Sex Discrimination in the Lone Star StateCross-posted to RH Reality Check. As a native Texan and a young woman, I cling to the legacy of leaders like Barbara Jordan and Ann Richards. These women fought a tireless battle to end sex discrimination and to leave future generations a world where justice and compassion guide us. Unfortunately, Texas doesn’t always honor their legacy and pay tribute to their struggle. A case in point: yesterday, the ACLU filed a friend-of-the-court brief in a lawsuit involving the unfair and discriminatory incarceration of a pregnant woman who violated her probation. In 2005, Amber Lovill pled guilty to the crime of felony forgery and received three years probation. In July 2007, during a routine report to her probation officer, Lovill took a required drug test and informed the officer that she was pregnant. After testing positive for drug use, the state moved to revoke her probation and incarcerate her for the rest of her pregnancy. According to the ACLU’s brief, officers repeatedly admitted that if Lovill were not pregnant, less restrictive alternatives would have been the typical response to a positive drug test. A lower court has already ruled that probation officers treated Lovill differently from others who violated probation, but were not pregnant. The ACLU has asked the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals to affirm this ruling. The state of Texas clearly discriminated against Lovill because she was pregnant. Lovill’s probation officers have openly testified that this was not the standard course of action in response to a positive drug screen, and that because of Lovill’s pregnancy, they were not willing to “work with” her and felt there were no “other options” besides putting her in jail. It sent her to Nueces County Jail, a facility known to be unsanitary and unsafe for the remainder of her pregnancy. The state sought to incarcerate Ms. Lovill regardless of whether the facility was safe and could meet her medical needs for both prenatal care and substance abuse, and regardless of whether it is legal to treat women differently simply because they are pregnant. While drug use during pregnancy raises serious concerns, if the state really wanted to help Lovill get the care she needed, it could have placed her in a program that specifically treats pregnant women. In fact, not only did a residential drug treatment program that specializes in treating pregnant women and their families exist, Lovill expressed a strong desire to enter the program. “I was clean for 21 months and I had one relapse. And I know that I can stay clean again. I’d just like the chance because I want to keep my baby with me,” Lovill said. Nevertheless, the state locked her up in Nueces County Jail. I hope that the Court of Appeals will uphold the lower court's ruling, and make me proud to be a Texan again.
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Jul 30th, 2009 at 10:02pm
American Civil Liberties. . . . .*hahahahaheeheehee*
American Civil Liberties Union . . . . .*HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA*
Sleigh bells ringin’ a jing jing jingling
Jul 31st, 2009 at 2:09pm
Tor you are a very sad little fellow
Aug 2nd, 2009 at 2:42am
It sounds to me as if Texas was looking after the rights of the unborn child this woman was carrying. Anyone with a brain knows that taking illegal, and a lot of legal, drugs can cause serious harm to an unborn child. Hurah for Texas and their great wisdom!
Aug 6th, 2009 at 8:51pm
anonymous, I agree that the health of the unborn fetus should have high consideration, however, the article points out that the multiple alternatives of treatment were not considered and the mother was incarcerated in an unsanitary facility that put the fetus' life at risk.
On the other hand, it was an opportunity to punish a drug user, so the risk to the fetus was worth it.
Sep 25th, 2009 at 7:44am
This young lady was five and one half months pregnant and knowingly placed a substance into her body that could harm her unborn child. She was on probation for forgery and it is illegal folks, to do illegal drugs in the first place, and especially while you are on probation. If you violate any term of your probation, you are subject to revocation of that probation. She also was not paying fines that were due and they had already been working with her on that. This woman had basically been given so much rope, that she eventually hung herself with it. The ACLU doesn't even care about her, they care about setting a precedent. They don't even care to the extent that the child will probably get trampled on during all of this publicity they see fit to add to the case.
I think that we had a case of social workers trying to find the best solution for all, including the baby. They couldn't count on Ms. Lovill, because she had broken many promises she had made to them previous to this event. They made a decision base on their training and it, without question, saved a baby's life. And while you may be so quick to throw that life away...Thank goodness you weren't the one making the decision that day.