'Jane Roe' Wants
Landmark Case Overturned By
LISA FALKENBERG
|
DALLAS (AP) - The former plaintiff
known as ``Jane Roe'' in the 1973 U.S. Supreme Court
case that legalized abortion sought to have the case
overturned in a motion filed Tuesday that asks the
courts to consider new evidence that abortion hurts
women. Norma McCorvey, who joined the
anti-abortion fight nearly 10 years ago and says she
regrets her role in Roe v. Wade, said the Supreme
Court's decision is no longer valid because scientific
and anecdotal evidence that has come to light in the
last 30 years has shown the negative effects of
abortion. ``We're getting our babies back,'' a
jubilant McCorvey said at a news conference while
flanked by about 60 women, some who sobbed and held
signs that read ``I regret my abortion.'' ``I
feel like the weight of the world has just been lifted
off my shoulders,'' said McCorvey, 55.
|
Sarah Weddington, the abortion
advocate and attorney who originally represented
McCorvey, did not immediately return a call seeking
comment. A representative from the National Organization
for Women also did not immediately return a message.
|
Allen Parker Jr., McCorvey's attorney,
said he could not remember any other landmark case in
which the plaintiff has asked to have it overturned.
|
``I think the new evidence will show
the court what they thought was good will turn out to be
an instrument of wrong,'' said Parker, who is with the
San Antonio-based Texas Justice Foundation.
|
McCorvey filed the motion with the
federal district court in Dallas, which ruled to
legalize abortion in Texas before the Supreme Court
ruling. The Texas attorney general's office and Dallas
district attorney each have 20 days to respond to the
motion.
|
McCorvey and her attorneys asked the
federal court to consider more than 5,400 pages of
evidence, including 1,000 affidavits from women who say
they regret their abortions.
|
McCorvey was a 21-year-old carnival
barker when, pregnant for the third time, she sought an
abortion. She agreed to be the plaintiff in a lawsuit
seeking to overturn Texas' anti-abortion statute.
|
The Supreme Court decision came after
she had the baby. It was the third child she put up for
adoption. McCorvey publicly identified herself as Jane
Roe in 1980.
|
|
© Copyright The Associated
Press. All rights reserved. The information contained In
this news report may not be published, broadcast or
otherwise distributed without the prior written
authority of The Associated Press.
|