This week, a court hearing in Alabama exposed a new constitutional landmine in the abortion conflict: whether prosecutors from conservative states can punish people for abortions that take place in progressive ones. And the deep ambiguities raised in this case may ultimately be settled by a conservative U.S. Supreme Court.
After the Supreme Court decimated abortion rights last year, Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall proclaimed that organizations that helped Alabama abortion seekers access services out of state could face criminal conspiracy charges in Alabama. In July, two reproductive health centers and the Yellowhammer Fund, which provides support to low-income abortion seekers, sued Marshall, arguing that the prosecutions he outlined would be plainly unconstitutional. A conspiracy prosecution, they argued, could threaten speech protected under the First Amendment; it could curtail the constitutional right to travel; and it could violate the full faith and credit clause, which requires that state courts respect other states’ laws and court judgments.
The law is a mess when it comes to whether criminal laws like Alabama’s can apply extraterritorially.
Marshall has filed a motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ lawsuit, arguing that he does have the authority to prosecute anyone in Alabama who helps someone else access abortion out of state. At first, it seems that Marshall’s motion is doomed to fail — an empty threat meant to intimidate abortion seekers who might otherwise have exercised their right to travel.
But the law is a mess when it comes to whether criminal laws like Alabama’s can apply extraterritorially — not least because states have not tried to police what happens in other jurisdictions since the Civil War. That makes Marshall’s threat deadly serious.
Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe, abortion opponents have floated a number of proposals to target travel to and services offered in progressive states. Some limits on these proposed bans seem clear, as far as current law is concerned. If an antiabortion state authorized lawsuits against a resident who traveled to a pro-choice state for abortion, modern legal rules seem to forbid it: They focus on where the relevant conduct took place — and where a purported injury occurred — not on where the plaintiff or defendant live. It is therefore likely unconstitutional to prosecute an Alabama resident for having an abortion in California.
A conservative state could claim that it has more skin in the game because both the abortion seeker and the fetus are based there. But the Supreme Court has not yet recognized a fetus as a separate, rights-holding person. Nor can states prosecute crimes that take place entirely outside of their state lines.
But states can prosecute elements of a crime that occur within their borders. This is the theory Marshall is banking on: He is threatening to charge abortion funds and clinics based on the plans they make in Alabama to help others seek legal abortions elsewhere. Even if planning takes place entirely within Alabama, though, states generally have to have a reason under current law to regulate conduct that takes place outside of state lines. Alabama tries to address this issue by claiming an interest in protecting the rights, life and even personhood of the fetus.








