logo
Montana House tables ‘abortion travel' bill that would have criminalized medical travel

Montana House tables ‘abortion travel' bill that would have criminalized medical travel

Yahoo28-02-2025
Photo illustration by Getty Images.
Just four months ago, Montanans overwhelmingly supported a state constitutional amendment that enshrined the right to an abortion in Montana's foundational document.
Even though voters seemed to decisively settle the issue, that has not stopped some lawmakers from proposing more restrictions on the medical procedure. It did not stop the Montana House Judiciary Committee from overwhelmingly tabling a bill to prohibit some pregnant women from traveling for an abortion on Thursday, by a 16-to-4 margin, after emotional testimony on Tuesday and concerns ranging from domestic violence to criminalizing doctors and violating the federal Constitution's right to travel.
House Bill 609 would have made it a criminal act a criminal act for Montanans to travel out of state for an abortion without a doctor's recommendation, if the fetus was 'viable.'
Kerri Seekins-Crowe, R-Billings, who is sponsoring the measure tried to reassure fellow lawmakers that her bill was tailored narrowly so that it only would be applicable if the pregnancy was beyond 24 weeks, often considered the point of fetal viability, and only if a doctor didn't determine abortion was medically necessary.
While supporters of the bill were pilloried for 'treating women as property,' Seekins-Crowe pushed back and said she will not make apologies for standing up for the unborn.
'There are some Montanans whose voices are not being heard and that's what I want you to hear,' Seekins-Crowe said. 'I want you to hear my passion for those Montanans who could have never chosen to vote for CI-128 (which codified abortion as a right in the state's constitution), or not vote. They will never drive, or play basketball. They will never see the marvelous Montana sunsets or sunrises. While I do respect women who have life-threatening conditions, that is truly not what this bill is about.'
She gave her own example of a pregnancy she had where the child was not expected to survive.
'He is now a 32-year-old man and a father,' she said. 'Those are the ones I am standing up for and if I am called an extremist because I speak for those who don't have a voice, then I will accept that.'
HB 609 would have made Montana an oddity: A place where abortion was protected by the state's Constitution, and yet state law would have among the strictest travel laws in the nation, where any person who traveled out of state for an abortion when the fetus is viable, open to possible criminal prosecution, as well as anyone who aids or helps them travel. Similar bills proposed in other states are often call 'abortion travel,' but supporters of Seekins-Crowe's proposal called it 'abortion tourism,' a term which others derided.
Anyone who helped a pregnant woman travel for an abortion could have also be found guilty, and those guilty of violating HB 609 could have faced as long as 40 years in prison.
'Montana women and their unborn children deserve better than an abortion industry that prioritizes profit over protection, secrecy over safety and convenience over care,' Seekins-Crowe said at the beginning of her testimony.
She said the measure was necessary because she feared for young women who would be taken out of state to have an abortion, without parental consent or support.
'Abortion may be legal, but that doesn't mean we allow an unchecked abortion industry to operate in the shadows,' she said.
Only two proponents, including the Montana Family Foundation, spoke in favor of the bill.
Medical providers and professionals pushed back on the measure, reporting that less than 1% of third-trimester abortions end in abortion, and the vast majority of those are because of medical conditions or problems that arise during the pregnancy.
During an hour-long hearing in front of the Montana House Judiciary Tuesday, opponents of the measure told harrowing stories of wanted pregnancies gone wrong, medical complications, and fear of criminalization.
Tearful testimony and intimate medical details were used as examples and pleas to lawmakers to stop HB 609. On Thursday, only four Republicans remained supporting the bill: Lee Deming of Laurel, Jedediah Hinkle of Belgrade, Caleb Hinkle of Belgrade, and chairwoman Amy Regier of Kalispell.
Ann Angus of Bozeman told about a pregnancy in 2022 where the child she was carrying 'was not compatible' with life. Because she was 24 weeks along, she had to travel out-of-state to end the pregnancy that would have ended with death or possibly life-threatening complications.
'I wouldn't be a grieving mother, I'd be a felon,' she said.
Matt Ferrell of Helena worried that the enforcement mechanism would encourage neighbors to spy on neighbors and report them to authorities, something he said was decidedly not in line with the character of the state.
Hailey McKnight told the committee that she is at a high risk for miscarriage, and doesn't want to take the risk if HB 609 becomes law.
'If I sought medical care, I could come home as a felon,' she said. 'I would love to have kids in Montana, but I am so afraid to have kids in Montana.'
Tess Fields of Blue Mountain Clinic, one of the providers in the state that provides abortion care described the proposal as 'dangerous, draconian and degrading.'
She reminded the lawmakers that in 2021 when she testified that some states would continue to restrict access to birth control, ban travel and not make exceptions for cases of rape or incest that people laughed at her, only to watch many of those same things happen.
'How many women need to die,' she asked, challenging the lawmakers that if HB 619 passed, it will lead to the same types of court challenges which have been a part of Montana courts for years.
'We will see you in court,' she said.
Jean Branscum, the Executive Director of the Montana Medical Association, which represents the state's healthcare providers, said that her organization is concerned because of the potential to criminalize doctors by simply giving advice.
'Doctors need to have open and transparent communication for all matters,' she said.
She said that by recommending some patients leave the state for care, they could risk becoming 'traffickers.'
'I don't think this will help recruit or retain physicians in our state,' Branscum said.
A similar concern was raised by the Montana Coalition Against Sexual and Domestic Violence. Beth Brenneman said that her organization, spread throughout the state, often is called upon to take victims of violence to the hospitals or for medical care. That could include victims who have been raped. She said that domestic violence is 2.5 times more likely when the woman is pregnant.
'We don't ask, but we don't know when some of our people if they're pregnant,' she said. 'We bring people to medical care when they need it most. We suspect you want us to continue to provide those services, so please don't make us felons.'
Katherine Harmon, a nurse in Billings, had a daughter who was having complications with pregnancy, and lives in the state, but the nearby medical facilities are in North Dakota. She said healthcare providers there refused to deal with it because of the strict prohibitions on abortion. Harmon scheduled an appointment in Billings, and about a week later, her daughter started the journey to state's largest medical corridor in Billings, only to suffer complications and a miscarriage.
'In a rest stop, she bled and completed her miscarriage,' Harmon said. 'And all I felt was rage.'
Sarah Kries received news that devastated her during her first pregnancy. Tests after the 20th week revealed a rare condition in which her child would be born, but not able to live, gasping for air until the infant died.
'I made the decision to have my child die with me, her mother rather than gasping for air,' Kries said.
She and her husband traveled to Portland where the procedure could be completed, and she went through abortion-clinic protestors who taunted her.
'That was devastating and traumatizing but to be criminalized would have been unfathomable,' said the mother of two living daughters.
Sophie Moon, a Mont-PIRG member who represents college-age students and lives in Missoula, brought up concerns about HB 609 criminalizing families.
She told the committee that if a parent of a student who isn't from Montana comes to get them to take them home for medical care and an abortion, the parent could be considered trafficking the child under the law.
'It would directly negate parental rights,' she said.
Lydia Trom, a mother of three adult children who lives in Bozeman said she was standing up for women and families.
'I value our reproductive rights and the attempt to label our citizens and women as criminals is not OK,' she said.
She said that she was traveling out of state when she experienced a miscarriage.
'If this bill was legal at the time and I was further along, I would have been considered a felon,' she said.
Dennis Webber of Missoula said that he had concerns about the bill violating the U.S. Constitution.
'The Dobbs decision made abortion a state's issue, but Montana stops at the state line. And Montana cannot stop another state from banning late-term abortions and Montana cannot stop a Montana resident from traveling, or using that state's law when they cross the border there,' he said. 'This takes an already painful choice and makes it more isolating, traumatic and cruel. If the goal is to reduce abortion, this isn't the answer. We need comprehensive sex ed., access to contraception, affordable healthcare and the support of survivors for abuse.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Babbling Biden's claims of Trump trashing the constitution are straight hypocrisy
Babbling Biden's claims of Trump trashing the constitution are straight hypocrisy

New York Post

time26 minutes ago

  • New York Post

Babbling Biden's claims of Trump trashing the constitution are straight hypocrisy

Last week, Biden addressed the National Bar Association. He demanded $300,000. I hear he took less. Speech halting. Words scripted. His burble — minus explanation — said President Trump's trashing the Constitution. Joe Babble pumped up the Supreme Court with his ideological types, allowed transpeople into the military, supported college violations, permitted nearly 14 million foreigners through our borders and stayed caring daddy to his sticky-fingered son. What worked with Biden was a sticky middle finger. Advertisement They built to last Peter Kalikow. Realtor. Onetime, short-time owner of the now about-to-be countrywide NY Post. Some festivities. His invite says it's 100 years of celebrating Kalikow's excellence. The company. The family. 'This landmark event honors a century of the Kalikow family's legacy in New York real estate. It commemorates 100 years of leadership, innovation, and impact on the city's skyline and communities.' This whole city — minus those lying on the street — will all be there. Advertisement Jackman's clean cut past Hugh Jackman's been in the news because of his recent divorce and more recent affair with his also recent B'way co-star Sutton Foster. But I heard that once he did a semi-nude bathtub scene for the aulde 2001 movie 'Kate & Leopold.' The director cut it. Hugh said: 'Thank goodness they cut it. Now people won't give me a hard time doing nudity.' The director said the scene was cut because it 'didn't really fit the film, but it will definitely be in the DVD.' Advertisement 'Ugh,' said Jackman. Now nobody can see it — or him — except for maybe Sutton Foster. Hometown Bills Bill O'Reilly: 'I watched the Billy Joel documentary. We were both raised in Levittown. He in the Hicksville section, me in the Westbury precinct. 'Nobody had air-conditioning. We spent summer nights at the municipal swimming pool. Joel's crew was right out of 'Grease.' Slicked hair, cigarettes, T-shirt, chewing gum. We'd sing a cappella. If you sang off-key you could wind up in the pool.' Advertisement Awaiting groom NYC beauty shop owner who shall remain nameless — or customerless: 'You see bra straps that are filthy. A man wouldn't put on day-old socks — why do ladies do that? 'Females today need grooming. Also more sexual awakening. 'I have customers all ages but a woman doesn't turn beautiful until she's maybe 35. Needs character. Who wants a child? 'The right colors attract. Second is the body. Notice her tush. The curves. Her physicality. Walks well, sits well, uses all she's got. For me she has to dress well, walk well — definitely not smell. 'I beautify women all day. I certainly don't want to go to bed with a child.' Advertisement Some cable stations keep showing reruns of old TV series like 'Dick Van Dyke' or 'Laugh-In.' Forget your television set now creating exciting new content. They're offering refills. Next year you want news? It'll be an AI machine that looks like a juiced-up Walter Cronkite. Only in New York, kids, only in New York.

Asia markets set to open lower, tracking Wall Street losses
Asia markets set to open lower, tracking Wall Street losses

CNBC

timean hour ago

  • CNBC

Asia markets set to open lower, tracking Wall Street losses

Asia-Pacific markets are expected to open lower, tracking losses on Wall Street as investors weighed weaker-than-expected economic data as well as fresh tariff comments from U.S. President Donald Trump. "We're going to be announcing [tariffs] on semiconductors and chips, which is a separate category, because we want them made in the United States," Trump said on Tuesday stateside, adding that he'll announce the new plan "within the next week or so." Happy Wednesday from Singapore. Asia markets are poised for a lower open. Australia's S&P/ASX 200 was set to start the day lower with futures tied to the benchmark at 8,739, compared with its last close of 8,770.4. Japan's benchmark Nikkei 225 was set to open higher, with the futures contract in Osaka last traded at 40,555 against the index's last close of 40,549.54. Futures for Hong Kong's Hang Seng Index stood at 24,812, pointing to a weaker open compared with the HSI's last close of 24,902.53. — Lee Ying Shan The three leading U.S. indexes finished lower Tuesday. The S&P 500 fell 0.49%, closing at 6,299.19, while the Nasdaq Composite slid 0.65% to end at 20,916.55. The Dow Jones Industrial Average moved 61.90 points lower, or 0.14%, to settle at 44,111.74. — Sean Conlon U.S. President Donald Trump speaks to reporters near Air Force One at the the Lehigh Valley International Airport on August 03, 2025 in Allentown, Pennsylvania. Anna Moneymaker | Getty Images President Donald Trump spoke with "Squawk Box" in a wide-ranging conversation. Here are some of the highlights: On semiconductors, Trump said his administration is going to announce new tariffs "within the next week or so." "We're going to be announcing on semiconductors and chips, which is a separate category, because we want them made in the United States," he said during the interview. When it comes to his planned pharmaceutical tariffs, Trump said that the levies could eventually reach up to 250%. That's the highest tariff rate he's threatened to date. The president also revealed in the interview that he's considering four candidates for future Federal Reserve chair, which does not include Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent. "Well, I love Scott, but he wants to stay where he is," Trump said. — Kevin Breuninger, Annika Kim Constantino, Jeff Cox, Sean Conlon

Trump's fake electors from 2020 are still facing charges. The next few months could be crucial.
Trump's fake electors from 2020 are still facing charges. The next few months could be crucial.

Politico

timean hour ago

  • Politico

Trump's fake electors from 2020 are still facing charges. The next few months could be crucial.

The case once represented one of the starkest threats to Trump's orbit. Meadows, Eastman, and Giuliani were all indicted. So were Trump aide Boris Epshteyn and former state GOP chairwoman Kelli Ward. But now the case is a mess. Last fall, the presiding judge recused himself after defendants criticized him for sending an internal email urging male colleagues to speak out against sexist attacks on Kamala Harris. His replacement, Sam Myers, ruled last month that the entire case was flawed because grand jurors were never shown the full text of the Electoral Count Act, the 1887 law at the heart of some of the charges. Mayes has appealed the ruling, which put the case on hold pending review by higher courts. That pause is likely to continue into the fall. If Mayes loses, her office would have to assemble a new grand jury to consider reissuing the charges — one that could take a sharply different direction than the last one. Even if Mayes prevails and preserves her case, the earliest it will resume is late 2025. And if it does, a long list of motions by defendants to dismiss the charges, citing a complex array of constitutional principles, awaits. Those could take months to resolve. Among them: Defendant Christina Bobb, a Trump ally now serving as an attorney for the conservative public records group Judicial Watch, has moved for Mayes' disqualification from the case altogether. And Meadows is asking Myers to dismiss the charges against him, saying federal law and the Constitution shield him from the charges. Georgia: Willis fights to save her case This is the only case in which Trump remains a defendant, but it is also the most dysfunctional. Willis, the Atlanta-area district attorney, brought the ambitious racketeering case in August 2023, but it has been mired in two years of controversy and drama. Trump and other defendants claimed that Willis, a Democrat, had a conflict of interest stemming from her romantic relationship with one of her handpicked top prosecutors. In December 2024, an appeals court agreed, ruling that Willis and her entire office must be removed from the case. Willis is appealing that decision at the Georgia Supreme Court. Her appeal has been pending for seven months. A state Supreme Court ruling that upholds Willis' disqualification would trigger a process to transfer the matter to a different district attorney, who could drop the case altogether or revisit her charging decisions. That would mean months, or even years, of further delays.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store