Kansas political leaders, advocacy groups react to Roe v. Wade repeal

Strong turnout for Aug. 2 abortion amendment vote encouraged

by Noah Taborda and Margaret Mellott, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — Kansas lawmakers and activists across the political spectrum present emotional and starkly contrasting responses Friday to the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, ranging from celebration to outrage to calls for action.

With a proposed constitutional amendment on the August primary ballot offering a vote on whether to maintain a Kansas constitutional right to abortion, the U.S. Supreme Court decision raised already high stakes in Kansas. Under a state Supreme Court ruling, Kansans maintained that right even after the ruling from the nation’s highest court.

Conservatives across the state celebrated the victory while Democratic legislators blasted the decision, but both were quick to remind voters of the significance of the “Value Them Both” amendment as they head to the polls. Aug. 2.

“Here in Kansas, however, we still have work to do because of the deeply flawed Hodes decision released by the Kansas Supreme Court, which wrongly invented an unlimited right to abortion in our 1859 constitution, and recklessly put into question even our most basic protections for women and their unborn children,” said Senate President Ty Masterson, an Andover Republican.

“Abortions are and will remain safe, regulated and accessible in Kansas, thanks to our state constitution,” said Rep. Jennifer Day, D- Overland Park. “We will maintain those rights when we vote NO on the constitutional amendment question on ALL ballots on August 2nd.”

Passage of the amendment would nullify a 2019 state Supreme Court ruling that said a right to bodily autonomy in the state’s Bill of Rights included a woman’s right to an abortion. The amendment contains no exemptions for pregnancies because of rape or incest or to save a pregnant woman’s life, but it would not stop the state government from passing such exceptions into state law.

Even with months to prepare, the decision was a devastating blow to personal autonomy, said Senate Minority Leader Dinah Sykes.

“Abortion is a personal decision,” the Lenexa Democrat said. “The right to abortion is protected by the Kansas constitution, and we’ve got to keep it that way. I will not let my colleagues in the legislature take that freedom away from my fellow Kansans — not without a fight.”

Kansas Attorney General Derek Schmidt, a Republican candidate for governor, backed the decision and concurred with the idea that Roe was wrong from the start. He said this decision returns the power to decide these matters where it belongs: with the people, not a federal court.

A rise in abortions in Kansas over the past two years was among the reasons Schmidt said the decision was necessary. The Kansas Department of Health and Environment’s 2021 report on abortion statistics shows an increase of 4.1%, from 7,542 abortions reported in 2020 to 7,849 in 2021.

“I prefer a future with less abortion, not more,” Schmidt said. “To preserve existing limits on late-term abortions, requirements parents be notified when minors seek abortion and prohibitions on using taxpayer funds to pay for abortion, I will join with other pro-life Kansans in casting my vote for Value Them Both.”

While the 2021 increase was almost entirely due to Kansas residents, between 2019 and 2020 the number of annual abortions increased by 630, driven by 528 girls and women primarily from Texas and Oklahoma.
Abortion rights organizations say the Kansas numbers, when looked at as a whole, show the effect of restrictive policies in neighboring states.

Texas’ six-week abortion ban went into effect Sept. 1, 2021, and in Oklahoma performing an abortion officially became a criminal offense with the U.S. Supreme Court decision.

Kansas GOP executive director Shannon Pahls celebrated the decision and said Kansas must endeavor not to become like states with more widespread access to abortions, like California and New York.

“Kansas Republicans will continue to advocate for the right to life and push back against the Democrats’ radical pro-abortion agenda,” she said. “Our work is not done.”

Democratic House candidate for District 52, Derik Flerlage, tweeted that abortion should not be governmentally managed.

“As a born and raised Catholic, abortion has been a topic I’ve dealt with from a very young age,” Flerlage wrote. “At the foundation of it all, I do not believe that the government should be involved in personal health decisions.

“It’s an incredibly complex moral issue that shouldn’t be mandated,” he continued in the following tweet. “Once again — advocacy for pro-life groups could continue. Improving sex education and contraceptive access is critical. These are issues we can’t properly discuss on social media.”

Kansas abortion rights advocates lament decision dangers

Micah Kubic, the executive director of the American Civil Liberties Union of Kansas, said this decision would back many Americans into a corner and usher in a “life-threatening public health crisis.”

“Access to abortion shouldn’t depend on where we live, how much money we make or the color of our skin,” Kubic said. “We should be able to make the best medical decisions for ourselves and for our families — without a government bureaucrat sitting in the exam room next to us.”

Ashley All, of the coalition Kansans for Constitutional Freedom, said the decision was “unprecedented” and “shameful.”

“If we do not act, children will have fewer constitutional rights than their parents,” All said. “This decision reinforces how critical it is that we protect our constitutional rights here at home. Kansans must continue to have the freedom to make private health decisions free from government overreach.”

Reducing or eliminating access to local, free and on demand abortions is a hit to American freedom, said Zack Gingrich-Gaylord of Trust Women.
“Over the past 10 months, we have seen the dire consequences of abortion bans that force pregnant people to travel hundreds of miles to access essential medical care,” Gingrich-Gaylord said. “We have seen this play out in our own clinics in Oklahoma and Kansas, all while Roe remained the law of the land. For many people in our region, however, reality has been ‘post-Roe’ for decades.”

Ryan Reza, president of Kansas Young Democrats, has spent the day sharing resources and advocating for abortion rights on Twitter. He reminded those affected by today’s news to take a minute to process it.

“First, take a breather,” Reza tweeted. “This one is hard, and there are folks who deserve time to collect themselves. Take it easy the rest of the day.”

Reza encouraged Kansans to vote no on Aug. 2.

On flipside, Mackenzie Haddix, a spokesperson for the Value Them Both Coalition — led by Kansans for Life, the Kansas Catholic Conference, and Kansas Family Voice — said the group was continuing efforts to ensure the passage of the amendment.

“Today’s decision on Dobbs v. Jackson emphasizes the importance of our democracy, restoring the power to the states to decide how and if they are going to place limits on the abortion industry,” Haddix said. “The U.S. Supreme Court restored the people’s ability to come to individual consensus on abortion limits — but not in Kansas. As it stands today, unelected judges in Kansas are the ones who will decide the fate of abortion limits.”

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0

See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/06/24/kansas-political-leaders-advocacy-groups-react-to-roe-v-wade-repeal/

16 metro area residents indicted for drug trafficking conspiracy

Sixteen residents of Kansas City, Missouri, Kansas City, Kansas, and Independence, Missouri, have been indicted by a federal grand jury for their roles in a conspiracy to distribute cocaine, methamphetamine and fentanyl.

Ublester Molina, 26, Kevin O. Alarcon, 25, Rocky Orozco, 30, Salvador Valdivia, 40, Stephen Manning, 33, Carlos Ramos, 21, Joel Vargas, 30, Danzell Walker, 31, Gerald Knight, 43, Tatiana Ray, 29, and Ana Morales, 27, all of Kansas City, Missouri; Robert Manley Jr., 30, Bernard Kelly, 35, and Miranda Sanchez, 40, all of Kansas City, Kansas; Christian Love-Barker, 26, and Tyreece Dickerson, 34, both of Independence, Missouri; were charged in a 19-count indictment returned under seal by a federal grand jury in Kansas City, Mo., on Tuesday, June 21.

That indictment was unsealed and made public June 23 following the arrests of most of the defendants in a metro-wide law enforcement operation Thursday.

The federal indictment alleges that 13 of the defendants (with the exceptions of Ray, Morales, and Sanchez) participated in a conspiracy to distribute at least five kilograms of cocaine, as well as methamphetamine and fentanyl, from Jan. 1, 2019, to June 21, 2022. According to the indictment, Orozco, Manley, and Valdivia were leaders of the conspiracy.

Orozco, Manley, Valdivia, Ray, Morales, and Sanchez are also charged with participating in a money-laundering conspiracy from Oct. 1, 2015, to Sept. 9, 2020. They allegedly engaged in financial transactions that involved the proceeds of the drug-trafficking conspiracy.

In addition to the conspiracies, various defendants are charged in seven separate counts related to drug trafficking and nine separate counts related to using their cell phones to facilitate a drug-trafficking crime.

Walker is also charged with being a felon in possession of a firearm. He allegedly was in possession of a Springfield .40-caliber handgun on Aug. 16, 2021.

The charges will be presented to a federal jury, which will determine guilt or innocence.
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This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Matt Moeder, Patrick Edwards, and Mary Kate Butterfield. It was investigated by the FBI, the Kansas City, Missouri, Police Department, IRS-Criminal Investigation, and the Drug Enforcement Administration.

Demise of Roe v. Wade adds gravity to Kansas’ vote on abortion constitutional amendment

Kelly: Combination of federal, state action may sharply restrict abortion rights

by Tim Carpenter and Sherman Smith, Kansas Reflector

Topeka — The U.S. Supreme Court’s decision Friday striking down the landmark Roe v. Wade decision legalizing abortion nationwide resonates deeply in Kansas where a proposed constitutional amendment on the August ballot could set the stage for a wave of new abortion restrictions in the state.

Gov. Laura Kelly, a Democrat campaigning for reelection in 2022, said the decision by the nation’s highest court would have no immediate impact in Kansas given a Kansas Supreme Court opinion two years ago that said a constitutional right to abortion existed in the state’s Bill of Rights.

“But anybody who’s been alive in Kansas in the last six months knows that we have an amendment on the primary ballot that would essentially overturn the (state) Supreme Court ruling and say that women’s reproductive rights are not protected under the constitution,” Gov. Kelly said.

If the state constitutional amendment passed, Kelly said, the Republican-led Legislature would likely attempt to impose more stringent restrictions on women’s health care.

“If people in the state of Kansas vote no on that amendment, then the status quo will remain. And women’s reproductive rights will remain constitutional here in the state of Kansas,” Gov. Kelly said.

The decision by the U.S. Supreme Court held special significance in Kansas because the state’s voters head to the polls Aug. 2 to consider an abortion amendment to the Kansas Constitution. The amendment would reverse the state Supreme Court decision in 2019 that declared a right to bodily autonomy in the state’s Bill of Rights included a woman’s right to decide whether to carry a pregnancy to term.

Under the state Supreme Court’s decision, Kansans retained that right even if Roe v. Wade was struck down by the U.S. Supreme Court. Passage of the “Value Them Both” amendment to the Kansas Constitution would nullify the state Supreme Court’s interpretation of constitutional rights to private health decisions and open the door to a ban or additional limitations on the procedure in Kansas.

The proposed Kansas amendment included no exemption for pregnancies occurring as result of rape or incest or to save the life of the pregnant woman. However, it wouldn’t preclude the legislative and executive branches of state government from embracing those exceptions in Kansas law.

A coalition of anti-abortion, church and political organizations supporting the amendment claimed the state Supreme Court decision triggered an influx of out-of-state residents seeking abortions in Kansas. That perspective ignored consequences of profound abortion restrictions adopted in Texas and Oklahoma that pushed to other states women seeking reproductive health services.

“Kansas medical professionals are concerned about our state becoming a permanent destination state for painful dismemberment abortions,” said Mackenzie Haddix, who works with the pro-amendment coalition.

The Susan B. Anthony national pro-life group invested $1.3 million in Kansas to promote passage of the abortion amendment.

On the opposite side of the amendment debate, the bipartisan Kansans for Constitutional Freedom began airing television advertisements to encourage voters to choose “no” on the ballot measure. A simple majority of people participating in that statewide vote determine fate of the constitution amendment.

“On August 2nd, Kansas will vote on whether to eliminate Kansans’ freedom to make private medical decisions without political interference,” said Ashley All, spokesperson for Kansans for Constitutional Freedom. “The constitutional amendment on the primary ballot will mandate government control over our private medical decisions and pave the way for a total ban on abortion. We ask Kansans to vote no.”

The coalition’s first commercial warned passage of the amendment would grant politicians power to pass any law regarding abortion, including a total ban without exceptions. Another ad pointed to the oath taken by physicians to “do no harm,” and issues raised when politicians in Topeka would assume authority for medical decisions.

“If this amendment passes, there will be nothing to prevent politicians from banning abortion outright,” All said. “One legislator already introduced a bill that completely bans abortion, makes it a felony to receive or perform an abortion, and provides no real exception to save a woman’s life.”

In Kansas, seven of 10 abortions in Kansas occurred prior to nine weeks and 90% prior to 12 weeks. State law prohibits abortions after 22 weeks of a pregnancy. There have been no “post-viability” abortions in Kansas since 2018. Government funding of abortion has been outlawed.

Kansas Reflector stories, www.kansasreflector.com, may be republished online or in print under Creative Commons license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0.
See more at https://kansasreflector.com/2022/06/24/demise-of-roe-v-wade-adds-gravity-to-kansas-vote-on-abortion-constitutional-amendment/