Slava Novorossiya

Slava Novorossiya

Sunday, September 7, 2014

PRO-LIFE ACTION LEAGUE



            I will post information about the Pro-Life Action League from Wikipedia and other links.


Pro-Life Action League Logo
The Pro-Life Action League is an American anti-abortion organization founded by Joseph M. Scheidler in Chicago in 1980. It describes its type of activism as "non-violent direct action". The organization's primary goal to end abortion. Joe Scheidler is the national director, and his son, Eric Scheidler, is the executive director. Joe Scheidler's wife, Ann, is the vice-president of the organization.

It was prominently involved in the Scheidler v. NOW 2006 Supreme Court decision, which was ultimately decided in favor of Scheidler in an 9-0 vote.

Activism

Face the Truth

The organization is perhaps most widely known for their Face the Truth displays, in which they display large images of abortion victims in public areas, such as largely inhabited cities or busy intersections. The tours are generally held monthly around the Chicago area and occasionally in other areas of the country.

These displays have been known to elicit a strong response from passing drivers and pedestrians, ranging from words of support to angry protestations and violent action in rare cases. The League's goal is to educate the public and "to show what abortion does to the unborn child."

Abortion Clinic Presence

Another major facet of the League's activism is its presence at abortion clinics, which may include protests, prayer vigils, or sidewalk counseling. According to the League's philosophy, presence outside clinics is crucial to ending abortion, both on a national and individual basis — a steady clinic presence across the country maintains the idea that abortion is not universally supported, and alternative services can be provided to women seeking abortions.

The League holds pickets and protests and abortion facilities as a way to let the community know that abortions are being performed at these locations.

The League gained attention for its campaign to stop an Aurora Planned Parenthood clinic from opening in September 2007, and their efforts resulted in the clinic's opening being delayed for over two weeks. The league has since maintained a constant presence at this facility.



Joseph M. Scheidler
Joseph M. Scheidler (born 7 September 1927) is a noted American pro-life activist, National Director of the Pro-Life Action League, former Benedictine monk, and named defendant in the NOW v. Scheidler litigation, a 19-year saga which was ultimately resolved in Scheidler's favor by the U.S. Supreme Court in 2006. He is affectionately known as the "Father of Pro-Life Activism". Scheidler lives in Chicago with his wife Ann, and has seven children and numerous grandchildren, many of whom are involved in his organization.

NOW v. Scheidler

In 1986 the National Organization for Women (NOW) filed a lawsuit in the United States District Court against a host of Pro-Life groups and individuals including the Pro-Life Action Network (PLAN) and Scheidler, among others. The suit was filed under the claim that Scheidler and the other defendants had violated the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) through a conspiracy to prevent women from accessing abortion services through the threat of violence or the implied threat of violence. The district court dismissed the case on the grounds that an organization without an academic motive (such as the Pro-Life Action League, a non-profit organization) could not be considered a "racketeering enterprise" under RICO.

However, the case was then brought to the Court of Appeals where it was determined that a non-profit organization could, in fact, be considered a racketeering enterprise. This was confirmed by the Supreme Court in 1994, in a 9-0 vote in favor of NOW. This allowed the original case to move forward. The decision did not make any statements about whether or not Scheidler and PLAN were guilty of the racketeering allegations, however. It simply stated that they could be tried under RICO.

A trial began in 1998 to determine whether the allegations against Scheidler and PLAN were true, and if they were, in fact, violations of RICO and the Hobbs Act (this was added as a predicate). It was the role of NOW to prove that there had been a national effort by PLAN to prevent women from accessing abortion clinics through violence or the threat thereof. After NOW's testimonies, the jury decided unanimously that PLAN was guilty. The court awarded monetary compensation to NOW, and also ruled that PLAN was forbidden to interfere with NOW's right to provide abortion services.

PLAN appealed to the seventh circuit under the claim that they had not violated the Hobbs Act. The act explicitly defines extortion as obtaining property, and PLAN argued that at no point had they taken property from NOW. This claim was rejected, and PLAN took it to the Supreme Court. The court voted 8-1 in favor of Scheidler and PLAN. It ruled that PLAN, while depriving abortion clinics of property, did not actually acquire anything, meaning PLAN did not commit extortion under the Hobbs Act.

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