ACLU Statement on DOJ Abandoning Fight to Protect Emergency Abortion Care for Pregnant Patients

March 4, 2025 5:00 pm

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WASHINGTON – The Department of Justice (DOJ) intends to dismiss its challenge to Idaho’s ban on emergency abortion care, Idaho and Moyle, et al. v. United States, demonstrating that it will no longer fight to protect the health and lives of pregnant patients. According to a court filing today, DOJ sent counsel for St. Luke’s hospital, Idaho’s largest hospital system, an email informing them of their intent to dismiss the case as early as Wednesday, March 5.

Because there is currently a preliminary injunction in place in DOJ’s case protecting doctors’ and hospitals’ ability to provide emergency care in Idaho, dismissal of that case will leave the health and lives of pregnant Idahoans hanging in the balance. In response, St. Luke’s today sought a temporary restraining order to protect their ability to provide pregnant patients necessary emergency care.

Statement from Deirdre Schifeling, chief political and advocacy officer, American Civil Liberties Union:

“The Trump administration has made clear they would let women die rather than get an abortion. In dropping the case, the administration sanctions preventing doctors from providing emergency medical care to patients that is necessary to save their lives and health. On the campaign trail, President Trump repeatedly promised not to interfere with women’s ability to access abortion and patients’ ability to get the care they need. His failure to keep that promise, six weeks into his administration, goes against the will of the vast majority of people in this country who want and expect their loved ones to be able to get the care they need at a hospital. This should not be a political issue at all, yet President Trump has sided with a radical fringe position that would put doctors who act to save the lives of their patients in jail and supports letting women die rather than access abortion. Make no mistake — women may die because of these actions, and President Trump will be directly responsible.

“For 40 years, across presidential administrations, the federal government has protected the right of all people to emergency care, including abortions. Today, President Trump has abandoned pregnant patients, and his campaign promises to voters. The ACLU will continue to fight at the ballot box, in the courts, and in the streets across the nation to guarantee the fundamental rights of all Americans, including accessing emergency medical care.”

Today’s revelation comes in connection with a challenge brought by DOJ in August 2022 to Idaho’s abortion ban, arguing that EMTALA — a nearly 40-year-old federal statute that requires hospitals that receive Medicare funds to provide emergency stabilizing treatment to any patient who needs it — prevents Idaho from enforcing its abortion ban to prohibit emergency abortions. Because of DOJ’s challenge, a federal court issued a preliminary injunction blocking Idaho from putting doctors in jail for providing pregnant patients emergency care. That injunction was subsequently lifted in January 2024, and then restored in June 2024, by the Supreme Court. During those six months that the injunction was not in effect, the consequences were devastating: hospitals were forced to either airlift their patients out of state or wait for their conditions to worsen before doctors could step in to provide critical care to save their patients’ health and lives.


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