Wyoming Attorney General To Ask For One Last Chance To Defend Abortion Bans

The Wyoming AG is filing a petition for a Supreme Court rehearing on Tuesday’s abortion ruling upholding it as fundamental right, at Gov. Mark Gordon’s request. Lawmakers are eyeing a ballot measure to change the constitution also.

CM
Clair McFarland

January 06, 20262 min read

Cheyenne
The Wyoming AG is filing a petition for a Supreme Court rehearing on Tuesday’s abortion ruling upholding it as fundamental right, at Gov. Mark Gordon’s request.
The Wyoming AG is filing a petition for a Supreme Court rehearing on Tuesday’s abortion ruling upholding it as fundamental right, at Gov. Mark Gordon’s request. (Wyoming Supreme Court building (Cowboy State Daily staff). Inset photo: Wyoming AG Keith Kautz (courtesy: WyoFile))

The Wyoming Attorney General is filing a petition for re-hearing after the Wyoming Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld abortion access in the state as a fundamental health care right.

Gov. Mark Gordon asked the Wyoming Attorney General’s Office to file the petition, the governor announced Tuesday.

A statement from the office said the petition will be filed within the 15-day deadline.

Attorney General Keith Kautz declined further comment Tuesday.

Gordon lamented the decision in a statement, then told Cowboy State Daily in a phone interview that the high court’s ruling was not good for Wyoming or the unborn.

The Process

Wyoming’s Rules of Appellate procedure describe the process Kautz is trying to trigger.

He has 15 days to file a petition and a brief covering the points and authorities that, from the state’s vantage, rebut the high court’s opinion.

The high court doesn’t have to grant the re-hearing. This part of the process doesn’t include an oral argument, unless the court requests one.

If the Wyoming Supreme Court grants Kautz’s petition, the pro-choice coalition that challenged Wyoming’s abortion bans as unconstitutional will then have 15 days to file its answer to his arguments, and to get that answer to the attorney general.

After that, the court “may amend (its) written opinion or direct other proceedings if it is deemed necessary,” the rules say.

Meanwhile, legislative leaders are vowing to advance to the ballot a proposed constitutional amendment, to change the language upon which the Wyoming Supreme Court based its ruling.

Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.

Authors

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Clair McFarland

Crime and Courts Reporter