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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsThe guy who wrote Texas' infamous abortion law settled a test run to extend its strategy
Jonathan Mitchell enabled private parties to sue anyone who aids an abortion. But his experimental wrongful death lawsuit may have collapsed after an appeals court blocked his subpoena to the woman whose abortion was at issue.
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The guy who wrote Texas most infamous abortion law just quietly settled his test run
Jonathan #Mitchell enabled private parties to sue anyone who facilitates an abortion. But his test case might have collapsed when an appeals court blocked his
Jonathan #Mitchell enabled private parties to sue anyone who facilitates an abortion. But his test case might have collapsed when an appeals court blocked his
https://www.msnbc.com/rachel-maddow-show/maddowblog/texas-abortion-law-jonathan-mitchell-silva-rcna175032
In May 2021, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott signed his states version of a heartbeat ban, forbidding nearly all abortions after six weeks but with a twist. The Texas bill, as The New York Times reported, also empowered any private citizen to sue doctors or abortion clinic employees who would perform or help arrange for the procedure.
Left unsaid was that private citizens, rather than law enforcement or other state officials, would be the only people who could enforce the ban. By empowering private actors to enforce the ban, the thinking went, abortion providers and other prospective plaintiffs couldnt sue the state to prevent its enforcement; instead, anyone and everyone could be a prospective plaintiff, and state officials would have no role at all.
That bounty hunter feature of the law designed specifically to circumvent judicial review was the conceptual brainchild of a then-relatively unknown conservative lawyer, Jonathan Mitchell, whose admirers have praised him as a technical magician. And it worked. S.B. 8 took effect in September 2021, despite providers petition to the Supreme Court to stay its implementation. It then survived a more thorough Supreme Court review months later......
Mitchell has never enforced S.B. 8 itself. In March 2023, Mitchell decided to mimic its bounty hunter provision by filing a lawsuit in Galveston County court on behalf of Marcus Silva, who had divorced his ex-wife, Brittni, just the month prior. Silva alleged Brittni had undergone a medication abortion during their marriage with the help of two friends, one of whom obtained abortion pills from a third woman. Silva sued all three women but not his ex-wife alleging they caused the wrongful death of his child and conspired to murder Baby Silva with abortion pills. And Silva sought more than $1 million in damages from each of them......
Exactly what was behind the decision to settle is unclear, but the progress of the case gives some clues. In April, a Texas appeals court ruled that Marcus could not force Brittni to turn over communications relating to her abortion, including with the defendants. The court noted that his complaint alleges she violated numerous state and federal criminal laws, including the Comstock Act of 1873, which prohibits the mailing of anything intended for producing abortion. Even though the Biden administration does not interpret Comstock broadly as prohibiting the mailing of abortion medication, the court reasoned that to compel her to produce the communications at issue could violate her constitutional rights, notably her right against self-incrimination.
Mitchell then appealed to the Texas Supreme Court, which denied the petition in June in a three-sentence order. One justice of that court, in a concurring opinion, called out Silvas disgracefully vicious harassment and intimidation of his ex-wife Brittni during the course of their marriages demise and during this litigation, noting that his atrocious treatment of her made him a particularly unsuitable beneficiary of this Courts discretionary powers. (Among other things, The Washington Post reports, Silvas ex-wife shared with the court transcripts of recordings of the verbal abuse she said she experienced from Silva ahead of the lawsuit being filed, including threats to persecute her if she didnt have sex with him and do his laundry.)
And finally, we know that earlier this week, the trial judge refused Silvas request to delay trial, which was scheduled to begin on Oct. 14.
Neither Silva nor his lawyers have explained publicly why they backed down, but without Brittnis communications, it may be that they simply lacked the evidence to win at trial. Meanwhile, one of the defendants told the Post [t]here was no money exchanged in connection with the settlement.
And the ultimate irony? Despite losing her constitutional right to abortion, a womans other constitutional rights may have prevented the guy who wrote the countrys most infamous abortion ban from using other, facially neutral laws to accomplish the same aims.
Left unsaid was that private citizens, rather than law enforcement or other state officials, would be the only people who could enforce the ban. By empowering private actors to enforce the ban, the thinking went, abortion providers and other prospective plaintiffs couldnt sue the state to prevent its enforcement; instead, anyone and everyone could be a prospective plaintiff, and state officials would have no role at all.
That bounty hunter feature of the law designed specifically to circumvent judicial review was the conceptual brainchild of a then-relatively unknown conservative lawyer, Jonathan Mitchell, whose admirers have praised him as a technical magician. And it worked. S.B. 8 took effect in September 2021, despite providers petition to the Supreme Court to stay its implementation. It then survived a more thorough Supreme Court review months later......
Mitchell has never enforced S.B. 8 itself. In March 2023, Mitchell decided to mimic its bounty hunter provision by filing a lawsuit in Galveston County court on behalf of Marcus Silva, who had divorced his ex-wife, Brittni, just the month prior. Silva alleged Brittni had undergone a medication abortion during their marriage with the help of two friends, one of whom obtained abortion pills from a third woman. Silva sued all three women but not his ex-wife alleging they caused the wrongful death of his child and conspired to murder Baby Silva with abortion pills. And Silva sought more than $1 million in damages from each of them......
Exactly what was behind the decision to settle is unclear, but the progress of the case gives some clues. In April, a Texas appeals court ruled that Marcus could not force Brittni to turn over communications relating to her abortion, including with the defendants. The court noted that his complaint alleges she violated numerous state and federal criminal laws, including the Comstock Act of 1873, which prohibits the mailing of anything intended for producing abortion. Even though the Biden administration does not interpret Comstock broadly as prohibiting the mailing of abortion medication, the court reasoned that to compel her to produce the communications at issue could violate her constitutional rights, notably her right against self-incrimination.
Mitchell then appealed to the Texas Supreme Court, which denied the petition in June in a three-sentence order. One justice of that court, in a concurring opinion, called out Silvas disgracefully vicious harassment and intimidation of his ex-wife Brittni during the course of their marriages demise and during this litigation, noting that his atrocious treatment of her made him a particularly unsuitable beneficiary of this Courts discretionary powers. (Among other things, The Washington Post reports, Silvas ex-wife shared with the court transcripts of recordings of the verbal abuse she said she experienced from Silva ahead of the lawsuit being filed, including threats to persecute her if she didnt have sex with him and do his laundry.)
And finally, we know that earlier this week, the trial judge refused Silvas request to delay trial, which was scheduled to begin on Oct. 14.
Neither Silva nor his lawyers have explained publicly why they backed down, but without Brittnis communications, it may be that they simply lacked the evidence to win at trial. Meanwhile, one of the defendants told the Post [t]here was no money exchanged in connection with the settlement.
And the ultimate irony? Despite losing her constitutional right to abortion, a womans other constitutional rights may have prevented the guy who wrote the countrys most infamous abortion ban from using other, facially neutral laws to accomplish the same aims.
I am glad that Briscoe Cain was on the losing side of this lawsuit. Cain is a true asshole
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The guy who wrote Texas' infamous abortion law settled a test run to extend its strategy (Original Post)
LetMyPeopleVote
Monday
OP
flying_wahini
(7,897 posts)1. Good post. Sick of the stranglehold these men have on the courts.
Its almost like we arent equal citizens in some States!
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,291 posts)2. I saw that. I recognized the name.
I am glad that Briscoe Cain was on the losing side of this lawsuit.
UTUSN
(72,125 posts)3. K&R for more digestion