Pursuant to the Court’s Scheduling Order (Doc. 21), Defendants were permitted to file three- separate motions to dismiss that addressed distinct sets of issues relating to the Louisiana Legislature's 2016 regulations on abortion. Before the Court are Defendants’ First Motion for Partial Dismissal RE: H.B. 606, H.B. 1019, and H.B. 488 (Doc 27); Second Motion for Partial Dismissal RE: S.B. 33, H.B. 815, and H.B. 38 (Doc. 40); and Third Motion for Partial Dismissal RE: H.B. 1081 and Cumulative Impact Claim (Doc. 58). Defendants seek dismissal of Plaintiffs’ claims that challenge certain laws enacted by the Louisiana Legislature during the 2016 Regular Legislative Session that place restrictions on abortion providers, patients, doctors, state and local government agencies, as well as private businesses that contract with the state. Plaintiffs in this suit are June Medical Services, LLC (“Clinic Plaintiff’),
I. BACKGROUND
During the 2016 Regular Legislative Session, the Louisiana Legislature enacted several laws that address the provision of abortion services within the state: House’ Bill 606, enacted as Act 304 (“H.B. 606”); House Bill 1019, enacted as Act 563 (“H.B. 1019”); House Bill 488, enacted as Act 98 (“H.B. 488”); Senate Bill 33, enacted as Act 196 (“S.B. 33”); House Bill 815, enacted as Act 593 (“H.B. 815”); House Bill 386, enacted as Act 97 (“H.B. 386”); and House Bill 1081, enacted as Act 264 (“H.B. 1081”). Plaintiffs challenge the legislation both individually and collectively.
A. H.B.606
H.B. 606 prohibits any "institution, board, commission, department, agency, official, or employee of the state, or of any local political subdivision thereof,” from “contract[ing] .with, awarding] any grant to, or otherwise bestow[ing] any funding upon, an entity or organization that performs abortions, or that contracts with an entity or organization that performs abortions, in th[e] state.” (Doc. 22-7 at p. 2,11. 17-20; id. at p. 3, 1. 1). This prohibition applies “to state funds, federal funds, and any other funds that may be used for purposes of contracting for services, providing reimbursements, or grant issuance.” (id. at p. 3,11. 2-3). The statute specifically provides that this prohibition “shall not be construed to restrict funding to an entity that may perform the following types of abortions, exclusively”: (1) “[a]n abortion [that] is medically necessary to prevent the death of the mother,” (2) “[a]n abortion in a case when the mother is a victim of rape or incest,” or (3) “[a]n abortion performed when the pregnancy is diagnosed as medically
Clinic Plaintiff alleges that H.B. 606 “threatens abortion clinics’ contracts with government entities,” as well as “their business relationships with all of their vendors” because H.B. 606 “forces every entity in the State of Louisiana into the Hob-son’s choice of being eligible [either] to do business with, or receive funds from,- the entire state and local public sector ... or ... to contract with abortion clinics.” (Doc. 22 at ¶¶ 107-08). Setting aside the .effects that Clinic Plaintiff alleges will result from H.B. 606’s prohibition of awarding state contracts to entities thát contract with abortion providers, Clinic Plaintiff asserts that H.B. 606 facially prohibits it from “contracting for essential services” from government entities. (Id. at ¶ 110). According to Clinic Plaintiff, the effect of H.B. 606 will be that “all [of] Louisiana’s abortion clinics will close,” thereby depriving women in Louisiana of “access to legal' abortion” in the State. (Id. at ¶ 109), Additionally, Clinic Plaintiff alleges that “H.B, 606 imposes a legal stigma on abortion clinics, isolating them by singling them out to Louisiana businesses as uniquely unqualified entities with whom to contract.” (Id. at ¶ 111).
B. H.B. 1019
H.B. 1019 makes it unlawful “for any person to intentionally perform or attempt to perform an abortion of an unborn child of twenty or more weeks post-fertilization age” when that person has “knowledge that the-pregnant woman is seeking the abortion solely because the unborn child has been diagnosed with either a genetic abnormality or a potential for a genetic abnormality.” (Doc. 22-2 at p. 3,11. 10-15). Further, the statute requires that all women seeking an abortion first be provided an informational document regarding fetal genetic abnormalities: H.B. 1019 makes it unlawful
for a person to intentionally perform or attempt to perform an abortion of an unborn child of less than twenty weeks post-fertilization age without first providing the pregnant woman with an informational document including resources, programs, and services for pregnant women who have a diagnosis of fetal--genetic abnormality and resources, programs, and services for infants and children born with disabilities.
'(Id. at p. 3, 11. 16-21). The statute directs the Louisiana Department of Health and Hospitals (“DHH”) to develop this informational document. Pursuant to the statute, neither of these provisions shall apply “whenever the abortion is necessary [sic] to save the life of the mother.” (Id. at p. 4, 11. 3-4).
Plaintiffs challenge both the ban and the informational document. (Doc. 22 at ¶¶ .172-74). In reference to the prohibition on abortions performed after the fetus has reached a gestational age of twenty weeks when a physician has reason .to believe that the woman is seeking the abortion due. to actual or potential genetic abnormalities of the fetus, Plaintiffs allege that H.B. 1019 “criminalizes pre-viability abortion based solely on the reason [that] the woman is seeking the abortion.” (Id. at 1Í 63). Regarding the requirement that all women seeking an abortion be given an informational document containing information about fetal genetic .abnormalities, Plaintiffs assert that “[f]or the great majority of women seeking abortions, who have not had a diagnosis of fetal genetic abnormality, or whose pregnancy is medically futile, this information is irrelevant to their .decision.” (Id. at ¶ 71).
C. H.B.488
Pursuant to H.B. 488, in order to lawfully perform an abortion in the- State of Louisiana, a physician must be “board-certified in obstetrics and gynecology or
Plaintiffs allege that “H.B. 488 limits, without medical justification, the pool of physicians eligible to perform abortion and thus makes it even more difficult for women to obtain abortion[s] in their own communities.” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 102). Additionally, Plaintiffs assert that H.B. 488 “also limits, without medical justification, the pool of physicians the Clinic Plaintiff! ] may hire to perform abortions.” (Id.). According to Plaintiffs, H.B. 488 “reduces women’s ac-' cess to" abortions in Louisiana by exacerbating the current shortage of physicians providing abortions in Louisiana, and it threatens the ongoing viability of Clinic Plaintiff!] by limiting [its] ability to replace departing physicians and to hire new ones.” (Id.).
D. S.B.33
S.B. 33 prohibits any person from “knowingly and for money! — including but not limited to fees for storage or handling, any payments for reimbursement, repayments, or compensation, or any other consideration! — ][b]uy[ing], selling], receiving], or otherwise transferpng] or acquiring] a fetal organ or body part resulting from an induced abortion [or] [t]ransport[ing] with the intent to sell or otherwise transfer a fetal organ or body part resulting from an induced abortion.” (Doc. 22-4 at p. 2, 11. 10-16). The provision also makes' it unlawful for any person to “[transport a fetal organ or body part resulting from an induced abortion that has been acquired by any person via any [of the previously described] transaction[s].”' (Id. at p. 2,11. 17-18).
Plaintiffs allege that “S.B. 33 prohibits] women who choose abortion from consenting to the donation of their fetal tissue for scientific research,” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 87), which “stigmatize[s]” them because the provision does not prohibit “women who have experienced a miscaiTiage” from donating their fetal tissue, (Id. at ¶ 143). Plaintiffs similarly aver that “S.B. 33 ... stigmatizes and discriminates against physicians who perform abortions by providing among the harshest legal penalties— decades of imprisonment at hard labor— for disposing of an embryo or fetus in a manner that would be legal if produced through miscarriage.” (Id. at ¶ 144).
E. H.B.815
H.B. 815 requires “[e]ach physician who performs or induces an abortion [that] does not result in a live birth [to] insure that the remains of the child are disposed of ... by interment or cremation.” (Doc. 22-3 at p. 2, 11. 15-16, 18). The regulation that implements this provision requires a physician, prior to performing an abortion, “orally and in writing [to] inform the pregnant woman seeking an abortion ... that
Regarding the requirement that fetal remains be interred or cremated, Plaintiffs' assert that H. B. 815 “on its face, bans medication abortion, a commonly used method of abortion in the first trimester, and the only one allowing a woman to pass a pregnancy at home, because an embryo miscarried at home through medication abortion cannot in practice be interred or cremated.” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 6), Plaintiffs further allege that H. B. 815’s prohibition on the sale, donation, acceptance, distribution, or transfer of fetal remains “irrationally den[ies] women who have had an abortion the ability to donate fetal tissue, and to determine how embryonic or fetal tissue will be disposed of, while permitting women who have experienced a miscarriage to do so,” (id. at ¶ 142), thereby “stigmatizing]” those women, (id. at ¶ 143).
F.H.B.386
In essence, H.B. 386 increases — from twenty-four to seventy-two hours — the period of time that must elapse between a patient’s receipt of various information and documents and a physician’s performance of an abortion procedure on the patient (“waiting period”). (See, e.g., Doc. 22-5 at p. 5, 1. 22). “If the pregnant woman certifies in writing that she currently lives one[-]hundred[-]fifty miles or more from the nearest licensed outpatient abortion facility to her residence,” however, she must adhere to a twenty-four-hour waiting period. (Id. at p. 5, 11. 11-13). Plaintiffs allege that by increasing the waiting period from twenty-four to seventy-two hours, H.B. 386 “[d]elays ... abortion care, ... exposing] women to greater health risks associated with later abortions and longer pregnancies ... and increase[ing] anxiety, suffering, and expense.” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 93).
G. H.B. 1081
H. B. 1081 makes it unlawful for “any person to intentionally perform or attempt to perform a dismemberment abortion and thereby kill an unborn child unless necessary to prevent serious health risk to the unborn child’s mother.” (Doc. 22-1 at p. 4, 11.16-18). The provision graphically defines “dismemberment abortion” as any procedure in which a physician, “with the purpose of causing the death of an unborn child, ... purposely dismember[s] a living unborn child and extract[s] him or her one piece at a time from the uterus through use of clamps, grasping forceps, tongs, scissors, or a similar instrument that, through the convergence of two rigid levers, slices, crushes, or grasps a portion of the unborn child’s body to cut or rip it off or apart.” (Id. at p. 3,11.16-21).
Plaintiffs allege that H.B. 1081 prohibits “dilation and evacuation ([“]D & E[”]) procedures[
H. Cumulative Impact
The laws passed during the 2016 Regular Legislative Session are just the latest in the Louisiana Legislature’s aggressive regulation of abortion. Plaintiffs contend that the State’s goal is a “regulatory system aimed at virtually every conceivable point of obstruction in abortion care delivery in Louisiana” with the intention that “access to legal abortion in Louisiana will become increasingly unavailable, until it does not exist in practice, while remaining legal in theory.” (Id. at ¶ 113). Therefore, Plaintiffs argue that the Court should consider the impacts of H.B. 606, H.B. 1019, H.B. 488, S.B. 33, H.B. 815, and H.B. 386, not individually, but collectively. (See id. at ¶ 159). According to.Plaintiffs, the cumulative impact of the 2016 regulations “is greater than .the'[constitutional] violations imposed by • each challenged -restriction taken alone.” (Id. at ¶ 158).
II. LEGAL STANDARD
A. Lack of Jurisdiction
Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1), a claim is “‘properly dismissed for" lack of subject-matter jurisdiction when the court lacks the statutory or constitutional power to adjudicate’ the claim.” In re FEMA Trailer Formaldehyde Prods. Liab. Litig.,
A related, but distinct, issue of justiciability is ripeness. To determine whether a claim is ripe, the court must “balance ‘(1) the fitness of the issues for judicial decision, and (2) the hardship to the parties of withholding court consideration.’ ” Planned Parenthood of Gulf Coast, Inc.,
B. Failure to State a Claim
When reviewing a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, the Court must “áccept[ ] all well-pleaded facts as true and view[ ] those facts in the.light most favorable to the plaintiff.” Hines v. Alldredge,
Plaintiffs challenge the legislation on substantive due process and equal protection grounds,. . .
1. Substantive Due Process
. Under the United States Constitution, women have a long-established
2. Equal Protection
“The Equal Protection Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment commands that no State shall ‘deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws,’ which is essentially a direction that all persons similarly situated should be treated alike.” City of Cleburne v. Cleburne Living Ctr.,
III. DISCUSSION
Whenever a litigant asserts that his or her constitutional rights have been violated, the Court reviews such claims with the utmost seriousness. In all three of their motions,' however, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ challenges to each of the state laws should be dismissed for lack of justici-ability and alternatively for failure to state a claim. The Court addresses both Rule 12(b) motions together because they are analyzed under the same standard. See Benton,
C. H.B.606
1. Direct Injury
Clinic Plaintiff alleges that H.B. 606 injures it by “prohibiting [it] from contracting for essential services” with state or local government entities, (Doc. 22 at ¶ 110), and “threatening] ... [its] business relationships with all of [its] vendors, on whom [it] depend[s] for a vast array of essential services,” (id. at ¶ 108). .
Additionally, Clinic Plaintiff argues that the clear wording of the law prohibits them from contracting with any governmental entity, including those that provide essential services, such as water and sewage. According to Clinic Plaintiff, H.B. 606 prohibits even these contracts for essential services, which are only provided by government entities and cannot be obtained
Regarding its business relationships with its vendors, Clinic Plaintiff alleges that H.B. 606 “forces every entity in the State of Louisiana into the Hobson’s choice of being eligible to do business with, or receive funds from, the entire state and local public sector ... or to be able to contract with abortion clinics.” (Id. at ¶ 107). “The entire government of Louisiana,' and all local governments in th[e] state,” according to Clinic Plaintiff, “bestow billions of dollars of business and funding on the private sector each year,” and therefore vendors will invariably elect to cease doing business with healthcare providers that offer abortion services because state and local government entities are' a “many-fold larger potential source of revenues for vendors and others wishing t'o business in the state or receive state funds ... than are the state’s four remaining abortion clinics.” (Id. at ¶ 106). '
Defendants point out that Clinic Plaintiff has not alleged that it has been unable to contract for essential services with any state or local government entity, nor has Clinic Plaintiff alleged that any of its current business relationships with vendors have been negatively impacted by H.B. 606.
Clinic Plaintiff has neither pleaded nor argued that H.B. 606 actually prohibits it from contracting for essential services with government entities or caused any of Clinic Plaintiffs vendors to cease doing business with in.' Clinic Plaintiffs alleged injuries, therefore, are future injuries, but those injuries are not “conjectural or hypothetical” in nature and therefore confer standing upon Plaintiffs. Roark,
Additionally, at this stage, Clinic Plaintiff has sufficiently pleaded that H.B. 606 imposes an unconstitutional condition. (See Doc 22 at ¶ 187). It is well established that states may indicate their preference for childbirth over abortion and that states have no duty to fund or promote abortions. See Maher v. Roe,
Although the unconstitutional conditions doctrine has traditionally applied to First Amendment, claims, the Supreme Court has made clear that the doctrine applies to rights outside the first amendment context. See Koontz v. St. Johns River Water Mgmt. Dist.,
However, any threatened injury to Clinic Plaintiffs business relationships with its vendors is too “conjectural or hypothetical” in nature to confer standing. Roark,
2. Stigmatic Injury
Stigmatic injury caused by a government action “accords a basis for standing ... to ‘those persons who are personally denied equal treatment’ by the challenged discriminatory conduct,” Allen,
Clinic Plaintiff has identified a concrete interest that it alleges amounts to a stigma: H.B. 606 “singles] [abortion providers] out to Louisiana businesses as uniquely unqualified entities with whom to contract.” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 111). Because the objects of the regulation that H.B, 606 effectuates are “Louisiana businesses,” entities who are not parties to this suit, the Court must determine whether the alleged stigma in this case is caused by H.B. 606 itself or other motivations that these third parties who are not before the Court might possess. See Planned Parenthood of Gulf Coast, Inc.,
D. H.B. 1019
1. Prohibition on Abortions Performed After the Fetus Has Reached a Gestational Age of Twenty Weeks when a Physician Has Reason to Believe that the Woman Is Seeking the Abortion Due to the Actual or Potential Genetic Abnormalities of the Fetus
Among the three elements that a plaintiff must show to establish ' her standing is'that “a favorable decision is likely to redress the [alleged] injury.” Planned Parenthood of Gulf Coast,
Plaintiffs' allege, as a discrete injury, that H.B. 1019’s - prohibition on abortions performed after the fetus has reached a gestational age of twenty weeks when a physician has reason to believe that the woman is seeking the abortion due to the actual or potential genetic abnormalities of the fetus “criminalizes pre-viability abortion based solely on the reason [that] the woman is seeking the abortion.” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 63). Another Louisiana statute, however, criminalizes all abortions performed after the fetus has reached a gestational age of twenty weeks, regardless of a worn-an’s
2. Informational Document Containing Information about Fetal Genetic Abnormalities
Defendants argue that Plaintiffs’ challenge to H.B. 1019’s requirement that physicians disclose to each woman seeking an abortion an informational document addressing fetal genetic abnormalities is not ripe for review because the informational document has yet to be promulgated. Plaintiffs retort that their challenge to H.B. 1019’s mandated disclosure of the informational document is not based on the “content of the document, but rather the fact that all women must receive irrelevant information [regarding fetal genetic abnormalities] in the first place.” (Doc. 38 at p. 18 (emphasis added)). Therefore, according to Plaintiffs, their claim is ripe because it can be evaluated by the Court without viewing the actual document that must be disclosed to women seeking abortions. (Id).
The Court finds that Plaintiffs have adequately pleaded that their claim turns on the purely legal question of whether an informational document that contains information about fetal genetic abnormalities is “relevant” and therefore permissible. See Tex. Med. Providers Performing Abortion Servs. v. Lakey,
Regardless, Defendants argue that Plaintiffs will not suffer harm because, under state regulations, Plaintiffs do not have to provide the informational document until thirty days following its promulgation. See La. Admin. Code tit. 48. § 4431(G)(4)(d). Defendant James E. Stewart, Sr., the district attorney who has jurisdiction over Clinic Plaintiff, has also indicated that he does not intend to enforce the mandatory disclosure requirements of H.B. 1019 nor seek the relevant criminal penalties for noncompliance until thirty days following the promulgation of the informational document. (See Doc. 61-1 at ¶ 5).
Although the informational document has yet to be promulgated, Plaintiffs have adequately pleaded that they will be harmed by the law. Importantly, Defendants do not claim that the State may decline to promulgate the document required by H.B. 1019, nor do they claim that they may not enforce the law after the thirty-day grace period ends. The hardship required for ripeness can be met by the
E. H.B.488
1. Standing of Physician Plaintiffs
In order to establish her standing to bring suit, a plaintiff must demonstrate that “(1) [s]he has sustained an ‘injury in fact’ that is both (a) ‘concrete and particularized’ and (b) ‘actual or imminent, not conjectural or hypothetical.’ ” Planned Parenthood of Gulf Coast,
H.B. 488 limits the class of physicians who may lawfully perform abortions in the State of Louisiana to physicians who are either “board-certified in obstetrics and gynecology or family medicine” or “enrolled in a residency program for obstetrics and gynecology or family medicine” and are “under the direct supervision of a physician who is board-certified in obstetrics and gynecology or family medicine.” (Doc. 22-6 at p. 2, 11. 12-16). Under previous law, a physician could lawfully perform an abortion as long as he or she merely had “enrolled in or ha[d] completed a residency ... in obstetrics and gynecology or family medicine.” {Id. at p. 2, 11. 12-13).
All of the Physician Plaintiffs are either board-certified in obstetrics and gynecology or family medicine, {see Doc. 22 at ¶¶ 22-24), and thus H.B. 488 does not preclude any of them from continuing to perform abortions in Louisiana. Physician Plaintiffs therefore have suffered no “injury-in-fact” as a result of H.B. 488, and the Physician Plaintiffs thus lack standing to challenge H.B. 488. See Planned Parenthood of Gulf Coast,
2. Clinic Plaintiff and Claims Brought on Behalf of Patient Plaintiffs
As stated previously, “[t]he injury-in-fact element requires that a plaintiff show that he or she ‘has sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining some direct injury as the result of the challenged official conduct and the injury or threat of injury must be both real and immediate, not conjectural or hypothetical.’” Roark,
Plaintiffs allege that H.B. 488.“limits, without medical justification, the pool of physicians eligible to perform abortion and thus makes it even more difficult for women to obtain abortion in them own communities.” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 102). Additionally, Plaintiffs assert that H.B. 488 “also limits, without medical justification, the pool of physicians the ... Plaintiffs [that operate clinics] may hire to perform abortions,” thereby “reducing] womens access to abortions in Louisiana by exacerbating the current shortage of physicians providing abortions.in-Louisiana ... and .., threatening] the ongoing viability of [the] Plaintiffs [that operate clinics] by limiting their ability to replace departing physicians and to hire new ones.” (Id.). In essence, Plaintiffs aver that “[i]f Louisiana abortion clinics are unable to hire new physicians who retire or move away, they will be unable to keep their doors open,” and H.B. 488 inhibits their ability to remain open because it unduly restricts the pool of physicians whom the clinics- may hire. (Doc. 22 at ¶ 127).
• Plaintiffs have thus alleged a future injury that will result -from H.B. 488 — that the legislation will render it more difficult for Clinic Plaintiff to replace its current physicians when- they “retire or move away.” (Id.). This injury is “not conjectural or . hypothetical,” however, because one of ■Physician Plaintiffs, Doctor Doe 3, is “nearing retirement age” and suffers from a “serious health issue.” See Roark,
The Court finds that this injury — the increased difficulty in. hiring additional physicians (see Doc. 22 at ¶ 102) — confers standing to Clinic Plaintiff. Plaintiffs, in their Amended.Complaint, plead that H.B. 488 creates an additional hurdle for Clinic Plaintiff in its search for a replacement physician for Doctor Doe 3. (Id.). Whatever other challenges Clinic Plaintiff faces in hiring a replacement for Doctor Doe 3, the discreet injury that H.B. 488 causes can be redressed by a favorable ruling. In other words, a favorable ruling may not eliminate all difficulties Clinic Plaintiff faces in
F. S.B.33
As stated previously, “[t]he injury-in-fact element requires that a plaintiff show that he or she ‘has sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining some direct injury as the result of the challenged official conduct and the injury or threat of injury must be both real and immediate, not conjectural or hypothetical.’” Roark,
At this stage, Plaintiffs have not shown the required injury in fact to confer standing because Plaintiffs have not alleged that they engage in or would engage in the conduct prohibited by S.B. 33. Similarly, regarding Plaintiffs’ stigmatic injury claim, this Court notes that in order to establish that they have suffered a stigmatic injury, Plaintiffs must identify “some concrete interest with respect to which [they] are personally subject to discriminatory treatment.” Allen, 468 at 757 n.22; see also Moore,
G. H.B.815
1. Burial or Cremation
H.B. 815 requires “[e]ach physician who performs or induces an abortion [that] does not result in a live birth [to] insure that the remains of the child are disposed of ... by interment or cremation.” (Doc. 22-3 at p. 2, 11. 15-16, 18). Plaintiffs allege that this portion of H.B. 815 creates an undue burden in two respects.
First, Plaintiffs allege that this provision “on its face, bans." medication abortion, a commonly used method of abortion in the first trimester, and the only one allowing, a woman to pass a pregnancy at home, because an embryo miscarried at ■ home through medication abortion cannot in practice be interred or cremated.” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 6). Defendants assert that Plaintiffs’ claim that the provision has the effect of outlawing medication abortions, in which the fetus is expelled outside a medical setting and is disposed of by the mother, is belied by the emergency regulation - that implements this provision. (Doc., 40-1 at p. 13). That emergency regulation provides interpretive clarity that the internment-or-cremation requirement “shall not apply to abortions induced by the administration of medications when the evacuation of any human remains occurs at a later time and not in the presence of the inducing physician or at the facility in which the physician administered the inducing medications.” (Doc. 40-1 at p. 13 (quoting La. Admin Code tit. 16, § 102(B))).
Seeond, Plaintiffs allege that H.B. 815 “stigmatizes women seeking abortion ... treats women seeking abortions differently
The Court finds that -Plaintiffs have standing and- have alleged that H.B. 815 places an undue burden on a woman’s right to terminate a pregnancy prior to the fetus obtaining viability. Regarding the claim that H.B. 815 effectively bans medication abortions, such a claim is a purely legal issue that is ripe for adjudication. See Planned Parenthood of Gulf Coast, Inc.,
The State’s emergency regulation does not affect the- ripeness of the claim. In some ways, the regulation is broader than the statute, creating even greater confusion among the Plaintiffs about how to comply with the state rules. (See Doc. 47 at p. 4). Additionally, the regulation does not bind all state actors empowered to impose discipline against Plaintiffs under H.B. 815, such as the state board of medical examiners. (See Doc. 22 at ¶ 79); La. Rev. Stat, § 40: 1061.29. Therefore, the Court is not obligated to defer to the regulation’s interpretation of the statute. See Carhart I,
The Court will also allow Plaintiffs’ equal protection claim regarding fetal burial or cremation to go forward. Plaintiffs have alleged that the statute treats women who have abortions differently than women who experience miscarriages. (Doc. 22 at ¶ 84). Therefore, Plaintiffs have sufficiently pleaded that their patients are singled out from women who are similarly situated.
2. Donation of Fetal Tissue
Additionally, H.B. 815 makes it unlawful “for any person or entity to buy, sell, donate, accept, distribute, or otherwise transfer or use for any purpose the intact body of a human embryo or fetus whose death was knowingly caused by an induced abortion, or the human organs, tissues, or cells obtained from a human
For reasons similar to those regarding S.B. 33, however, Plaintiffs do not have standing to challenge the donation portion of H.B. 815 because they have not alleged that they donate or have planned to donate fetal tissue from an induced abortion. Therefore, any injury is “conjectural or hypothetical” and does not confer standing. Roark,
H. H.B.386
H.B. 386 increases the waiting period for abortions from twenty-four to seventy-two hours. (See, e.g., Doc. 22-5 at p. 5, 1. 22). “If the pregnant woman certifies in writing that she currently lives one[-]hundred[-]fifty miles or more from the nearest licensed outpatient abortion facility to her residence,” however, a twenty-four hour waiting period still applies. (Id. at p. 5, 11. 11-13).
Defendant’s primary contention is that increasing the waiting period from twenty-four to seventy-two hours for an abortion does not create an undue burden because Casey upheld a waiting period for an abortion; therefore, the law is not facially invalid. (Doc. 40-1 at pp. 16-17). Defendants also offer a more subtle argument: because Plaintiffs cite substantially the same harms that Plaintiffs in Casey did, Plaintiffs cannot invalidate a waiting period based on the same harms alleged in Casey. (Id. at pp. 17-18).
The Court finds that at this stage of the litigation, Plaintiffs have adequately pleaded that increasing the waiting period from twenty-four to seventy-two hours places an undue burden on patients seeking abortions. Plaintiffs claim that the waiting period will be longer than three days in many cases, create logistical difficulties, force women to incur greater health risks, and narrow the window in which a woman can seek an abortion. (Doc. 22 at ¶¶ 93-98,119, 122, 136). As the litigation advances, the Court will “consider the burdens a law imposes on abortion access together with the benefits those laws confer.” Hellerstedt,
I. H.B. 1081
H.B. 1081 prohibits D & E procedures without fetal demise, “thus denying Louisiana women seeking second trimester abortions a safe and commonly used method, and requiring them to undergo an additional risky and invasive procedure.” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 5). The ban that H.B. 1081 places on D & E procedures, according to Plaintiffs, “effectively deprives] women of access to abortion in Louisiana after about 15 weeks from them last menstrual period.” (Id.).
In Carhart II,
Here, the State has not conceded that a ban on D & E abortions would impose an undue burden, and the State ■ advocates alternative methods of abortion that would serve as an adequate substitute for D & E abortions. (See- Doc. 58 at pp. 3-4). Plaintiffs allege that these alternative methods pose an unnecessary risk and deviate from the accepted standard of care. (Doc. 22 at ¶¶ 51-58). Therefore, the Court must examine “the availability of other abortion procedures that are considered to be safe alternatives.” Carhart II,
Additionally, Plaintiffs claim that H.B. 1081 violates the equal protection rights of patients seeking abortion by requiring them — but no other medical patients — “to undergo an invasive, unnecessary medical procedure.” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 170). At this early stage, the Court will allow Plaintiffs’'equal protection claim to proceed, even though Plaintiffs will face' a steep burden' of demonstrating that the regulation is not rationally related to a legitimate government-interest. See K.P.,
J. Cumulative Impact
Plaintiffs argue that the Court should consider the impacts of H.B. 606, H.B. 1019, H.B. 488, S.B. 33, H.B. 815, and H.B. 386, not individually, but collectively. • (See Doc. 22 at ¶ 159). According to Plaintiffs, the cumulative impact of the 2016 regulations’ “is greater than the [constitutional] violations imposed by each challenged restriction taken alone.” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 158). Although no case explicitly addresses the cumulative impact analysis in' the abortion context, courts have regularly considered the cumulative impact of restrictions on other constitutional rights. See Wilson v. Seiter,
The Court agrees with Plaintiffs that when weighing the benefits of a restriction on abortion against its burdens, see Hellerstedt,
IV. CONCLUSION
Accordingly,.
IT IS ORDERED that Defendants’ First Motion for Partial Dismissal (Doc 27) is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED . that Plaintiffs’ claims challenging H.B. 606. as it applies to third-party contractors are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ claims challenging H.B. 1019’s ban on abortions after twenty weeks when based on genetic abnormalities are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Doctor Plaintiffs’ claims challenging H.B. 488 are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendants’ Second Motion for Partial Dismissal (Doc. 40) is GRANTED IN PART and DENIED IN PART.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs’ claims challenging S.B. 33 are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs’- claims challenging H.B. 815’s ban on donating fetal tissue are DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE. '
IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Defendant’s Third Motion for Partial Dismissal (Doc.. 58) is DENIED.
Notes
. The Court dismissed Plaintiff Bossier City Medical Suite when it ceased operating as a licensed abortion clinic. (See Docs. 45, 46).
. The D & E procedure is the most common second-trimester method of abortion and involves the "use forceps or other instruments to remove the products of conception (includ-mg the fetus, placenta, and umbilical cord) from the uterus often in combination with suction.” (Doc. 22 at ¶ 31).
. Plaintiffs appear to have abandoned this claim. (See Doc. 38 at p. 16 n.15) ("Plaintiffs do not oppose dismissal of their claim that H.B. 1019 impermissibly bans pre-viability abortions sought for reason of genetic abnormality .., but note that assertion remains relevant to Plaintiffs’ cumulative undue burden claim.”)
. The medical term for miscarriage is spontaneous abortion. Kristyn S. Appleby & Joanne Tarver Medical Records Review § 3.32(1) (2010).
