The Right to an Abortion Was Crucial for Them, Attorneys Say
In a reproductive freedom case, more than 100 women lawyers tell the Supreme Court about why each decided to terminate a pregnancy.
February 01, 2016 at 01:33 AM
3 minute read
In an extraordinary brief filed on Jan. 4, more than 100 women lawyers have told the U.S. Supreme Court about their own abortions and why their reproductive freedom was crucial to their personal and professional lives.
The signers include former judges, law professors, law firm partners, public interest lawyers and law clerks, though none who clerked for the high court itself. “The constitutional right to abortion access has had a profoundly important impact on the legal profession,” says Alexia Korberg, an associate at Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton & Garrison who is one of the authors of the brief. “We had a huge outpouring of interest from lawyers who wanted to join this brief.”
Janice Mac Avoy, a partner at Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson, was one of the women who told of her abortion in the amicus brief. “One-third of women have had abortions, including justices' colleagues, law school classmates, advocates who have appeared before them and people they have worked with,” Mac Avoy says. “We wanted to signal to members of the court that abortion is not just an abstract concept.”
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