Courts

Wisconsin Supreme Court grapples with an 1849 state law and the legality of abortion

An attorney representing the Republican district attorney of Sheboygan County sought to convince the liberal-leaning Wisconsin Supreme Court to reactivate a 175-year-old law that has been construed as an abortion ban after a Dane County judge ruled it was a prohibition on feticide.

Associated Press

November 11, 2024

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Three people seated in rows of stackable chairs, desk chairs and a swiveling office chair sitting in a room with a skylight and illuminated light fixtures watch a projection screen bordered by wood moulding shows a video feed of a man standing at a podium with an open binder filled with papers on its surface, with another person seated in the background in a high-backed chair, with a graphic at the bottom with the text Wisconsin Supreme Court.

Reporters sitting in an overflow room watch WisconsinEye's feed of the Wisconsin Supreme Court holding oral arguments in a lawsuit over the status of abortion law in the state on Nov. 11, 2024, at the Wisconsin State Capitol in Madison. (Credit: PBS Wisconsin)


AP News

By Todd Richmond, AP

MADISON, Wis. (AP) — A conservative prosecutor’s attorney struggled Nov. 11 to persuade the Wisconsin Supreme Court to reactivate the state’s 175-year-old abortion ban, drawing a tongue-lashing from two of the court’s liberal justices during oral arguments.

Sheboygan County’s Republican district attorney, Joel Urmanski, has asked the high court to overturn a Dane County judge’s ruling in 2023 that invalidated the ban. A ruling isn’t expected for weeks but abortion advocates almost certainly will win the case given that liberal justices control the court. One of them, Janet Protasiewicz, remarked on the campaign trail that she supports abortion rights.

The two-hour session on Nov. 11 amounted to little more than political theater. Liberal Justice Rebecca Dallet told Urmanski’s attorney, Matthew Thome, that the ban was passed in 1849 by white men who held all the power and that he was ignoring everything that has happened since. Jill Karofsky, another liberal justice, pointed out that the ban provides no exceptions for rape or incest and that reactivation could result in doctors withholding medical care. She told Thome that he was essentially asking the court to sign a “death warrant” for women and children in Wisconsin.

“This is the world gone mad,” Karofsky said.

The ban stood until 1973, when the U.S. Supreme Court’s landmark Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion nationwide nullified it. Legislators never repealed the ban, however, and conservatives have argued the Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe two years ago reactivated it.

Democratic Attorney General Josh Kaul filed a lawsuitcan survive with medical help after 21 weeks of gestation.

Urmanski contends that the ban was never repealed and that it can co-exist with the 1985 law because that law didn’t legalize abortion at any point. Other modern-day abortion restrictions also don’t legalize the practice, he argues.

Dane County Circuit Judge Diane Schlipper ruled in 2023 that the ban outlaws feticide — which she defined as the killing of a fetus without the mother’s consent — but not consensual abortions. The ruling emboldened Planned Parenthood to resume offering abortions in Wisconsin after halting procedures after Roe was overturned.

Urmanski asked the state Supreme Court in February to overturn Schlipper’s ruling without waiting for a lower appellate decision.

Thome told the justices on Nov. 11 that he wasn’t arguing about the implications of reactivating the ban. He maintained that the legal theory that new laws implicitly repeal old ones is shaky. He also contended that the ban and the newer abortion restrictions can overlap just like laws establishing different penalties for the same crime. A ruling that the 1985 law effectively repealed the ban would be “anti-democratic,” Thome added.

“It’s a statute this Legislature has not repealed and you’re saying, no, you actually repealed it,” he said.

Dallet shot back that disregarding laws passed over the last 40 years to go back to 1849 would be undemocratic.

Planned Parenthood of Wisconsin filed a separate lawsuit in February asking the state Supreme Court to rule directly on whether a constitutional right to abortion exists in the state. The justices have agreed to take the case but haven’t scheduled oral arguments yet.

Editor’s note: This is corrected to indicate the Sheboygan County district attorney’s first name is Joel.


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