The struggle of Mississippi’s last legal abortion clinic took an unusual turn Wednesday when the clinic’s attorneys filed a brief essentially accusing the state of lying to the Supreme Court. They also asked the Supreme Court not to take the case.
In February, Mississippi petitioned the Supreme Court to overturn an appeals court ruling that kept the clinic open. At issue is a 2012 law that requires that all abortion clinics’ doctors have admitting privileges at local hospitals. The clinic’s doctors have been unable to comply with the law — in some cases, hospitals have refused to even send them applications — which likely did not surprise the state’s governor, Phil Bryant, who declared his goal “to try and end abortion in Mississippi” when he signed the law. The 5th Circuit Court of Appeals blocked the law last summer, saying Mississippi could not tell women they had to go out of state for their constitutional rights.
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In urging the Supreme Court to take its case and allow it to shut down the clinic, Mississippi told the court it was only trying to protect women’s health and “to level the playing field by requiring all doctors on staff at abortion clinics to meet the same professional licensing standards applicable to doctors in other areas of outpatient surgical practice.” That implied that abortion providers were uniquely unregulated. But attorneys at the Center for Reproductive Rights, who represent Mississippi’s Jackson Women’s Health Organization, say that’s “simply not true.”
“Mississippi physicians who provide similar or less safe surgical procedures in their offices, such as colonoscopy, hernia repair, hemorrhoidectomy, and dilation and curettage, do not need admitting privileges,” according to Jackson Women’s Health Organization’s brief to the court. “Mississippi physicians can even provide surgery with general anesthesia in their offices without having admitting privileges.”








