State v. Comprehensive Health of Planned Parenthood

241 P.3d 45, 291 Kan. 322, 2010 Kan. LEXIS 747
CourtSupreme Court of Kansas
DecidedOctober 15, 2010
Docket100,726
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 241 P.3d 45 (State v. Comprehensive Health of Planned Parenthood) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Kansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Comprehensive Health of Planned Parenthood, 241 P.3d 45, 291 Kan. 322, 2010 Kan. LEXIS 747 (kan 2010).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Beier, J.:

This interlocutory appeal is the latest in a related series of actions arising out of an inquisition conducted by former Attorney General Phill Kline regarding the performance of abortions in Kansas. In this case, we are asked to rule on whether a Johnson County district judge erred in quashing subpoenas directed at various employees of die Kansas Department of Health and Environment (“KDHE”) and at Shawnee County District Judge Richard D. Anderson and attorney Stephen W. Cavanaugh.

*325 Although the issues before us are simply summarized, their resolution is not because they arise in a complicated factual and procedural context, revealed in fits and starts over the life of a series of cases. Like icebergs, the appearance of the issues above the waves is relatively benign; their mass and shape below the waves goes unnoticed or ignored at peril.

We therefore begin by setting forth a list of the cases in the series and then a chronology of pertinent events, taking care to guard the twin imperatives of patient privacy and criminal prosecution that we discussed in our first opinion in these related actions, Alpha Medical Clinic v. Anderson, 280 Kan. 903, 128 P.3d 364 (2006). Although not all of the information we review below has become public knowledge since the Alpha decision, much of it has. In addition, to the extent any of the following goes beyond what has previously been made or become public, we take care to ensure that no privacy or law enforcement goal is threatened. The chronology, dependent in part on documents and transcripts never supplied to this court before this appeal, is necessary to an understanding of our analysis and rulings.

We also emphasize that nothing in this opinion should be interpreted by the parties as license to publish or otherwise disseminate material sealed under our previous orders or previous orders of our district courts. As in Alpha, “[w]e caution all parties to resist” any such impulse, “which may imperil the privacy of the patients and the law enforcement objectives at the heart of this proceeding.” 280 Kan. at 930.

The Series of Cases

• Case No. 04-IQ-03. Inquisition launched by Kline while Attorney General filed in district court in Shawnee County (“the Inquisition”).
• Case No. 93,383 in the Supreme Court. Petition for Writ of Mandamus filed by two abortion clinics regarding the Inquisition subpoenas for patient records. This petition led to this court’s opinion, Alpha, 280 Kan. at 903 (“Alpha”).
• Case No. 97,554 in the Supreme Court. Petition for Writ of Mandamus filed by two abortion clinics regarding Kline’s ap *326 pearance before the 2006 election on “The O’Reilly Factor” and other alleged dissemination of information from patient records (“the publicity mandamus action”).
• Case No. 98,747 in the Supreme Court. Petition for Writ of Mandamus filed by Comprehensive Health of Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri, Inc. (“CHPP”), regarding Kline’s movement of records from Attorney General’s office to Johnson County District Attorney’s office. This petition led to this court’s opinion in Comprehensive Health of Planned Parenthood of Kansas v. Kline, 287 Kan. 372, 197 P.3d 370 (2008) (“Comprehensive Health”).
Case No. 07 CR 2112. Criminal prosecution filed by former Attorney General Paul Morrison in Sedgwick County against Dr. George Tiller, a Wichita physician who performed abortions, which ended in an acquittal after jury trial (“the Tiller case”).
• Case No. 99,050 in the Supreme Court. Petition for Writ of Mandamus filed by Morrison against Judge Anderson seeking surrender of redacted patient records produced in the Inquisition and left in the judge’s custody (“Morrison v. Anderson”).
• Case No. 07 CR 2701. Criminal prosecution filed by Kline while Johnson County District Attorney against CHPP, which is the case underlying this appeal (“this criminal prosecution”).

Other proceedings before grand juries in Johnson and Sedgwick Counties regarding abortion providers, including one that led to a Petition for Writ of Mandamus in this court, eventually denied, and various related disciplinary matters are not listed above. Although some of these proceedings and disciplinary matters were contemporaneous with the cases on the list, they had no direct effect on their pursuit or disposition.

Factual and Procedural Background

The first crystals of the particular icebergs before us now were formed when Kline, in his capacity as Attorney General from January 13, 2003, to January 8, 2007, opened the Inquisition under the judicial supervision of Judge Anderson in Shawnee County.

*327 As part of the Inquisition, Kline and his staff obtained copies of certain reports of abortions performed in 2003 in Kansas that were filed by clinics with KDHE. The entire group of reports produced by KDHE has never been filed or deposited with or otherwise disclosed to this court in this or any related action. This court is, therefore, necessarily dependent upon other s descriptions of these items.

According to the record before us, the reports produced by KDHE do not contain patient names, but patients are identified by numbers and other data, including age; marital status; state, county, and city of residence; ancestry and race; level of education; number of live and deceased children, if any; gestational age of the terminated pregnancy; and the date the patient’s abortion was performed. The reports also do not contain the names of abortion providers, who are identified by a code number. But there is no dispute — and no secret at this time — that the KDHE reports at issue in this appeal are among those filed with the agency by defendant CHPP and later sought from KDHE by Kline during the Inquisition.

Kline, as Attorney General, also sent subpoenas duces tecum in the Inquisition to obtain certain patient medical records directly from two Kansas clinics that performed abortions. Those subpoenas, and Judge Anderson’s refusal to quash or modify them, led the climes to file the petition for writ of mandamus in Alpha. At the time, the clinics were referred to as Alpha and Beta; they are now known to include defendant CHPP. See Comprehensive Health, 287 Kan. at 375.

As a result of the clinics’ Alpha petition, we ruled in February 2006 that Judge Anderson must first evaluate the soundness of Kline’s interpretation of the criminal statutes at issue to determine if there was a firm legal ground supporting the Inquisition. See Alpha, 280 Kan. at 924.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 P.3d 45, 291 Kan. 322, 2010 Kan. LEXIS 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-comprehensive-health-of-planned-parenthood-kan-2010.