No challenge expected on Mo. abortion law
No challenge expected on Mo. abortion law
JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — A new Missouri law requiring a 72-hour abortion waiting period is set to take effect this week, and the state’s only licensed abortion clinic isn’t planning to try to stop it.
Although Planned Parenthood officials have denounced the Missouri law as “onerous” and “burdensome” for women, the organization isn’t planning to file a lawsuit before the measure takes effect Friday. That’s because abortion-rights groups have determined that their chances of success aren’t that good.
“We’ve had our national attorneys from all of the leading women’s health organizations in the country work with us, and we have a consensus that we do not have a route at this time to go to court and to stop this law from going into effect — as disappointing and as frustrating as that is,” said Paula Gianino, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood of the St. Louis Region and Southwest Missouri.
An attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union, which has challenged other abortion laws, said it also has no plans to try to block the Missouri law from taking effect.
Missouri’s law will impose the second longest abortion waiting period in the nation behind only South Dakota, where the 72-hour period can sometimes extend longer because it doesn’t count weekends and holidays. Utah also has a 72-hour requirement, but unlike Missouri, Utah allows exceptions for rape, incest and other circumstances. Utah’s law has not been challenged in court.
A Planned Parenthood affiliate filed a federal lawsuit against South Dakota’s law after it passed in 2011 and obtained a preliminary injunction that temporarily blocked it from taking effect.
The lawsuit asserted that the waiting period imposed an “undue burden on women’s reproductive rights” and violated their constitutional right to equal protection.
But that challenge was dropped in February 2013 at the request of Planned Parenthood. The organization noted that it had adjusted physicians’ schedules at its only clinic in Sioux Falls to avoid weeks-long delays and didn’t feel confident it could prevail in the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals, which it said had “ruled against women’s interests time after time.”
California drought worries pool industry
SANTA ANA, Calif. (AP) — California swimming pool companies just regaining their financial footing after the recession are now facing a new challenge: a devastating drought that has put the state’s ubiquitous backyard pools under the microscope.
More than three dozen water agencies and local cities are cracking down on water use in swimming pools with rules that range from requiring a pool cover to prevent evaporation to banning residents from draining and refilling older ones that need repairs.
So far, the rules implemented by water districts haven’t put much of a dent in business, but those in the industry worry that could come if the drought lingers and restrictions tighten.
And, at a time when wells are running dry in some parts of the state and water-conscious homeowners are ripping out lawns, swimming pools have an image problem that could affect the business long-term if dry conditions persist. The uncertainty has pool builders looking at other bone-dry locales as far away as Australia for ways they can adapt.
“They’ve got a lot of pressure and it’s only getting hotter, it’s only getting drier,” said Alan Smith, the owner of Alan Smith Pool Plastering Inc., which drains and repairs 900 aging pools a year in Orange County.
Backyard pools range in volume from 10,000 to 30,000 gallons of water and the biggest Olympic-sized commercial pools hold more than 650,000 gallons. A typical backyard one, left uncovered, will lose around an inch of water a week due to evaporation, depending on weather conditions.
Thirty-seven cities or water districts statewide have implemented some level of restrictions on swimming pools, said Jennifer Persike, spokeswoman the Association of California Water Agencies.
Judge orders release of Guantanamo videotapes
WASHINGTON (AP) — A federal judge on Friday ordered the public release of 28 videotapes of a hunger-striking Guantanamo Bay prisoner strike being forcibly removed from his cell and force-fed.
Lawyers for the prisoner, Abu Wa’el Dhiab, have challenged his treatment as abusive.
Numerous news media outlets, including The Associated Press, had asked the court on June 20 to unseal the videotapes, which are classified “secret.”
U.S. District Court Judge Gladys Kessler granted the news media’s request, although Kessler said the tapes will remain sealed until some information on them is redacted. The material to be removed includes identifying information of everyone on the tapes except for the prisoner. She said faces other than Dhiab’s will be obscured, as will voices and names.
“Protection of the identities of Guantanamo Bay staff is a legitimate goal,” Kessler wrote. “Adequate protection can be provided by appropriate audio and visual edits, for example, blurring faces and identifying portions of uniforms, and blacking-out written materials on walls.” The government could appeal her ruling.
Dhiab’s lawyer, Jon Eisenberg, said that “we are very gratified by this decision, which will enable the American people to see with their own eyes the sorts of abuses that are being heaped on these peacefully hunger-striking detainees.”
“Once the truth is fully brought to light, we believe these terrible practices will come to an end,” Eisenberg said.
AP attorney David Schulz welcomed the decision, calling it “a strong reaffirmation of the public’s right to know what their government is up to.”
Dhiab was told in the spring he would be resettled in Uruguay, along with five other Guantanamo prisoners. But as the months have dragged on and the transfer put on hold, his standoff with military officials has only deteriorated, at times turning violent.
On Thursday, the judge rejected a request by the Obama administration to close a hearing into Dhiab’s case scheduled for Monday.
Dhiab, a Syrian prisoner, has been held at the Navy-run prison for terrorist suspects at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, since August 2002.
The Obama administration has been in court for months seeking to limit the amount of information released in Dhiab’s case.
“The court is well aware, as the government has emphasized, that in no case involving Guantanamo Bay detainees has any court ordered disclosure of classified information over the government’s opposition,” Kessler wrote in a 29-page opinion ordering release of the tapes.
“However — to be clear — that does not mean that in a given factual situation no court has the discretion to do so if warranted,” the judge added.
Standard protocol at penal institutions nationwide is to videotape forcible cell extractions. What’s unusual about these videotapes is that many of them include footage of force-feedings in addition to forcible cell extractions.
AP attorney David Schulz called the decision “a strong reaffirmation of the public’s right to know what their government is up to.”
Hunger strikes at Guantanamo Bay have been taking place since the early days of the island facility’s use as a prison for terrorist suspects following the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
In early 2013, as many as 100 detainees began a hunger strike to protest their uncertain fate. The U.S. has long disclosed how many are refusing to eat and whether they meet military guidelines to be force fed. But late last year, the disclosure ended. A Navy spokesman said in December 2013 that peaceful protest was allowed but that reporting numbers to the public would no longer be done.
The former Navy commander at Guantanamo Bay, Rear Adm. Richard Butler, said in a court declaration filed in July that even though the forced cell extraction videos are lawful, humane and appropriate, they “are particularly susceptible to use as propaganda and to incite a public reaction because of their depiction of forcible … guard interaction with detainees.”
The videos that also contain footage of forced-feedings could be used “to foment anti-American sentiment and inflame Muslim sensitivities as it depicts … personnel providing medical care to a detainee while he is restrained,” Butler said in the declaration.
Making public a video showing a detainee receiving medical care while restrained “would exacerbate the world’s perception of detainees in U.S. custody,” Butler added. “Public release, in whole or in part, of videos showing forced cell extractions” or feedings would cause “serious damage to national security.”
In her ruling, Kessler disputed many of Butler’s points.
After viewing the government videos and analyzing Butler’s arguments, she found that they were “unacceptably vague, speculative, lack specificity or are just plain implausible,” she wrote.
The government has already released substantial information relating to the feeding process, including the layout of and equipment in the feeding space.
“It strains credulity to conclude that release of these videos has a substantial probability of causing the harm the government predicts,” Kessler wrote.
The government argues that releasing the videos would allow adversaries to reconstruct portions of the camp infrastructure, threatening the security of the camps. But the judge noted that much of that information already is in the public domain.
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