Question Submitted by: The Honorable Warren Hamilton, Oklahoma State Senate, District 7

2023 OK AG 12
CourtOklahoma Attorney General Reports
DecidedNovember 21, 2023
StatusUnpublished
Cited by5 cases

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Question Submitted by: The Honorable Warren Hamilton, Oklahoma State Senate, District 7, 2023 OK AG 12 (Okla. Super. Ct. 2023).

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OSCN Found Document:Question Submitted by: The Honorable Warren Hamilton, Oklahoma State Senate, District 7, et al.
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Question Submitted by: The Honorable Warren Hamilton, Oklahoma State Senate, District 7, et al.
2023 OK AG 12
Decided: 11/21/2023
Oklahoma Attorney General Opinions


Cite as: 2023 OK AG 12, __ __

Question Submitted By: The Honorable Warren Hamilton, Oklahoma State Senate, District 7, The Honorable Shane Jett, Oklahoma Senate, District 17, The Honorable Nathan Dahm, Oklahoma Senate, District 33, The Honorable George Burns, Oklahoma Senate, District 5, The Honorable Tom Gann, Oklahoma House of Representatives, District 8, The Honorable David Smith, Oklahoma House of Representatives, District 18

¶0 This office has received your request for an official Attorney General Opinion in which you ask, in effect, the following question:
Does Oklahoma law, through section 1-733 of title 63 of the Oklahoma Statutes or some other provision, make it a punishable crime for a pregnant woman to solicit, perform, or self-induce an abortion to terminate her pregnancy intentionally?

I.

SUMMARY

¶1 The answer to your question is no. Oklahoma law does not allow the punishment of pregnant women attempting an abortion, self-induced or otherwise. The Legislature has repeatedly made this clear in statutory text, and just last year, repealed the one law that would have expressly allowed such a prosecution. Nor is there any historical tradition of such punishment in Oklahoma or nationwide prior to the Roe v. Wade era. This in no way indicates that abortion is lawful, as longstanding Oklahoma law prohibits the performance of--or the aiding and abetting of--every abortion throughout pregnancy except as necessary to save a pregnant woman's life.1

II.

BACKGROUND

A. In the decades prior to Roe v. Wade, Oklahoma prosecuted practitioners of abortion to protect pregnant women, unborn children, and society.

¶2 In Oklahoma, attempting or performing an abortion has been a crime at every stage of pregnancy, tracing all the way back to Oklahoma Territory law from 1890. See Okla. (Terr.) Stat. § 2187 (1890), recodified at Okla. (Terr.) Stat. § 2177 (1893), recodified at Okla. (Terr.) Stat. § 2268 (1903), recodified at Okla. Comp. Laws § 2370 (1909), recodified at Okla. Rev. Laws § 2436 (1910), recodified at Okla. Comp. Stat. Ann. § 1859 (1921), recodified at O.S. § 1834 (1931), recodified at 21 O.S.1941, § 861. In its current form, this law ("section 861") states that:

Every person who administers to any woman, or who prescribes for any woman, or advises or procures any woman to take any medicine, drug or substance, or uses or employs any instrument, or other means whatever, with intent thereby to procure the miscarriage[2] of such woman, unless the same is necessary to preserve her life shall be guilty of a felony punishable by imprisonment in the State Penitentiary for not less than two (2) years nor more than five (5) years.

21 O.S.2021, § 861; see also Oklahoma Call for Reprod. Just. ["OCRJ"] v. Drummond, 2023 OK 24, ¶ 7, 526 P.3d 1123, 1129 ("This law has changed very little since the days of the Oklahoma Territory.").

¶3 Thus, nearly two decades before and for over five decades after the adoption of the state constitution, until Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973), abortion was criminalized throughout pregnancy in Oklahoma, except to save the pregnant woman's life.

¶4 Prior to Roe, moreover, Oklahoma prosecutors charged, and juries convicted, various persons for violating section 861 or other statutes in connection with the performance of abortion. See, e.g., Wilson v. State, 1927 OK CR 42, 252 P. 1106; Davis v. State, 1925 OK CR 61, 234 P. 787; Thacker v. State, 1933 OK CR 119, 26 P.2d 770; and Smith v. State, 1946 OK CR 115, 175 P.2d 348. During this time, a separate, companion statute--title 21, section 862, in its most recent iteration--was on the books, and that statute allowed for the prosecution of a pregnant woman who sought an abortion:

Every woman who solicits of any person any medicine, drug, or substance whatever, and takes the same, or who submits to any operation, or to the use of any means whatever, with intent thereby to procure a miscarriage, unless the same is necessary to preserve her life, is punishable by imprisonment in the county jail not exceeding one (1) year, or by fine not exceeding One Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00), or by both.

21 O.S.2021, § 862.3

¶5 Whereas a conviction under section 861 resulted in a felony punishable by at least two years in prison, a conviction under section 862 would have been a misdemeanor as it only allowed a maximum punishment of one year in county jail. See

21 O.S.2021, §§ 5--6, 10; Carr v. State, 1961 OK CR 15, ¶¶ 4--9, 359 P.2d 606, 608--09. But even that one-year punishment for section 862 was just theoretical, as this office has been unable to identify any reported prosecutions or convictions of pregnant women under section 862. The absence of any readily available prosecution history contrasts starkly with section 861's known track record and indicates that the prosecution of pregnant women in connection with abortion attempts--even for a misdemeanor--is not entrenched in historical Oklahoma practice. This position dovetails with the repeated emphasis of the Court of Criminal Appeals ("OCCA") in pre-Roe cases that, although a "female in an abortion case may be prosecuted" under what would become section 862, the pregnant woman was not generally seen to be criminally culpable for the abortion. Wilson, 1927 OK CR 42, 252 P. at 1107--08; see also Cahill v. State, 1947 OK CR 27, 178 P.2d 657, 659--60 (re-affirming Wilson and holding that the pregnant woman "is regarded as the victim of the crime, rather than a participant in it" (citations omitted)); Reeves v. Territory, 1909 OK CR 65, 101 P. 1039, 1042 (favorably embracing scholarly position that "the woman is not an accomplice in . . . abortion" (citation omitted)).

¶6 In short, historically in Oklahoma, prosecution of a pregnant woman for a misdemeanor was theoretically permitted but not carried out in any substantial manner, if at all.

¶7 This was not unique to Oklahoma. Nationwide, the pre-Roe practice was consistent: regardless of whether state laws on abortion technically applied to pregnant women in some way, the States rarely, if ever, prosecuted them for abortion alone, much less obtained a conviction. This has been confirmed by many. In a lengthy book on abortion history--a scholarly work the United States Supreme Court cited six different times in overturning Roe in 2022--one historian defended the "long and fact-based tradition of [treating] abortion as a crime against women." JOSEPH W.

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Related

OKLAHOMA CALL FOR REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE v. STATE OF OKLAHOMA
2023 OK 60 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2023)
OKLAHOMA CALL FOR REPRODUCTIVE JUSTICE v. DRUMMOND
2023 OK 24 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2023)

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