Thomas More Society Moves Closer to Victory in
Fight
for Right to Share Life-Affirming Alternatives
(January
11, 2017 – Chicago) Chicago area pro-life advocates achieved a
victory last week when United States District Judge Amy J. St. Eve denied the
City of Chicago’s motion to dismiss a federal complaint challenging Chicago’s
abortion-protective “bubble zone.” This ruling was in response to the Thomas
More Society’s challenge, on behalf of the Pro-Life Action League, Live
Pro-Life Group and several individual pro-life counselors, that the ordinance
that denies life advocates their First Amendments rights and impedes their
ability to share life-affirming alternatives with women seeking abortions.
Ann
Scheidler, Anna Marie Scinto Mesia, David Berquist and Veronica Price are citizens
who peacefully exercise their First Amendment rights on the public ways near
Chicago abortion facilities by reaching out to women who are approaching the
clinics. These “sidewalk counselors” and their organizations inform these
abortion-bound women of the dangers inherent in the procedures and share
life-affirming alternatives. Their complaint asserts that Chicago’s “bubble
zone” law unconstitutionally constrains the peaceful work of these counselors
because police have selectively and erratically applied it against them, but
not abortion clinic escorts.
St.
Eve ruled that the plaintiffs could proceed with the challenge to the “bubble
zone” ordinance. She decided that since the law was enacted in 2009,
sufficient instances of discriminatory and inconsistent enforcement have been
alleged to warrant a hearing. She deemed valid the need for a hearing on
whether the Chicago police enforced the ordinance with “deliberate
indifference” toward the rights of the plaintiffs.
The
“bubble zone” law, which is exclusively applicable to abortion facilities,
designates a 50-foot radius of an abortion clinic entrance as an area in which
a pro-life counselor is prohibited from intentionally coming closer than eight
feet to a person approaching the entrance, unless that person gives permission
for the counselor to approach.
Thomas
More Society Senior Counsel and Co-Executive Director Thomas Olp explained,
“Contrary to pro-abortion propaganda, pro-life counselors do not intimidate
women approaching abortion clinics. That type of engagement would be
ineffective. Pro-life sidewalk counselors compassionately and calmly
approach women, one-on-one, to offer them information about abortion
alternatives. The Chicago ‘bubble zone’ ordinance is designed to impede -- and
does impede -- this communication. This law is unconstitutional and it
deliberately curtails our clients’ First Amendment rights.”
Read
U.S. District Court Judge Amy St. Eve’s January 4,
2017, Memorandum Opinion and Order handed down in the United States
District Court for the Northern District of Illinois Eastern Division in the
case, Veronica Price et al. v. The City of Chicago et al., here [https://www.thomasmoresociety.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/01/Order-granting-and-denying-MTD-010417.pdf]
About the Thomas More Society
The
Thomas More Society is a national not-for-profit law firm dedicated to
restoring respect in law for life, family, and religious liberty. Headquartered
in Chicago and Omaha, the Thomas More Society fosters support for these causes
by providing high quality pro bono legal services from local trial courts all
the way up to the United States Supreme Court. For more information, visit thomasmoresociety.org
No comments:
Post a Comment