ACLJ
GETS LEGAL VICTORY AS LAWSUIT AGAINST KMARTINVOLVING ABORTION
PRODUCING DRUGS MOVES FORWARD
JANUARY
24, 2001
(Cincinnati,
OH) -- The American Center for Law and Justice, an international
public interest law firm, said today a federal court has cleared
the way for its lawsuit against Kmart on behalf of a pharmacist
who was fired for refusing to dispense abortion producing
drugs to move forward. A federal judge in the case refused
to dismiss the suit and said that a pharmacist may sue her
employer under a state conscience law which protects persons
who refuse to perform or participate in medical procedures
which result in abortion.
This
is a major victory for the rights of conscience, said
Francis J. Manion, Senior Counsel for the ACLJ who is suing
Kmart on behalf of a pharmacist. As long as abortion
is legal in this country, there will be millions of citizens
opposed to the practice on ethical and religious grounds.
These people deserve legal protection to the fullest extent
possible. No one should be forced to choose between their
livelihood and their conscience. We look forward to moving
forward with our case and the upcoming trial on this most
critical issue.
The
case began in 1996 when Kmart fired Karen Brauer, an Indiana
pharmacist, after she refused to dispense a drug called Micronor.
Micronor, a progestin-only contraceptive, works in a significant
number of patients by preventing the implantation of a fertilized
egg. According to Brauer, this means Micronor and similar
drugs, rather than preventing pregnancy; terminate a human
life that has already begun. Brauer was fired from Kmarts
Hamilton, Ohio store when she refused to sign an agreement
that she would dispense all lawfully prescribed medications
regardless of her feelings or beliefs. The ACLJ filed suit
against Kmart in U.S. District Court in Cincinnati in August
1999.
Kmart
went to court in an effort to dismiss the suit. But in an
opinion issued yesterday and released to the ACLJ today, U.S.
District Court Judge Herman Weber disagreed with Kmarts
narrow reading of the state conscience statute ruling the
statute is obviously intended to allow an individual
who morally or ethically opposes abortion . . . to follow
the dictates of her conscience and refuse to participate in
such procedures. The court likewise rejected Kmarts
arguments that the legislature did not intend the conscience
law to apply to the dispensing of a drug that sometimes prevents
implantation. Judge Weber said: What is critical . .
. is the undisputed fact that Micronor does prevent implantation
of a fertilized egg in some cases and plaintiffs asserted
belief that this process results in abortion and is morally
wrong.
Manion
says the courts decision is an important step in protecting
the rights of employees who hold religious beliefs. This
case has enormous implications for the growing practice of
chemical or drug-induced abortions. So-called emergency
contraceptives, morning-after pills, and
RU-486 all work not by preventing pregnancy
but by ending a human life already in existence. With the
courts recognition of a pharmacists statutory
exemption from participating in such procedures, pharmacists
and others have gained the ability to protect themselves against
recrimination for following the dictates of their consciences.
Manion
said the courts ruling now clears the way for trial
to begin in May. The suit seeks compensatory and punitive
damages against Kmart and alleges that her firing violated
both federal and state laws. At the same time, the suit contends
that as a result of Brauer's termination, she "has sustained
and continues to sustain substantial losses in earnings, retirement
benefits, and other employment benefits, and has suffered
and continues to suffer damage with regard to her professional
standing."
The
American Center for Law and Justice is an international public
interest law firm that focuses on constitutional issues including
pro-family and pro-life cases. Web address is www.aclj.org.
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