On Friday, the U.S. Third Circuit Court of Appeals rejected free exercise and parental rights claims against the City of Philadelphia's Health Department in a suit alleging that a health center acted unconstitutionally when it furnished a 16-year old girl emergency contraception without first notifying her parents or encouraging her to consult with them. In Anspach v. City of Philadelphia, (3d Cir., Sept. 21, 2007), the court rejected both parental rights and First Amendment claims. The suit, brought by both the parents and the girl, argued that the health center misled Melissa Anspach when a staffer told her that the morning-after pill would prevent her from getting pregnant, without informing her that it could prevent the implantation of a fertilized egg. Melissa's religious beliefs saw this as abortion.
The court rejected Melissa's free exercise claim, finding that she was not coerced by the government into taking the pills and that she does not allege she ever informed the clinic staff about her religious beliefs. It also rejected a free exercise claim by Melissa's parents, holding that the Constitution does not require the government to ensure that children abide by their parents' religious beliefs. Much of the court's 47-page opinion focuses on-- and rejects-- substantive due process claims that parental rights were infringed. The Baltimore Sun's news blog reported on the case on Friday.