Federal judge finds female genital mutilation law
unconstitutional, by Tresa Baldas, 11/20/18, Detroit Free Press.
In a major blow to the
government, a federal judge in Detroit has declared the nation’s female genital
mutilation law unconstitutional, thereby dismissing nearly all of the charges
against two Michigan doctors and seven others accused of subjecting at least
nine minor girls to genital cutting in the nation’s first FGM case.
The historic case
involves minor girls from Michigan, Illinois and Minnesota, including some who
cried, screamed and bled during the procedure and one who was given Valium
ground in liquid Tylenol to keep her calm, court records show.
U.S. District Judge
Bernard Friedman concluded that Congress did not have the authority to pass the
22-year-old federal law that criminalizes female genital mutilation in America.
FGM is banned worldwide and has been outlawed in more than 50 countries, though
the U.S. statute had never been tested before this case.
Friedman’s ruling
stems from a request by Dr. Jumana Nagarwala and her co-defendants to dismiss
the genital mutilation charges, claiming the law they are being prosecuted
under is unconstitutional.
More specifically, the
defendants have argued that “Congress lacked authority to enact” the genital
mutilation statute, “thus the female genital mutilation charges must be
dismissed.” They also argue that they didn’t actually practice genital
mutilation, but rather engaged in a benign religious ritual that involves only
a scraping of the genitals.
The statute at issue
states: “Whoever knowingly circumcises, excises or infibulates the whole or any
part of the labia majora or labia minora or clitoris of another person” under
the age of 18 shall be fined or imprisoned for up to five years, or both.
Prosecutors argue
Nagarwala, the lead defendant, did exactly that when she cut the genitals of
two 7-year-old Minnesota girls who were tricked into the procedure in 2017 by
their mothers and cried and bled afterward. They said Nagarwala did this with
the help of Dr. Fakhuruddin Attar, who is accused of letting Nagarwala use his
Livonia clinic after hours to carry out the procedures; and his wife, Farida
Attar, who is accused of assisting Nagarwala in the examination room during the
procedures and holding the girls’ hands.
Prosecutors allege that
Nagarwala may have subjected up to 100 girls to the procedure over a 12-year
period, though they have cited nine victims in the case: two 7-year-old girls
from Minnesota; four Michigan girls ages 8-12, including one who was given
Valium ground up in liquid Tylenol during her procedure; and three Illinois
girls.
Nagarwala has maintained
she committed no crime and is being prosecuted under a law that slid through
Congress without proper vetting.
“The law was never debated
on the floor of either chamber of Congress nor was there ever any legislative
hearing addressing the justification or need for the federal law. Instead, all
that exists is the criminal statute itself,” defense lawyers have argued in
court documents, claiming the driving force behind the legislation was one
lawmaker’s belief that the prohibited conduct was ‘repulsive and cruel.’”
But the Constitution
demands more than that, the defense has argued, claiming Congress could not
have passed a female genital mutilation ban under the Commerce Clause because
“notably, here, the activity being regulated has absolutely no effect on
interstate commerce.”
The prosecution disagrees,
arguing genital mutilation is an illegal, secretive and dangerous health care
service that involves interstate commerce on a number of fronts: text messages
are used to arrange the procedure; parents drive their children across state
lines to get the procedure; and the doctor uses medical tools in state-licensed
clinics to perform the surgeries.
In defending the statute,
prosecutors also have noted that FGM is condemned worldwide — it’s illegal in
more than 30 countries. And they’ve cited the legislative history of the law,
along with former U.S. Sen. Harry Reid’s comments in pushing for a genital
mutilation ban.
“I want everyone within
the sound of my voice to understand that what I am going to talk about here
today does not deal with religion and it does not deal with sex. It deals with
violation of a person’s human rights. It deals with degradation of women and
young girls. It deals with the most inhumane thing a person can imagine,” Reid
stated in 1994.
On Sept. 30, 1996, the
female genital mutilation law was signed, with Reid stressing: “There is no
medical reason for this procedure. … It is used as a method to keep girls
chaste and to ensure their virginity until marriage, and to ensure that after
marriage they do not engage in extramarital sex.” The female genital mutilation
statute carries a maximum punishment of five years in prison. The defendants,
meanwhile, also face up to 20 years in prison on obstruction of justice
charges, if convicted.
The most serious charge
against Nagarwala — conspiracy to transport a minor “with intent to engage in
criminal sexual conduct” — carries a maximum life sentence.
Four mothers also have
been charged, accused of subjecting their daughters to the unlawful procedure.
The defendants are all
members of a small Indian Muslim sect known as the Dawoodi Bohra, which has a
mosque in Farmington Hills. The sect practices female circumcision and believes
it is a religious rite of passage that involves only a minor “nick.” The case
is set to go to trial in April 2019.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/ct-female-genital-mutilation-law-20181120-story.html
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody
GA Tea Party Leader
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