses at all gestational stages, or only after a certain point?” they continue. “What about fetuses that would be born with diseases that guarantee an early and extremely painful death?”

Attorneys for Planned Parenthood Arizona, also trying to preserve the 15-week law, did not go quite so far in asking the Supreme Court to knock Hazelrigg out of the legal ring. But they told the justices that they should ignore his bid to have them once again outlaw virtually all abortions.

“If Dr. Hazelrigg believes it is good policy to subject licensed physicians to criminal prosecution for performing any abortion, even those performed before 15 weeks, he may seek to achieve such policy through the legislative process and not by judicial fiat,” they wrote.

Of course, all that presumes that the current legislature would be willing to restore the law to the way it was prior to 1973. And even if the votes were there, the odds of current Gov. Katie Hobbs signing such a measure are virtually nil.

The court has not set a date to consider the issue. And, for the moment, that leaves in place the appellate ruling allowing abortions to continue through 15 weeks.