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Court hems in Florida minors who want abortions without their parents' knowledge
Court hems in Florida minors who want abortions without their parents' knowledge

Miami Herald

time3 days ago

  • Politics
  • Miami Herald

Court hems in Florida minors who want abortions without their parents' knowledge

A Florida appeals court took an unusual legal step when it earlier this month struck down as unconstitutional a law allowing minors to get abortions without parental consent. Florida youth have for decades been able to petition a judge for permission to have an abortion without their parents' knowledge. This May, a pregnant 17-year-old initiated one of those cases. When a lower court judge denied her the waiver for an abortion, she appealed. The Fifth District Court of Appeal took up the appeal. But instead of focusing solely on the teen's case, the court used it to weigh major constitutional questions — a move that one judge acknowledged is rare. The court's decision effectively stops most minors from being able to have abortions unless their parent gives consent, further restricting Florida's already limited pathways to abortion and setting up a possible question for the Florida Supreme Court. The move was celebrated by Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier and other conservatives. But abortion access advocates have decried it, saying the court went into the case with an outcome in mind and found its way to it. 'Judicial overreach doesn't even begin to describe it,' said Amy Myrick, senior counsel of U.S. litigation at the Center for Reproductive Rights. Inviting in the AG Before the appeals court judges got all the details about the teen's case, they drafted an order asking her lawyers to answer four legal questions. The questions had nothing to do with the minor's specific circumstances but were more broadly about the judicial waiver process itself, including whether the parents of minors got due process. Then, in a move that some observers said was unusual, the court invited Florida's Republican Attorney General James Uthmeier to weigh in on the legal questions the judges raised. Uthmeier joined the case as an opponent and argued that the judicial waiver process violates parents' rights. (Usually, in the judicial waiver process, the minor makes the petition and the judge decides if the girl is 'sufficiently mature' to decide whether to terminate her pregnancy. There are normally no other outside parties involved besides the minor's lawyers.) 'When you're reaching out to do a whole bunch of stuff you don't need to do to resolve a case, it's usually because you're trying to get a big legal conclusion about it,' said Mary Ziegler, a reproductive law expert at UC Davis School of Law. Mat Staver, the chairman of the conservative anti-abortion group Liberty Counsel, said it wasn't unusual for the courts to give notice to the attorney general when a constitutional provision is being questioned, and said it was 'very appropriate' for the appeals court to do so. Uthmeier last year, while he was still Gov. Ron DeSantis' chief of staff, was the chairperson of a political committee that opposed a proposed amendment to protect abortion rights in Florida. That amendment ultimately failed in November's election. Uthmeier has also pushed against the idea of minors getting abortions without parental consent. A few months before weighing in on the Florida case, Uthmeier filed a brief encouraging the U.S. Supreme Court to reevaluate what rights minors have and what rights their parents have when it comes to abortion, arguing that there was a common law tradition of parents having rights over their children. Florida's bypass process has been used less frequently after the six-week abortion ban went into effect last year. In 2024, courts saw 130 petitions filed across the state, most of which were granted. The courts A judge on the Fifth District Court of Appeal acknowledged that the court's decision to weigh in on the constitutionality of the law, rather than resolve it more simply, was unusual. The court also said that it was possibly the 'first and only' time it would be able to address the question, 'which has thus far evaded review despite being posed in an untold number of prior cases.' In a concurring opinion in the recent Fifth District case, Judge John MacIver said the court thought it was appropriate to address the constitutional questions because parents whose kids have abortions without their knowledge would not be able to challenge the law themselves since, 'by design,' the law blocks those parents from being informed. The justices' actions were primed by a move last year by the First District Court of Appeal. That court said it couldn't review abortion waiver cases because there was no party opposing the minor. 'The only opportunity for a defense of those fundamental rights came about here because the Attorney General of Florida was invited to brief as amicus and instead sought intervention,' MacIver said. Of the three judges in the Fifth District who heard the case, two were appointed by DeSantis — MacIver and Jordan Pratt, who authored the decision and used to work at a conservative religious liberty law firm that has represented anti-abortion parties. Pratt this week was nominated by President Donald Trump to a federal judgeship. The third justice, Brian Lambert, was appointed by former Gov. Rick Scott. No judge dissented. What about teens now? After the court's ruling, there are limited circumstances where minors can still use the waiver process, such as if they are the victim of child abuse, said Elizabeth Ling, an attorney with the abortion access group If/When/How. 'For the vast majority of people who are under 18 in the state of Florida, the judicial bypass or the judicial waiver process is no longer an option,' Ling said. With the ruling in place, pregnant minors in Florida's foster system find themselves in uncharted territory. Florida law prohibits the Department of Children and Families from ever authorizing an abortion — meaning that foster kids have no other option but to use the judicial waiver process if they want to terminate their pregnancy. Ling said that because the ruling leaves the avenue only for victims of child abuse, it could create a split process for foster kids. Youth who are in the system because of abuse could access the waiver process, but foster youth who are in the system for other reasons may not be able to. Ling said research shows that young people largely involve a parent with news of their pregnancy, and said when people seek otherwise, they 'have thought very deeply and carefully' about it. She said young people are now 'being forced to choose between either having the abortion or their safety and their wellness.' Florida Supreme Court The appeals court said it anticipated future Florida Supreme Court review of the question of whether the judicial waiver law complies with a parent's due process rights. If the Florida high court does hear the case, earlier precedent could mean it sides with people trying to dismantle the judicial waiver process. Last year, the Florida Supreme Court said the state constitution doesn't guarantee a right to an abortion. Ziegler said if the judicial waiver case does move to the Florida Supreme Court, it could be a way for anti-abortion advocates to argue about fetus' rights in their briefing in the hopes that justices would seize on it and include it in a ruling. If the court determines that fetuses have more rights, it could lead to further restrictions on abortion. 'They want to get on the Florida Supreme Court on personhood,' Ziegler said. Of the seven state Supreme Court justices, five have been appointed by DeSantis. Some have known anti-abortion views. Staver, the chairman of the conservative anti-abortion group Liberty Counsel, said the recent case striking down judicial waivers was 'perhaps the first step' in the direction of looking at a right to life for fetuses in the Florida Constitution — as well as affirming parental rights more broadly.

How a Florida court took unusual steps to limit abortion access for minors
How a Florida court took unusual steps to limit abortion access for minors

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Health
  • Yahoo

How a Florida court took unusual steps to limit abortion access for minors

TALLAHASSEE – A Florida appeals court took an unusual legal step when it earlier this month struck down as unconstitutional a law allowing minors to get abortions without parental consent. Florida youth have for decades been able to petition a judge for permission to have an abortion without their parents' knowledge. This May, a pregnant 17-year-old initiated one of those cases. When a lower court judge denied her the waiver for an abortion, she appealed. The Fifth District Court of Appeal took up the appeal. But instead of focusing solely on the teen's case, the court used it to weigh major constitutional questions — a move that one judge acknowledged is rare. The court's decision effectively stops most minors from being able to have abortions unless their parent gives consent, further restricting Florida's already limited pathways to abortion and setting up a possible question for the Florida Supreme Court. The move was celebrated by Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier and other conservatives. But abortion access advocates have decried it, saying the court went into the case with an outcome in mind and found its way to it. 'Judicial overreach doesn't even begin to describe it,' said Amy Myrick, senior counsel of U.S. litigation at the Center for Reproductive Rights. Before the appeals court judges got all the details about the teen's case, they drafted an order asking her lawyers to answer four legal questions. The questions had nothing to do with the minor's specific circumstances but were more broadly about the judicial waiver process itself, including whether the parents of minors got due process. Then, in a move that some observers said was unusual, the court invited Florida's Republican Attorney General James Uthmeier to weigh in on the legal questions the judges raised. Uthmeier joined the case as an opponent and argued that the judicial waiver process violates parents' rights. (Usually, in the judicial waiver process, the minor makes the petition and the judge decides if the girl is 'sufficiently mature' to decide whether to terminate her pregnancy. There are normally no other outside parties involved besides the minor's lawyers.) 'When you're reaching out to do a whole bunch of stuff you don't need to do to resolve a case, it's usually because you're trying to get a big legal conclusion about it,' said Mary Ziegler, a reproductive law expert at UC Davis School of Law. Mat Staver, the chairman of the conservative anti-abortion group Liberty Counsel, said it wasn't unusual for the courts to give notice to the attorney general when a constitutional provision is being questioned, and said it was 'very appropriate' for the appeals court to do so. Uthmeier last year, while he was still Gov. Ron DeSantis' chief of staff, was the chairperson of a political committee that opposed a proposed amendment to protect abortion rights in Florida. That amendment ultimately failed in November's election. Uthmeier has also pushed against the idea of minors getting abortions without parental consent. A few months before weighing in on the Florida case, Uthmeier filed a brief encouraging the U.S. Supreme Court to reevaluate what rights minors have and what rights their parents have when it comes to abortion, arguing that there was a common law tradition of parents having rights over their children. Florida's bypass process has been used less frequently after the six-week abortion ban went into effect last year. In 2024, courts saw 130 petitions filed across the state, most of which were granted. A judge on the Fifth District Court of Appeal acknowledged that the court's decision to weigh in on the constitutionality of the law, rather than resolve it more simply, was unusual. The court also said that it was possibly the 'first and only' time it would be able to address the question, 'which has thus far evaded review despite being posed in an untold number of prior cases.' In a concurring opinion in the recent Fifth District case, Judge John MacIver said the court thought it was appropriate to address the constitutional questions because parents whose kids have abortions without their knowledge would not be able to challenge the law themselves since, 'by design,' the law blocks those parents from being informed. The justices' actions were primed by a move last year by the First District Court of Appeal. That court said it couldn't review abortion waiver cases because there was no party opposing the minor. 'The only opportunity for a defense of those fundamental rights came about here because the Attorney General of Florida was invited to brief as amicus and instead sought intervention,' MacIver said. Of the three judges in the Fifth District who heard the case, two were appointed by DeSantis — MacIver and Jordan Pratt, who authored the decision and used to work at a conservative religious liberty law firm that has represented anti-abortion parties. Pratt this week was nominated by President Donald Trump to a federal judgeship. The third justice, Brian Lambert, was appointed by former Gov. Rick Scott. No judge dissented. After the court's ruling, there are limited circumstances where minors can still use the waiver process, such as if they are the victim of child abuse, said Elizabeth Ling, an attorney with the abortion access group If/When/How. 'For the vast majority of people who are under 18 in the state of Florida, the judicial bypass or the judicial waiver process is no longer an option,' Ling said. With the ruling in place, pregnant minors in Florida's foster system find themselves in uncharted territory. Florida law prohibits the Department of Children and Families from ever authorizing an abortion — meaning that foster kids have no other option but to use the judicial waiver process if they want to terminate their pregnancy. Ling said that because the ruling leaves the avenue only for victims of child abuse, it could create a split process for foster kids. Youth who are in the system because of abuse could access the waiver process, but foster youth who are in the system for other reasons may not be able to. Ling said research shows that young people largely involve a parent with news of their pregnancy, and said when people seek otherwise, they 'have thought very deeply and carefully' about it. She said young people are now 'being forced to choose between either having the abortion or their safety and their wellness.' The appeals court said it anticipated future Florida Supreme Court review of the question of whether the judicial waiver law complies with a parent's due process rights. If the Florida high court does hear the case, earlier precedent could mean it sides with people trying to dismantle the judicial waiver process. Last year, the Florida Supreme Court said the state constitution doesn't guarantee a right to an abortion. Ziegler said if the judicial waiver case does move to the Florida Supreme Court, it could be a way for anti-abortion advocates to argue about fetus' rights in their briefing in the hopes that justices would seize on it and include it in a ruling. If the court determines that fetuses have more rights, it could lead to further restrictions on abortion. 'They want to get on the Florida Supreme Court on personhood,' Ziegler said. Of the seven state Supreme Court justices, five have been appointed by DeSantis. Some have known anti-abortion views. Staver, the chairman of the conservative anti-abortion group Liberty Counsel, said the recent case striking down judicial waivers was 'perhaps the first step' in the direction of looking at a right to life for fetuses in the Florida Constitution — as well as affirming parental rights more broadly.

Court blocks major exemptions from Florida's parental consent requirement for abortions for minors
Court blocks major exemptions from Florida's parental consent requirement for abortions for minors

Yahoo

time19-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Yahoo

Court blocks major exemptions from Florida's parental consent requirement for abortions for minors

A surprise decision by a state appellate court has stripped away some options available to minors who are seeking an abortion without their parents' consent. The ruling reverses protections state lawmakers implemented when they passed the parental consent law back in 2020. Florida's parental consent law includes some exceptions that allow a minor to petition a judge to access an abortion without their parents' approval. Those exceptions include the minor proving they're sufficiently mature to make the decision, the court determining parental consent wouldn't be in the minor's best interest or if the minor is the victim of child or sexual abuse inflicted by their parent or guardian. Now, those first two options are off the table. >>> STREAM ACTION NEWS JAX LIVE <<< [DOWNLOAD: Free Action News Jax app for alerts as news breaks] In a ruling issued by the Fifth District Court of Appeal, a three-judge panel determined the maturity and best interest standards violate the 14th Amendment rights of parents. 'Any deprivation of parents' due-process rights to notice and opportunity to be heard can no longer be justified by their children's asserted constitutional right to obtain an abortion (much less a secret abortion that cuts presumptively fit parents out of the decision),' wrote Judge Jordan Pratt. 'It's really devastating. We know that the majority of time minors who are accessing abortion include their parents in that decision-making process,' said Amber Gavin with a Woman's Choice Clinic in Jacksonville. Gavin argued the ruling will impact the state's most vulnerable youth. 'This avenue was kind of a last resort for minors who are not able to include their parents in this decision-making process for fear of retribution like being kicked out of their homes,' said Gavin. State Representative Anna Eskamani (D-Orlando) noted the judicial bypass was only used 130 times last year. 'So, it's a very small population,' said Eskamani. She said she fears even though this ruling only impacts Florida for now, it could end up having national implications. 'It could go to the US Supreme Court and it could impact the judicial waiver process for everyone across the country,' said Eskamani. The ruling came after Florida Attorney General James Uthmeier inserted himself into a case involving a 17-year-old girl who was appealing a decision that rejected her petition for a judicial waiver. In a post on social media he called the ruling a, 'Major win… protecting the rights of parents to prevent their underage children from undergoing dangerous abortions without parental consent'. [SIGN UP: Action News Jax Daily Headlines Newsletter] Click here to download the free Action News Jax news and weather apps, click here to download the Action News Jax Now app for your smart TV and click here to stream Action News Jax live.

Florida appeals court strikes down law letting minors get an abortion without parents' consent

time15-05-2025

  • Politics

Florida appeals court strikes down law letting minors get an abortion without parents' consent

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. -- A Florida appeals court ruled Wednesday that a state law that allows minors to get an abortion without their parents' consent is unconstitutional. A three-judge panel of the Fifth District Court of Appeal found that the state's judicial waiver law violates parents' Fourteenth Amendment rights to due process, citing the state's parental rights laws, a recent ruling by the Florida Supreme Court and the landmark 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision that stripped away federal abortion rights. 'Whatever asserted constitutional abortion rights may have justified Florida's judicial-waiver regime in the past unequivocally have been repudiated by both the U.S. Supreme Court and the Florida Supreme Court,' reads the appeals court opinion penned by Judge Jordan Pratt and joined by Judges John MacIver and Brian Lambert. For years, anti-abortion activists and Republican state lawmakers have worked to unravel minors' rights to petition a judge to access the procedure in Florida, which bans most abortions after six weeks, before many women even know they are pregnant. The appeals panel flagged the case as 'a question of great public importance' for the Florida Supreme Court, which ruled in 2024 that a privacy clause in the Florida Constitution does not guarantee a right to an abortion. The three-judge panel sided with arguments made by state Attorney General James Uthmeier and ruled against a 17-year-old girl who is nearly six weeks pregnant and seeking an abortion without the knowledge or consent of her father. The appeals court affirmed a lower court ruling that the girl, who is only identified as Jane Doe, lacks the 'requisite maturity' to make the decision without a parent or legal guardian involved. The opinion said the decision was based on her lack of 'emotional development and stability, her credibility and demeanor as a witness, her ability to accept responsibility, and her ability to assess the immediate and long-range consequences of her choices."

Florida appeals court strikes down law letting minors get an abortion without parents' consent
Florida appeals court strikes down law letting minors get an abortion without parents' consent

Toronto Star

time15-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Toronto Star

Florida appeals court strikes down law letting minors get an abortion without parents' consent

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) — A Florida appeals court ruled Wednesday that a state law that allows minors to get an abortion without their parents' consent is unconstitutional. A three-judge panel of the Fifth District Court of Appeal found that the state's judicial waiver law violates parents' Fourteenth Amendment rights to due process, citing the state's parental rights laws, a recent ruling by the Florida Supreme Court and the landmark 2022 U.S. Supreme Court decision that stripped away federal abortion rights.

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