The petitioner in this certiorari proceeding is a physician and the chief of staff of the Providence Lying-In Hospital. He seeks a reversal of a Superior Court justice’s denial of his motion to quash or stay a subpoena ordering him to appear and testify before a grand jury sitting in Providence. The subpoena, he believes, is the result of newspaper articles describing procedures that have been practiced at Lying-In and which may have violated various portions of G. L. 1956 (1969 Reenactment) ch. 3 of title 11, the state’s repository of its anti-abortion statutes.
We issued the writ on February 10, 1972. Since that time, the Attorney General has made no effort to have petitioner appear before the grand jury. On January 22, 1973, the United States Supreme Court ruled that Georgia’s and Texas’s anti-abortion statutes were unconstitutional.
Doe
v.
Bolton,
The constitutionality of ch. 3 of title 11 is not in issue in the case at bar. Doctor Buxton’s petition presents two simple questions. They are: (1) can a person ignore a summons to appear before a grand jury simply because he thinks the statute which ‘ proscribes the activities about which he may be asked to testify is unconstitutional; and (2) was the Superior Court’s denial of petitioner’s motion such an abuse of discretion as would justify a reversal of the order now being reviewed? The answer to both queries is negative.
Several years ago, five of our predecessors advised thé then Governor that they believed the grand jury envisioned
Recently, the United States Supreme Court has reaffirmed the historically grounded obligation of a citizen to appear and give his evidence before the grand jury. Such a duty, the Court has said, while “onerous,” is necessary to the administration of justice. A grand jury subpoena is not to be regarded as some magical document that dissolves all constitutional protections. Grand juries are subject to judicial control and upon a proper showing their subpoenas can be quashed.
United States
v.
Dionisio,
41
0
U. S. 1,
While our predecessors in their 1939 advice to the Governor observed that a grand jury could not “investigate and act” upon mere “rumor or reports,” these remarks must be placed in proper perspective. Usually, the identity of an offender and the precise nature of the offense, if there be one, is developed at the conclusion of the grand jury’s labors, not at the beginning.
Hendricks
v.
United States,
We have stated on countless occasions that a statute enjoys a presumption of constitutionality unless it is shown to be unconstitutional beyond a reasonable doubt. At the time the subpoena was served upon petitioner, our state’s statutory enactments relating to abortion were in full force and effect. They were entitled to be regarded as presumptively constitutional. The petitioner’s thoughts as to the Supreme Court’s future course of action in this area gave him no excuse to ignore the subpoena. In fact, at this juncture no one knows the proposed thrust and purpose of the jury’s inquiry.
On the record before us, we can do no more than repeat here what was said in
In re Pappas,
In summary then, the ultimate decision as to what shall be investigated and which witnesses shall be called
1
rests with
The petition for certiorari is denied and dismissed.
Notes
In
Taglianetti
v.
Fontaine,
105 R. I. 596,
