ORDER ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT
This matter is before the Court on cross-motions for summary judgment filed by Plaintiffs Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky and Carol Dellinger, M.D. (collectively, “PPINK”), (Filing No. 73), and Defendants the Commissioner of the Indiana State Department of Health (“ISDH”), the Prosecutors of Marion, Lake, Monroe, and Tippecanoe Counties, and members of the Medical Licensing Board of Indiana (collectively, “the State”), all in their official capacities, (Filing No. 75).
On March 24, 2016, House Enrolled Act No. 1337 (“HEA 1337”), which creates new regulations of abortion and practices related to abortion, was signed into law. PPINK maintains that several provisions of HEA 1337 are unconstitutional. PPINK seeks to permanently enjoin the implementation and enforcement of these provisions, and a declaratory judgment that the challenged provisions are unconstitutional.- For the- reasons that follow, the Court concludes that the challenged provisions' violate the Fourteenth • Amendment' to the United States Constitution and permanently enjoins enforcement of these provisions. " ''
I. BACKGROUND
PPINK is a non-profit healthcare provider which offers reproductive healthcare, family planning, and preventive primary-care services. (Filing No. 30-1 at 1.) At the outset of this case, it operated twenty-three health centers in Indiana and two in Kentucky. (Filing No. 30-1 at 1.) Three of the Indiana health centers, located in Bloomington, Merrillville, and Indianapp-lis, provide surgical- abortion services to patients. (Filing No. 30-1 at 1.) Surgical abortions are available at these centers only through the first trimester of pregnancy. (Filing No. 30-1 at 1.)
On March 24, 2016, the Governor of Indiana signed into law HEA 1337, which would have become effective on July 1, 2016. See Ind. Code § 16-34-4-1 et seq. HEA 1337 creates several new provisions and amends several others regarding Indiana’s regulation of abortion and practices related to abortions. See id. Three aspects of HEA 1337 are challenged by PPINK in this action. The parties essentially do not .dispute the key background facts related to the challenged provisions, nor do they dispute the potential consequences of these provisions for PPINK and its patients. The Court will therefore only briefly set forth the challenged provisions and summarize the background evidence related to each provision.
A. - Anti-Discrimination and Information Dissemination Provisions
HEA 1337 creates Indiana Code § 16-34-4, and is entitled “Sex Selective and Disability Abortion Ban,” This chapter bans abortions sought solely for certain enumerated reasons. Specifically, HEA 1337 provides that “[a] person may not intentionally perform or attempt to perform an abortion before the earlier of viability of the fetus or twenty (20) weeks, of postfertilization age if the person knows that the pregnant woman is seeking” an abortion: (1) “solely because of the sex of the fetus,” §§ 16-34-4-4, 16-34-4-5; (2) “solely because the fetus has been diagnosed with, or has a potential diagnosis of, Down syndrome or any other disability,” § 1 16-34-4-6, 16-34-4-7; or (3) “solely because of the race, color, national origin, or ancestry of the fetus,” § 16-34-4-8. The phrase “potential diagnosis” is defined as “the presence of some risk factors that indicate that a health problem may occur.” Ind. Code § 16-34-4-3. Moreover, HEA 1337 requires abortion providers to complete a form provided by ISDH that indicates, among other things, the “gender of the fetus, if detectable,” and “[wjhether the fetus has been diagnosed with, or has a potential diagnosis of having Down syndrome or any other disability.” Ind. Code § 16-34-2-5(a)(6).
Indiana law sets forth consequences for abortion providers who violate these provisions. Currently, it is a felony to knowingly or intentionally perform an abortion that is not permitted by Indiana law, and HEA 1337 does not change this. See Ind. Code § 16-34-2-7(a). Moreover, HEA 1337 provides that “[a] person who knowingly or intentionally performs an abortion in violation of this chapter may be subject to: (1) disciplinary sanctions under IC 25-1-9; and (2) civil liability for wrongful death.” Ind. Code § 16-34-4-9(a).
Not only does HEA 1337 preclude abortions sought solely for one of the enumerated reasons, but the associated information dissemination- provision requires abortion providers to inform their patients of the anti-discrimination provisions.. Specifically, abortion providers must inform their patients “[t]hat Indiana does not allow a fetus to be aborted solely because of the fetus’s race, color, national origin, ancestry, sex, or diagnosis or potential diagnosis of the fetus having Down syndrome or any other disability.” Ind. Code § 16-34-2-1.1(a)(1)(K).
The State presents evidence that these provisions were passed in light of technological developments that allow the diagnosis or potential diagnosis of fetal disabilities to be made early in a pregnancy. In particular, cell-free fetal DNA testing is able to screen for several genetic abnormalities, including Down syndrome, as early as ten'weeks into, the pregnancy. (Filing No. 54-1 at 5.) Tests such as the cell-free fetal DNA test are screening tests rather than diagnostic tests, and as such, only reveal the likelihood of genetic abnormality. (Filing No. 54-1 at 4.)
The parties are essentially in agreement that a significant number of women have sought, and will continue to seek, an abortion solely because of the diagnosis of a disability or the risk thereof. (See, e.g., Filing No. 30-1 at 2-3 (attestation from the CEO of PPINK that it has and will continue to provide abortions to women who seek an abortion “solely because of a diagnosis of fetal Down syndrome or other genetic disabilities or the possibility of such a diagnosis”); Filing No. 54 at 14-15 (citing statistics regarding the percentage of fetuses diagnosed with Down syndrome that are aborted)). Moreover, the parties agree that the number of women who will seek an abortion at least in part out of these concerns' will likely increase as testing is more widely available than ever before.
B. Fetal Tissue Disposition Provisions
HEA 1337 also changes the manner in which fetal tissue must be disposed. Under current Indiana law, prior to the passage ’of HEA 1337, “[a] pregnant woman who has an abortion ... has’the fight to determine the final disposition of the aborted fetus.” Ind. Code § 16-34-3-2, If the woman decides to let the facility performing the abortion dispose of the fetal tissue, Indiana regulations require that the facility bury or cremate the fetal tissue. See 410 I.A.C. § 35-2-1(a). Currently, if a medical facility elects to cremate fetal tissue, it must do so by using á “crematory” or by “incineration as authorized for infectious and pathological waste.” 410 I.A.C. § 35-1-3. Pathological waste includes tissues, organs, body parts, and blood or,-bodily fluid “that, are removed during surgery, biopsy, or autopsy.” Ind. Code § 16-41-16-5. Infectious waste includes pathological waste, Ind. Code § 16-41-16-4(b), and it can be destroyed through various procedures including incineration, Ind. Code § 16-41-16-3(b). Therefore, as it currently stands, the woman can determine to bury, cremate, or otherwise dispose of the fetal tissue herself, or the fetal .tissue may be incinerated along with other human surgical by products such as organs. PPINK currently utilizes a contractor who periodically incinerates the fetal tissue along with other surgical by-products.
HEA 1337 alters the manner in which healthcare providers must handle fetal tissue in instances where the patient does not elect to retain it and . dispose of it herself. It provides that “[a]n abortion 'clinic or health care facility having possession of an aborted fetus .shall provide for the final disposition, of the aborted fefus. The burial transit permit requirements of IC 16-37-3 apply to the .final disposition of an aborted fetus, which must be interred or cremated.” Ind. Code § 16-34-3-4(a).
Moreover, HEA 1337 excludes “an aborted fetus or a miscarried fetus” from the definition of “infectious waste.” Ind. Code § 16—41—16—4(d). This means that if a healthcare provider elects to use cremation rather than interment, the cremation of the fetal tissue must be performed at a crematory. However, the cremation of fetal tissue need not each be performed separately; HEA 1337 explicitly provides that “[ajborted fetuses may be cremated by simultaneous cremation.” Ind. Code § 16-34-3-4(a). In exploring compliance with these new provisions, PPINK has- been informed by the ISDH that its plan to aggregate “the products of conception in a container suitable for cremation and then, periodically, [have] the container delivered to a crematorium for final disposition” will comply with the statute. (Filing No. 54-10 at 2.)
C. Procedural History
In the operative Second Amended Complaint, PPINK maintains that several provisions of HEA 1337 are unconstitutional, and it seeks to permanently enjoin the implementation and enforcement of these provisions. (Filing No. 83 at 11.) PPINK also seeks a declaratory judgment that HEA 1337 is unconstitutional to the extent that it:
(a) Denies the ability of a woman to obtain an abortion during the first trimester of her pregnancy for the reasons noted in Ind. Code § 16-34-4-5 through Ind. Code § 16-34-4-8;
(b) Requires as part of the “informed consent” process that women seeking abortions be informed that they are unable to obtain an abortion if their sole reason for doing so is because of the fetus’s race, color, national origin, ancestry, sex, or diagnosis or potential diagnosis of the fetus having a disability; and
(c) Requires fetal tissue after a first trimester abortion or a miscarriage to be treated by the abortion provider differently than other medical material.
(Filing No. 83 at 11). Following extensive briefing and oral argument, the Court granted PPINK’s Motion for Preliminary Injunction, (Filing No. 7), concluding that PPINK was likely to succeed on the merits of its claims, (Filing No. 62).
PPINK and the State have cross-moved for summary judgment. (Filing No. 73; Filing No. 75.) Those motions are now fully briefed and ripe for the Court’s review.
H. LEGAL STANDARD
Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56 provides that summary judgment is appropriate if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law. Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(a). In ruling on a motion for summary judgment, the court reviews the record in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and draws all reasonable inferences in that party’s favor. Zerante v. DeLuca,
The party seeking summary judgment bears the initial responsibility of informing the court of the basis for its motion, and identifying “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any,” which demonstrate the absence of a genuine issue of material fact. Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
Thereafter, a nonmoving party who bears the burden of proof on a substantive issue may not rest on its pleadings, but must affirmatively demonstrate by specific factual allegations that there is a genuine issue of material fact that requires trial. Hemsworth v. Quotesmith.Com, Inc.,
Similarly, a court is not permitted to conduct a paper trial on the merits of a claim and may not use summary judgment as a vehicle for resolving factual disputes. Ritchie v. Glidden Co., ICI Paints World-Grp.,
III. DISCUSSION
The Court previously addressed all issues presented in this litigation in the Order preliminarily enjoining enforcement of the challenged sections of HEA 1337. (Filing No. 61.) Upon review of the parties’ summary judgment briefing, a completely developed factual record, and the applicable legal authorities, the Court’s view of the appropriate final, determination of these issues remains unchanged. Drawing substantially from the Court’s prior Order, (Filing No. 61), significant portions of which are incorporated herein, the Court modifies and extends that analysis only to the extent necessitated by the parties’ additional arguments.
A. Anti-Discrimination Provisions
PPINK contends that the anti-discrimination provisions clearly violate well-established Supreme Court precedent in that they prohibit women from obtaining an abortion prior to fetal viability. (Filing No. 74 at 2.) The State posits that HEA 1337 represents a “qualitatively new kind of [abortion] statute,” and, as such, it argues that the Supreme Court precedents on which PPINK relies do not address, and therefore do not govern, the constitutionality of these provisions. (Filing No. 76 at 11.)
“It is a constitutional liberty of the woman to have some freedom to terminate her pregnancy.” Planned Parenthood v. Casey,
First is a recognition of the right of the woman to choose to terminate a preg-nancy before viability and to obtain it without undue interference from the State. Before viability, the State’s interests are not strong enough to support a prohibition of abortion or the imposition of a substantial obstacle to the woman’s effective right to elect the procedure, Second is a confirmation of the State’s power to restrict abortions after fetal viability, if the law contains exceptions for pregnancies which endanger the woman’ life or health. And third is the principle that the State has legitimate interests from the outset of the pregnancy in protecting the health of the woman and the life of the fetus that may become a child.
Casey,
The anti-discrimination provisions of HEA 1337 clearly violate the first of these principles, in that they prevent women from obtaining abortions before fetal viability. The woman’s right to choose to terminate a pregnancy pre-viability is categorical: “a State may not prohibit any woman from making the ultimate decision to terminate her pregnancy before viability.” Casey,
Given the categorical nature of this principle, circuit courts have consistently held that any type of outright ban on pre-viability abortions is unconstitutional. See MKB Management Corp.,
Nevertheless, the State attempts to accomplish via HEA 1337 precisely what the Supreme Court has held is impermissible. The anti-discrimination provisions prohibit a woman from choosing to terminate a pregnancy pre-viability if the abortion is sought solely for one of the enumerated reasons. For this Court to hold such a law constitutional would require it to recognize an exception where none have previously been recognized. Indeed, the State has not cited a single case where a court has recognized an exception to the Supreme Court’s categorical rule that a woman can choose to terminate a pregnancy before viability. This is unsurprising given that it is a woman’s right to. choose an abortion that is protected, which, of course, leaves no room for the State to examine, let alone prohibit, the basis or bases upon which a woman makes her choice. See Casey,
The State resists this conclusion on multiple bases. First, the State casts the anti-discrimination provisions as the next iteration of our society’s prohibition on discrimination. The State points to technological advances allowing earlier and more accurate information regarding whether a -fetus has a diagnosis or potential diagnosis of Down syndrome or other disabilities. These technological advances, says the State, have led in part to an increase in the number of abortions sought for reasons related to those disabilities. Because the Supreme Court has recognized that the
State has a legitimate interest in protecting potential life even from the outset of a pregnancy, the State maintains that the anti-discrimination provisions siihply further its interest in protecting the potential life from discrimination.
The' State is correct that the Supreme Court has consistently recognized that “the State has legitimate interests from the outset of the pregnancy in protecting ... the life of the fetus that may become a child.” Casey,
Therefore, although the State’s interest in protecting and even promoting potential life is a legitimate one, the Supreme Court has already weighed this-interest against a woman’s liberty interest in choosing to terminate a pregnancy and concluded that, prior, to viability, the woman’s right trumps the State’s interest.. This is the “central holding” of Roe., and -the State’s pgsition would require this Court to-undermine that holding, which of course it cannot do. See Stenehjem,
Second, the State advances a so-called “binary choice” interpretation of Roe and Casey, which, if accepted, would support the State’s position that “HEA 1337 does not interfere with a right protected by Roe and Casey.” (Filing No. 76 at 26.) The State’s argument begins with the woman’s liberty interest as articulated in Casey: “the right of the individual ... to be free from unwarranted governmental intrusion into matters so fundamentally affecting a person as the decision whether to bear or beget a child.” (Filing No. 76 at 26, citing Casey,
both the woman’s rights and the State’s interests are different if the pregnant woman decides she wants a baby generally, but not the particular baby she happens to be carrying. A woman has already decided to bear a child. Although her privacy and liberty interests have not completely evaporated, those rights are not as central as they once were.
(Filing No. 76 at 26).
The difficulty with the State’s position is that there is nothing in Roe or Casey that limits the right to terminate a pregnancy pre-viability to women who do not want to have a child ever as opposed to those who do not want to see a particular pregnancy through to birth. The-quote from Casey on which the State relies certainly does not establish that a woman’s right to decide whether to bear a child refers to the decision to have a child generally, rather than whether to continue a specific pregnancy. And the State does not cite a single legal authority that has recognized its binary choice theory or its proffered interpretation of Roe or Casey.
The lack of authority supporting the State’s position likely stems from the fact that it is contrary to the core legal rights on which a woman’s right to choose to terminate her pregnancy prior to viability are predicated; The Supreme Court has mandated that this right stems from a liberty right protected by the Fourteenth Amendment — specifically, a woman’s right to privacy. See Roe,
Under the State’s theory, a woman either wants to have a child or does not; and, once a woman chooses the former, she cannot then terminate her pregnancy for reasons, whatever they may be, that the State deems improper. But the very notion that, pre-viability, a State can examine the basis for a woman’s choice to make this private, personal and difficult decision, if she at some point earlier decided she wants a child as a general matter, is inconsistent with the notion of a right rooted in privacy concerns and a liberty right to make independent decisions. The • State’s theory is also contrary to the reality that the decision to terminate a pregnancy involves “intimate views with, infinite variations.” Id. at 853,
To summarize, nothing in Roe, Casey, or any other subsequent Supreme Court decisions suggests that a woman’s right to choose an abortion prior to viability can be restricted if exercised for a particular reason determined by the State. The right to a pre-viability abortion is categorical. Indeed, the Seventh Circuit has described “the mother’s right to abort a fetus that has not yet become viable [as] essentially absolute.” Coe v. County of Cook,
Accordingly, the Court concludes that the anti-discrimination provisions of HEA 1337 are unconstitutional.
B. Information Dissemination Provision
HEA 1337 also requires abortion providers to inform their patients “[t]hat Indiana does not allow a fetus to be aborted solely because of the fetus’s race, color, national origin, ancestry, sex, or diagnosis or potential diagnosis of the fetus- having Down syndrome or any other disability.” Ind. Code § 16-34-2-1.1(a)(1)(K). Simply put, this provision requires abortion providers to inform patients of the anti-discrimination provisions discussed above.
PPINK maintains that requiring abortion providers to disseminate and patients to listen to this information violates their First Amendment rights regarding compelled speech and compelled listening, respectively. As the parties point out, the Seventh Circuit has not yet determined what level of scrutiny applies to the type of professional speech at issue here. (Filing No. 74 at 19-20; Filing No. 76 at 29-30.) The Court need not determine, however, what level of scrutiny applies, because the parties agree that in the event that the Court holds the anti-discrimination provisions to be unconstitutional, the information dissemination provision is likewise unconstitutional. (Filing No. 74 at 20; Filing No. 76 at 30.)
Having concluded that the anti-discrimination provisions violate the Fourteenth Amendment, the Court likewise concludes that Ind. Code § 16-34-2-1.1(a)(1)(K) is unconstitutional.
C.. Fetal Tissue Disposition Provisions
PPINK’s final challenge is to the new fetal tissue disposition provisions created by HEA 1337. PPINK contends that these requirements violate substantive due process and equal protection principles.
The parties agree that the fetal tissue disposition provisions do not implicate a fundamental right. When a fundamental right is not at stake, substantive due process still creates “a residual substantive limit on government action which prohibits arbitrary deprivations of liberty.” Hayden ex rel. A.H. v. Greensbnrg Community Sch. Corp.,
The State describes its interest as “treating fetal remains the same as other human remains,” (Filing No. 76 at 30), or alternatively, “the humane disposal of fetal remains,” (Filing No. 76 at 35). PPINK argues that this asserted interest is insufficient because the State has no legitimate interest in ensuring that abortion providers treat fetal tissue in the same manner as human- remains. Specifically, PPINE maintains that the State’s asserted interest would require this Court “to make a-leap that the Supreme Court has refused to take. Namely, to decide that human life begins at conception and that a fetus is a human being.” (Filing No. 74 at 21.)
The Court concludes that th,e State’s asserted interest is not legitimate. As the Seventh Circuit has noted, the Supreme Court and the circuit courts applying Supreme Court precedent have unequivocally held that for purposes of the Fourteenth Amendment, a fetus is not a “person.” See Coe,
The State points to other state and federal statutes as being “full of provisions that equate even a non-viable fetus with a human being,” arguing that these statutes are analogous, and that the State’s asserted interest is therefore legitimate. (Filing No. 76 at 30-33.) What those statutes do not share in common with the present law, however, is that they concern circumstances in which the State seeks to promote respect for potential life. No potential life is'at issue-in this provision. Absent a' potential life, this Court would have to determine that fetal tissue is in some respects the equivalent of human remains for the State’s interest to be legitimate. This would be quite similar to a recognition that a fetus is a person, an affirmation which this Court is not allowed to make. As explained by the Seventh Circuit, the conclusion in Roe that a fetus is not a person “follows inevitably from the decision to grant women a right to abort. If even a first-trimester fetus is a person, surely the state would be allowed to protect him from being killed.... ” Coe,
The State also argues that “respectful treatment of fetal -remains also stems from cultural and religious traditions,” and it cites to Hindu, Buddhist, and Christian practices that “treat deceased fetuses as persons.” (Filing No. 76 at 34.) Aside from the obvious entanglement of church and state suggested by this argument, it also ignores the fact that the law as it existed prior to the passage of HEA 1337 allowed individuals ample leeway to vindicate their own relevant religious or cultural practices. A patient was permitted to' take possession of the fetal tissue, whether thé result of an abortion or a miscarriage, and dispose of it in whatever manner she chose, including in accordance with her particular religious or cultural beliefs.
Second, the State boldly contends that it is a “biological fact” that embryonic fetal tissue is a “human being.” (Filing No. 76 at 30.) The Supreme Court, however, has not reached the same conclusion. Whether or not an individual views fetal tissue as essentially the same as human remains is each person’s own personal and moral decision. Cf. Roe,
Notably, courts that have upheld'requirements regarding the disposition of fetal tissue have done so by recognizing a legitimate state interest in ensuring the sanitary disposal of fetal tissue.
In sum, the Court can find no legal support for the State’s position that it has a legitimate interest in “treating fetal remains the same as other human remains.” (Filing No. 76 at 35.) The Supreme Court has made clear that a fetus is not legally a person, but the State’s asserted interests are essentially that fetal tissue should be treated similarly to human remains because they are like human remains. Although the Supreme Court has recognized a.legitimate governmental interest in promoting the life of a fetus during a pregnancy, such an interest is always tethered to the notion that the fetus represents a potential life and the State can legitimately promote respect for that potentiality. The Supreme Court has extended these principles no further than.that,,and the State has not provided a basis so that this Court can do otherwise. Therefore, any legitimate interest the State has in a potential life during a pregnancy is no longer present once the-pre-viability pregnancy is terminated; and thus, it does not have a legitimate state interest in treating fetal tissue similarly to human remains.
Even if the Court were to conclude that the State had a legitimate interest in treating embryonic and fetal tissue “the same as other human remains,” the disposition provision is not rationally related to that purpose, because in most respects, it does not treat fetal tissue in the same manner that it treats human remains. First, it allows patients to take possession of the fetal tissue and imposes no restrictions whatsoever on the manner in which they choose to dispose of that tissue. The same is not true of the disposition of human remains, which are subject to numerous requirements regarding burial and cremation. For example, state law enumerates the permitted dispositions of human bodies, including, inter alia, interment in an established cemetery, disposal of cremated human remains on the property of a consenting owner or an uninhabited public land, or burial at sea. Ind. Code § 25-15-2-7. State law also provides, with great specificity, details regarding burial, such as the minimum depth at which human remains must be buried, and proper ventilation if remains are placed in a mausoleum. See, e.g., Ind. Code §§ 34-14-54-2, 23-14-54-3. Second, the provision allows for the simultaneous cremation of fetal tissue from an unspecified number of patients. Simultaneous cremation is only permitted for human remains if consented to in writing by the authorizing agent(s). Ind. Code § 23-14-31-39(a).
For the reasons above, the Court concludes that the challenged disposition provisions violate the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
IV. CONCLUSION
The United States Supreme Court has stated in categorical terms that a state may not prohibit any woman from making the ultimate decision to terminate her pregnancy before viability. It is clear and undisputed that unless Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey are overturned by the United States Supreme Court, this Court is bound to follow that precedent under the rule of stare decisis. See Casey,
The challenged anti-discrimination provisions directly contravene well-established law that precludes a state from prohibiting a woman from electing to terminate a pregnancy prior to fetal viability. The information dissemination provision is also unconstitutional, as it requires abortion providers to convey false information regarding the anti-discrimination provisions to their patients. The fetal tissue disposition provisions do not further a legitimate state interest and are therefore also unconstitutional.
Accordingly, PPINK’s Motion for Summary Judgment, (Filing No. 73), is GRANTED, and the State’s Motion for Summary Judgment, (Filing No. 75), is DENIED.
' The Court ISSUES A PERMANENT INJUNCTION prohibiting the State from enforcing the following provisions of HEA 1337: the anti-discrimination provisions, Indiana Code §§ 16-34-4-4, 16-34-4-5, 16-34-4-6, 16-34-4-7, 16-34-4-8, the information dissemination provision, Indiana Code § 16-34-2-1.1(a)(1)(K), and the fetal tissue disposition provisions.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. PPINK notes in its Amended Complaint that the same disposition requirements apply to fetal tissue that results from a miscarriage when that tissue is removed by an abortion clinic. (Filing No. 83 at 2.)
. Although a plurality of the justices articulated these principles in Casey, subsequent Supreme Court decisions have recognized and applied these principles when considering challenges to abortion laws, See Gonzales v. Carhart,
. Because the Court concludes that the requirements violate substantive due process principles, it need to reach the equal protection issue.
. A fetal tissue disposition' statute was upheld in Planned Parenthood of Minn. v. State of Minn.,
. As PPINK highlights, it was already disposing of fetal tissue by utilizing professional, regulated removal companies to collect and incinerate it. (Filing No. 74 at 22.) The two major changes instituted by HEA 1337 are that it requires PPINK to use crematories, rather than facilities that handle medical tissue, and that PPINK is required to take possession of the ashes after cremation (at which time, presumably, it may dispose of those in any manner permitted by statute). (Filing No. 74 at 22.)
