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March 4, 2004
Roe v. Wade Was Almost Overturned in 1992
Justice Blackmun's Records Will Be Open Today
Harry Blackmun retired
from the court in 1994.
AP WASHINGTON (March 4) - As lawyers and court watchers have long suspected,
the Supreme Court was ready to effectively overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade
ruling legalizing abortion in 1992, but Justice Anthony M. Kennedy got cold
feet, and the vote went the other way.
Internal notes in the papers of late Justice Harry A. Blackmun reveal the secretive
dealings that led to the court's ruling in Planned Parenthood v. Casey that
year.
Blackmun's extensive records from 24 years on the court would be open to the
public March 4. Details of the archives were first released by NPR's Nina Totenberg,
who got advance access. Blackmun's notes show that Chief Justice William H.
Rehnquist led a five-justice majority to overrule Roe. Four other justices voting
with Rehnquist were Byron White, Antonin Scalia, Clarence Thomas and Kennedy.
Rehnquist himself was to write the majority opinion.
Unbeknownst to him, Kennedy was having second thoughts, and agreed with Justices
Sandra Day O'Connor and David Souter, to a compromise position.
The Casey ruling carved out a middle ground that upheld a woman's right to abortion
largely free from state regulation.
The case was argued in April and Rehnquist was at work on his majority ruling,
when Kennedy sent a note to Blackmun, NPR reported.
''I need to see you as soon as you have a few moments. I want to tell you about
a new development in Planned Parenthood v. Casey. It should come as welcome
news.''
Blackmun picked up a pink memo pad and scribbled, ''Roe Sound,'' The New York
Times reported Thursday.
Blackmun had written the Roe ruling 18 years before, and had guarded it from
previous attack from conservative justices.
Blackmun's paper legacy, filling more than 1,500 boxes, will be unsealed Thursday
on the fifth anniversary of his death.
It's been more than a decade since intimate details of the court's inner workings
were revealed in Justice Thurgood Marshall's papers, which elicited bitter criticism
within the court because the papers include secret memos and unpublished draft
opinions in controversial cases.
Most current justices are expected to ensure their files and any embarrassing
secrets they might hold will be protected long after their deaths.
Blackmun, like Marshall, served 24 years on the court and into his 80s, retiring
in 1994. He accumulated far more correspondence than Marshall.
The appointee of President Nixon ''took copious notes and never threw away any
of his papers,'' Washington lawyer David Frederick said.
His authorship of Roe v. Wade brought him more than 60,000 angry letters and
repeated threats on his life. Blackmun, who died at age 90, served with eight
of the current nine justices. Stephen Breyer was chosen as his successor in
1994.
Blackmun also donated his papers to the Library of Congress, more than 530,000
items, with a release date five years after his death.
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