If I travelled south to Tasmania and took the medication I would similarly be committing an offence under Section 134 of the Criminal Code Act 1924 and could face up to 21 years jail. The reactionary amendment to the Act (s164) after a complaint to police in 2001 would not help me here.
If I went to South Australia I would be committing an offence under Section 81(1) of the Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 and 'liable to be imprisoned for life'.
If you find yourself thinking that criminal charges would never be laid against a woman in such circumstances, let me remind you that this has already happened.
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In Cairns, Queensland in late 2008 a young woman named Tegan Leach obtained mifepristone from overseas and took the medication in the home she shared with her partner.
Early 2009 their home was searched by police for a completely unrelated matter. Unluckily for her, she had not disposed of the medication packaging. Being a modern Gen-Y Australian woman, she assumed private decisions about her body were her own and had no idea that abortion was still a crime based on laws written almost two centuries prior. When questioned by police she freely disclosed what the drugs had been for and why she had taken them. In essence, without knowing it, she was admitting to a crime.
The public prosecutor chose to charge her with procuring her own miscarriage, under section 225 of the Queensland Criminal Code Act 1899. The media saturation, the attacks on the young couple and the criminal trial that followed have been well documented in Professor Caroline de Costa's book; Never Ever Again: why Australian abortion law needs reform 2nd edn (Boolarong Press 2010), and I won't go into detail here. Suffice to say, she was able to be acquitted of a crime only through the semantics of a legal definition of the word 'noxious' and a sympathetic jury.
Unfortunately, unless there is a crisis, socially conservative parliaments prefer to turn a blind eye and sweep abortion issues under the carpet in preference to facing the wrath of the anti-choice groups, and their fear is not without basis. The extremist elements of anti-choice groups and their underhanded, vitriolic and in some cases violent tactics, strike fear into politicians.
When there is a crisis, such as a complaint to police about illegal abortion, parliaments usually act to avoid the embarrassment of sending people to trial for abortion related crimes. When legislative amendments are rushed through parliament without time for a thorough consideration of the issues, with trade-offs of restrictive amendments in exchange for votes, there are invariably unforeseen negative consequences.
The worst thing about reactionary amendments is that they are usually done to protect doctors, not done to give women full autonomy over their bodies. Even in states such as Western Australia and Tasmania which have amended their criminal legislation, it is usually not the woman's legal authority to decide whether to continue her pregnancy, it is the legal prerogative of one, or sometimes two, doctors, who may not have met the woman prior to making this life-altering decision on her behalf. The majority of doctors do not want the responsibility of being legal gatekeeper.
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Other jurisdictions rely on judicial precedent, which can be traced back to the UK in foregone centuries, and usually involve a 'relative risk' assessment. That is, the doctor/s must assess that the risk of continuing the pregnancy must be greater than the risk of terminating it (which, by the way, is laughable given that the weight of medical evidence tells us that early terminations are infinitely safer than full term pregnancy and childbirth).
Let me just highlight that point: In 2012, in most states and territories of Australia, a woman still does not have the legal authority to decide to terminate her pregnancy.
This begs the question, now that mifepristone has been approved for use in Australia, how many more Tegan Leach style prosecutions will there be?
There are, of course, many reasons why abortion laws need to change, but the imminent clash of 18th century law and 21st century medicine might just provide the perfect storm required to force state and territory governments to act.
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