Supreme Court justices scrutinize New Jersey attorney during oral arguments on subpoena to Christian pregnancy center.
Supreme Court justices scrutinize New Jersey attorney during oral arguments on subpoena to Christian pregnancy center.
Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI

Supreme Court justices scrutinize New Jersey subpoena to pregnancy center

Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI
Fakta terverifikasi

U.S. Supreme Court justices expressed skepticism toward New Jersey’s broad subpoena against a Christian pregnancy center during oral arguments on Tuesday, pressing the state on the basis and scope of its investigation. The case centers on whether the demand for donor and internal records can be challenged in federal court because it allegedly chills the organization’s supporters.

The Supreme Court heard arguments in a dispute between First Choice Women’s Resource Centers and New Jersey Attorney General Matthew Platkin over an investigative subpoena issued as part of a consumer‑protection probe. First Choice is a Christian, pro‑life network of crisis pregnancy centers that, according to court filings and the parties, operates five locations in New Jersey: New Brunswick, Newark, Morristown, Montclair, and Jersey City. The centers offer services such as free pregnancy tests, ultrasounds, options counseling, and a parenting program that provides baby clothes and diapers.

New Jersey first subpoenaed First Choice in November 2023. According to the Daily Wire and supporting court documents, the subpoena seeks roughly a decade’s worth of records, including materials related to the group’s promotion of abortion pill reversal, information provided to clients and donors, personnel records, and copies of every advertisement the centers have run, as well as information identifying donors so the attorney general’s office can contact them.

First Choice, represented by the conservative legal group Alliance Defending Freedom, challenged the subpoena, arguing it violates First Amendment associational rights by demanding donor names, addresses, and phone numbers in a way that could deter people from giving. The organization contends that New Jersey has not cited complaints specific to First Choice and that the request is overbroad.

During Tuesday’s oral arguments, several justices appeared doubtful of the state’s position, which was defended by Sundeep Iyer of the New Jersey attorney general’s office. In one exchange reported by the Daily Wire, Justice Clarence Thomas asked, “Did you have complaints that formed the basis of your concern about the fundraising activities here?” Iyer responded that the state had received complaints about crisis pregnancy centers in general, but not specifically about First Choice. Thomas then suggested that New Jersey had “no factual basis” for believing the center was deceiving donors and described the subpoena as a “burdensome way to find out whether someone has a confusing website.”

Liberal Justice Elena Kagan also questioned the practical effect of such an unapproved subpoena on donors. Addressing the argument that a subpoena is less coercive if it still requires court approval, Kagan said, according to the Daily Wire’s account of the hearing: “I think here, too, you would make the same argument … that an ordinary person, one of the funders for this organization or for any similar organization, presented with this subpoena, and then told, ‘But don’t worry, it has to be stamped by a court’ is not going to take that as very reassuring. Why isn’t that right?”

Other conservative justices, including Brett Kavanaugh, Neil Gorsuch and Chief Justice John Roberts, also voiced skepticism about New Jersey’s characterization of the subpoena and its potential impact, according to coverage by the Daily Wire and other outlets. Several members of the court suggested that the threat of being compelled to turn over donor information could chill support even before any enforcement action is taken.

Alliance Defending Freedom lawyer Erin Hawley, arguing on behalf of First Choice, told the justices: “This Court has long safeguarded the right of association by protecting the membership and donor list of nonprofit organizations like First Choice. Yet the attorney general of New Jersey issued a sweeping subpoena, commanding on pain of contempt that First Choice produce donor names, addresses, and phone numbers, so his office could contact and question them. That violates the right of association,” she said, according to the Daily Wire.

The case turns on whether and when organizations may seek relief in federal court from state investigatory subpoenas that they say chill First Amendment rights, rather than being required to litigate those claims in state court first. The dispute comes amid broader legal and political battles over crisis pregnancy centers and abortion pill reversal advertising in states including California, New York and Illinois, where some centers have faced investigations and lawsuits over allegedly misleading promotion of their services.

Apa yang dikatakan orang

Discussions on X focused on Supreme Court oral arguments where justices expressed skepticism toward New Jersey's subpoena to First Choice pregnancy centers, questioning its basis without complaints and potential chilling of First Amendment rights. Pro-life users praised protections for donor privacy; critics saw it as shielding deceptive centers.

Artikel Terkait

Illustration depicting U.S. Supreme Court case on New Jersey subpoena against faith-based pregnancy center, symbolizing free speech and privacy rights.
Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI

Mahkamah Agung akan meninjau sengketa surat perintah New Jersey yang melibatkan pusat kehamilan berbasis iman

Dilaporkan oleh AI Gambar dihasilkan oleh AI Fakta terverifikasi

Mahkamah Agung AS akan mendengar argumen pada 2 Desember 2025 mengenai apakah pusat sumber daya kehamilan Kristen di New Jersey boleh menantang surat perintah jaksa agung negara bagian di pengadilan federal sebelum menyelesaikan litigasi sepenuhnya di pengadilan negara bagian. Kasus ini melibatkan First Choice Women’s Resource Centers dan penyelidikan Jaksa Agung New Jersey Matthew Platkin terhadap iklan dan layanan pusat tersebut, termasuk promosi pembalikan pil aborsi, serta menimbulkan pertanyaan tentang privasi donor, kebebasan berbicara, dan hak asosiasi.

A coalition of pro-life pregnancy centers secured a legal victory against New York Attorney General Letitia James after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit upheld an injunction that protects the centers’ ability to speak about so‑called abortion pill reversal protocols.

Dilaporkan oleh AI Fakta terverifikasi

Seorang hakim federal di Boston mengeluarkan perintah baru yang menghalangi pemerintahan Trump menerapkan ketentuan Medicaid dalam One Big Beautiful Bill Act yang akan memotong dana untuk Planned Parenthood dan penyedia layanan serupa di lebih dari 20 negara bagian yang dipimpin Demokrat. Putusan tersebut, dalam gugatan yang diajukan oleh koalisi multi-negara bagian, menyatakan bahwa undang-undang tersebut kemungkinan melanggar batas konstitusional pengeluaran federal karena gagal memberi negara bagian pemberitahuan jelas tentang cara mematuhinya.

Pendukung yang menentang ideologi gender mendesak Presiden Donald Trump untuk menghubungkan pendanaan kesejahteraan anak federal dengan kebijakan yang menolak ideologi tersebut. Mereka telah menyusun perintah eksekutif untuk mendefinisikan ulang penyalahgunaan anak dan melindungi orang tua yang menolak mengakui transisi gender anak-anak mereka. Upaya ini menyoroti kasus di mana orang tua menghadapi penyelidikan atau kehilangan hak asuh karena sikap mereka.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

Mahkamah Agung AS mendengarkan argumen lisan pada 1 April 2026 dalam kasus Trump v. Barbara, yang menggugat perintah eksekutif Presiden Donald Trump untuk membatasi kewarganegaraan berdasarkan tempat kelahiran. Trump menghadiri sidang tersebut secara langsung—presiden petahana pertama yang melakukannya—sebelum pergi di tengah jalan dan melayangkan kritik di Truth Social. Mayoritas hakim menyatakan keraguan terhadap argumen pemerintah.

Jaksa Agung negara bagian Demokrat telah meningkatkan upaya hukum dan politik menjelang pemilu paruh waktu 2026 saat Presiden Donald Trump mempromosikan perubahan federal pada aturan pemilu, termasuk RUU yang disahkan DPR terkait bukti kewarganegaraan. Jajak pendapat yang dipesan Heritage Action melaporkan dukungan mayoritas untuk persyaratan tersebut di lima negara bagian.

Dilaporkan oleh AI

A nine-judge Supreme Court bench stated on Wednesday that courts cannot hollow out religion in the name of reform and logic may not be the right tool to examine faith and belief systems. The remarks came on the second day of hearing a reference from the 2018 Sabarimala judgment. The Centre disagreed on courts deciding religious practices as superstition.

 

 

 

Situs web ini menggunakan cookie

Kami menggunakan cookie untuk analisis guna meningkatkan situs kami. Baca kebijakan privasi kami untuk informasi lebih lanjut.
Tolak