On September 1, 1972, this Court affirmed, by opinion, the conviction of Jeffery C. Bigelow for encouraging or prompting the procuring of abortion by an advertisement in the Virginia Weekly, a newspaper published in Charlottesville, in violation of Code § 18.1-63.
On July 25, 1973, the Clerk of this Court received from the Supreme Court of the United States a copy of an order dated July 23, 1973, entered in the Bigelow case, voiding the judgment of this Court and remanding the case “for further consideration in light of Roe v. Wade,
The decision in Roe v. Wade, cited in the order of the Supreme Court, declared unconstitutional Texas statutes which made it a crime *342 to procure, or to attempt to procure, an abortion. Doe v. Bolton declared unconstitutional portions of Georgia statutes making abortion a crime except in certain stated instances. Both decisions were grounded upon the Fourteenth Amendment. Neither mentioned the subject of abortion advertising.
Bigelow’s is a First Amendment case. He was convicted not of abortion but for running in his newspaper a commercial advertisement for a commercial abortion agency. We held that government regulation of commercial advertising in the medical-health field was not prohibited by the First Amendment. We find nothing in the new decisions of Roe v. Wade and Doe v. Bolton which in any way affects our earlier view. So we again affirm Bigelow’s conviction.
Affirmed.
