This content originally appeared on ProPublica and was authored by ProPublica.
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This content originally appeared on ProPublica and was authored by ProPublica.
This post was originally published on Radio Free.
This content originally appeared on ProPublica and was authored by ProPublica.
This post was originally published on Radio Free.
In a stunning decision, the 9th Circuit Court of Appeals has ruled that Idaho can ban transgender students from using bathrooms that align with their gender identity. The ruling prioritizes cisgender students’ “privacy concerns” over the harm faced by transgender students, effectively stripping them of Title IX protections in school facilities. It also contradicts recent precedent from both the…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
The Trump administration has moved to dismiss a long-standing legal battle with Idaho over access to emergency abortion care. “We knew this was coming, but that doesn’t make it any less devastating,” Jessica Valenti, a journalist and abortion rights advocate, wrote in her Substack, Abortion, Everyday. “By dropping this case, the Trump administration is sending a clear message that anti…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
An Idaho woman was restrained and removed by an unidentified security force after she expressed her dissent during a town hall meeting hosted by Republican lawmakers over the weekend — a blatant violation of her First Amendment rights, witnesses to the ordeal have said. Teresa Borrenpohl, a former Democratic candidate for the Idaho state legislature, called out Republican corruption in the…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
In Arkansas, state health officials announced a stunning statistic for 2023: The total number of abortions in the state, where some 1.5 million women live, was zero. In South Dakota, too, official records show zero abortions that year. And in Idaho, home to abortion battles that have recently made their way to the U.S. Supreme Court, the official number of recorded abortions was just…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
Republican lawmakers in the Idaho state legislature have authored a resolution demanding that the U.S. Supreme Court overturn its 2015 decision recognizing marriage equality throughout the country. House Joint Memorial 1 was introduced last week by the House State Affairs Committee. Although it is a nonbinding resolution, the legislation would make a formal declaration by the Idaho House of…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
Nearly two years after it was first proposed by Republican lawmakers, an Idaho law that, as one rights advocate said, essentially “traps” people in the state to stop them from getting abortion care, was permitted to go into effect on Monday after a federal appeals court ruling. The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Idaho can prohibit people from “harboring or transporting” a…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
Matt and Sam talk to Luke Mayville of Reclaim Idaho about progressive organizing in rural and red America.
This post was originally published on Dissent Magazine.
On Monday, the United States Supreme Court refused to advance a case to its docket in which the Biden administration sought to have some abortion protections (specifically in emergencies) restored in states with near-total abortion bans. The court order, which came out on the first day of the new Supreme Court term, was listed among several other cases in which the Court denied a writ of…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
Chelsea Goodrich and her mother, Lorraine, were locked in discussions with the director of the Mormon church’s risk management division, Paul Rytting. One of Rytting’s jobs is to protect the church from legal liability, including sexual abuse lawsuits.
The women had come to the meeting with one clear request: Would the church allow a local Idaho bishop who heard Chelsea’s father’s confession of abuse to testify against him at trial?
In this week’s episode, produced in collaboration with The Associated Press, secret audio recordings expose a legal playbook used by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints that keeps evidence of sex abuse out of reach of authorities.
AP reporters Michael Rezendes and Jason Dearen investigate what happened after a former Mormon bishop, John Goodrich, was accused of sexual abuse—and the family pressed Mormon church officials on whether they were going to make decisions that would help Chelsea or her father.
Rezendes and Dearen also sit down with guest host Michael Montgomery to discuss a major development in the Goodrich case since this investigation was released last year—and why states across the country continue to exempt clergy from mandatory reporting laws that are meant to protect children from abuse.
This is an update of an episode that originally aired in December 2023.
This post was originally published on Reveal.
It just became more dangerous for a librarian to check out a book to a child in Idaho. On July 1, House Bill 710 went into effect in the state, undermining the agency of library workers to build collections that meet the needs of their communities. The legislation targets “harmful materials” in public and school libraries, requiring library workers to move them within 60 days at the request of any…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
Last week, the Supreme Court dismissed a case brought forth by Idaho that challenged doctors’ ability to provide emergency abortions to stabilize a patient’s health and life. As a result, for now, Idaho’s near-total abortion ban does not take precedence over a federal law known as the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA), which is a welcome relief for many doctors on the frontlines.
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
The Supreme Court will allow Idaho hospital physicians to provide abortions when they are needed in medical emergencies, the court ruled Thursday, in an opinion that was briefly made public Wednesday and reported by Bloomberg. The writing represents a meaningful — if temporary — victory for health care providers. The court has dismissed the case and returned it to lower courts for further…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
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The post The Pacifica Evening News, Weekdays – June 26, 2024. Supreme Court appears set to rule that emergency abortions in Idaho could be legal. appeared first on KPFA.
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The Supreme Court heard arguments this week about the legality of Idaho’s near-total abortion ban, which criminalizes the procedure in all circumstances unless the life of the parent is at risk. It’s the first such case to reach the high court since the conservative majority overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. A key issue is whether a state ban can take precedence over the federal right to receive emergency care, including an abortion. The Biden administration argued that Idaho’s law violates the Emergency Medical Treatment and Active Labor Act, or EMTALA. If the justices side with Idaho, it could have major implications for reproductive care and worsen racial disparities for healthcare in at least half a dozen other states with similar bans. “People are going to die,” warns Karen Thompson, legal director of the nonprofit advocacy group Pregnancy Justice. “They are going to be bleeding out in hospital rooms. They’re going to be dying from sepsis because doctors are not going to be able to make the choices that they need to make to give people the care that will save their lives in these emergency situations.”
This content originally appeared on Democracy Now! and was authored by Democracy Now!.
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In 1999, John Goodrich, an Idaho dentist who was also a bishop with the Mormon church, accompanied his teenage daughter Chelsea on a school field trip to the East Coast. During a stay in Williamsburg, Virginia, he allegedly abused her sexually, as she later claimed he had done since she was at least 9.
Nearly a quarter-century later, John Goodrich – whose story was at the center of an Associated Press/Reveal radio collaboration about how The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints protects itself from sexual abuse allegations – has been arrested in Virginia following a grand jury indictment on multiple felony charges, including forcible rape, forcible sodomy and aggravated sexual battery by a parent of a child.
The indictment came in January, weeks after AP investigative reporters Jason Dearen and Michael Rezendes exposed how the Mormon church used a legal playbook to keep accusations against John Goodrich secret, despite numerous recordings and witnesses supporting the allegations. John Goodrich also has been accused of similar abuse in Idaho.
Dearen and Rezendes write:
Chelsea and her mother, Lorraine, went to Idaho police in 2016 to report wide-ranging allegations of abuse during her childhood.
Those charges were eventually dropped after a key witness in the case, another Mormon bishop to whom John had made a spiritual confession about him and his daughter, refused to testify. While the details of that confession have not been made public, the church excommunicated Goodrich.
John Goodrich couldn’t be reached for comment.
The Reveal/AP radio episode, which first aired in December, drew on hours of audio recordings of Chelsea Goodrich’s meetings with Paul Rytting, a Utah attorney who directs the church’s risk management division. The recordings show how Rytting, despite expressing concern for what he called John Goodrich’s “significant sexual transgression,” discouraged the local bishop to whom John Goodrich confessed from testifying. Rytting cited Idaho’s clergy-penitent privilege that exempts clergy from having to divulge information to authorities about child sex abuse that is gleaned in a spiritual confession.
Dearen and Rezendes write:
Invoking the clergy privilege was just one facet of the risk management playbook that Rytting employed in the Goodrich matter. Rytting offered Chelsea and her mother $300,000 in exchange for a confidentiality agreement and a pledge to destroy their recordings of their meetings, which they had made at the recommendation of an attorney and with Rytting’s knowledge. The AP obtained similar recordings that were made by a church member at the time who attended the meetings as Chelsea’s advocate.
In a statement in December, a church spokesperson told The AP and Reveal that “the abuse of a child or any other individual is inexcusable.” The church said it dedicates “tremendous resources” to preventing and reporting abuse and noted that John Goodrich, following his excommunication, “has not been readmitted to church membership.”
Lawmakers in Utah, where the Mormon church is headquartered, recently passed a bill that provides legal protections to clergy if they notify authorities of ongoing child abuse based on information obtained from a perpetrator during a confession.
The measure extends to clergy the same legal protections that exist for mandatory reporters of child abuse and neglect, such as doctors, teachers or therapists. However, religious leaders who report abuse still will not be required to testify.
“I hope this case will finally bring justice for my childhood sexual abuse,” Chelsea Goodrich, now in her 30s, said in a statement to The AP. “I’m grateful it appears that the Commonwealth of Virginia is taking one event of child sexual assault more seriously than years of repeated assaults were treated in Idaho.”
Michael Montgomery can be reached at mmontgomery@revealnews.org. Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter: @mdmontgomery.
Ex-Mormon Bishop Arrested on Charges of Sexually Abusing His Daughter is a story from Reveal. Reveal is a registered trademark of The Center for Investigative Reporting and is a 501(c)(3) tax exempt organization.
This post was originally published on Reveal.
In 1999, John Goodrich, an Idaho dentist who was also a bishop with the Mormon church, accompanied his teenage daughter Chelsea on a school field trip to the East Coast. During a stay in Williamsburg, Virginia, he allegedly abused her sexually, as she later claimed he had done since she was at least 9.
Nearly a quarter-century later, John Goodrich – whose story was at the center of an Associated Press/Reveal radio collaboration about how The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints protects itself from sexual abuse allegations – has been arrested in Virginia following a grand jury indictment on multiple felony charges, including forcible rape, forcible sodomy and aggravated sexual battery by a parent of a child.
The indictment came in January, weeks after AP investigative reporters Jason Dearen and Michael Rezendes exposed how the Mormon church used a legal playbook to keep accusations against John Goodrich secret, despite numerous recordings and witnesses supporting the allegations. John Goodrich also has been accused of similar abuse in Idaho.
Dearen and Rezendes write:
Chelsea and her mother, Lorraine, went to Idaho police in 2016 to report wide-ranging allegations of abuse during her childhood.
Those charges were eventually dropped after a key witness in the case, another Mormon bishop to whom John had made a spiritual confession about him and his daughter, refused to testify. While the details of that confession have not been made public, the church excommunicated Goodrich.
John Goodrich couldn’t be reached for comment.
The Reveal/AP radio episode, which first aired in December, drew on hours of audio recordings of Chelsea Goodrich’s meetings with Paul Rytting, a Utah attorney who directs the church’s risk management division. The recordings show how Rytting, despite expressing concern for what he called John Goodrich’s “significant sexual transgression,” discouraged the local bishop to whom John Goodrich confessed from testifying. Rytting cited Idaho’s clergy-penitent privilege that exempts clergy from having to divulge information to authorities about child sex abuse that is gleaned in a spiritual confession.
Dearen and Rezendes write:
Invoking the clergy privilege was just one facet of the risk management playbook that Rytting employed in the Goodrich matter. Rytting offered Chelsea and her mother $300,000 in exchange for a confidentiality agreement and a pledge to destroy their recordings of their meetings, which they had made at the recommendation of an attorney and with Rytting’s knowledge. The AP obtained similar recordings that were made by a church member at the time who attended the meetings as Chelsea’s advocate.
In a statement in December, a church spokesperson told The AP and Reveal that “the abuse of a child or any other individual is inexcusable.” The church said it dedicates “tremendous resources” to preventing and reporting abuse and noted that John Goodrich, following his excommunication, “has not been readmitted to church membership.”
Lawmakers in Utah, where the Mormon church is headquartered, recently passed a bill that provides legal protections to clergy if they notify authorities of ongoing child abuse based on information obtained from a perpetrator during a confession.
The measure extends to clergy the same legal protections that exist for mandatory reporters of child abuse and neglect, such as doctors, teachers or therapists. However, religious leaders who report abuse still will not be required to testify.
“I hope this case will finally bring justice for my childhood sexual abuse,” Chelsea Goodrich, now in her 30s, said in a statement to The AP. “I’m grateful it appears that the Commonwealth of Virginia is taking one event of child sexual assault more seriously than years of repeated assaults were treated in Idaho.”
Michael Montgomery can be reached at mmontgomery@revealnews.org. Follow him on X, formerly known as Twitter: @mdmontgomery.
Ex-Mormon Bishop Arrested on Charges of Sexually Abusing His Daughter is a story from Reveal. Reveal is a registered trademark of The Center for Investigative Reporting and is a 501(c)(3) tax exempt organization.
This post was originally published on Reveal.
An Idaho bill that would ban public funds from paying for gender-affirming care advanced out of committee and now heads to the Idaho House floor. “Concerning!! A bill in Idaho that would greatly limit ADULT access to gender affirming care has PASSED committee,” LGBTQ legislative researcher Allison Chapman said on social media. “It prohibits use of state funds, medicaid, and state facilities…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
Idaho has lost 22 percent of its practicing obstetricians in the 15 months since the state’s near-complete ban on abortion was implemented, a new study finds. The research, conducted by the Idaho Physician Well-Being Action Collaborative (IPWAC), reveals that over 50 obstetricians in Idaho have left the state since August 2022, meaning that only an estimated 210 obstetricians are available to…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
Right-wing lawmakers in Tennessee and Oklahoma have introduced “abortion trafficking” bills that would criminalize helping pregnant minors access abortions out of state. These bills mirror Idaho’s “abortion trafficking” bill, which went into effect last year but was blocked by a federal court in November. “Under these laws, an aunt or grandma who helps a teenager get an abortion would be a…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
A new Republican-sponsored bill in Idaho would remove two exceptions that exist in the state’s already highly restrictive abortion law, a move that critics are lambasting as going in the wrong direction for the state. Polling in this very conservative state indicates that most residents agree — the abortion law needs changes that would reduce restrictions on accessing the procedure.
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
Republicans in Idaho have advanced a proposed bill that would allow residents of the state to sue libraries over purportedly obscene content in books on their shelves, if they’re accessible to patrons under 18 years of age, including books that depict a vague definition of homosexual acts. House Bill 384, introduced by GOP lawmakers earlier this month, expands the state’s obscenity law…
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The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday opted to reinstate Idaho’s near-total abortion ban, a draconian law that carries up to five years in prison for doctors who perform the procedure outside of extremely narrow circumstances. The high court, which overturned the constitutional right to abortion in the summer of 2022, agreed to hear a Justice Department challenge to Idaho’s abortion ban in April.
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
A federal court ruled on Tuesday that an Idaho law prohibiting doctors from providing transgender minors with access to gender-affirming care is likely unconstitutional and blocked the law from taking effect. The gender-affirming healthcare ban, which was originally planned to go into effect on January 1, would have made providing puberty blockers and hormone therapies to transgender youth a…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
In this week’s episode, produced in collaboration with The Associated Press, secret audio recordings expose a legal playbook used by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints that keeps evidence of sex abuse out of reach of authorities.
AP reporters Michael Rezendes and Jason Dearen investigate the case of a former Mormon bishop, John Goodrich, who was accused of sexually abusing his daughter Chelsea.
The story opens in Hailey, Idaho, with Chelsea Goodrich and her mother, Lorraine, locked in discussions with the director of the Mormon church’s risk management division, Paul Rytting. One of Rytting’s jobs is to protect the church from legal liability, including sexual abuse lawsuits.
The women had come to the meeting with one clear request: Would the church allow a local Idaho bishop, which in the Mormon church is akin to a Catholic priest, to testify at John Goodrich’s trial? Bishop Michael Miller, who accompanied Rytting to the meeting, had heard John Goodrich’s confession before he was arrested on charges of lewd behavior with a minor.
Audio recordings of the meeting and others show how Rytting, despite expressing concern for what he called John Goodrich’s “significant sexual transgression,” would discourage Miller from testifying, citing an Idaho law that exempts clergy from having to divulge information about child sex abuse that is gleaned in a confession.
In the episode’s final segment, Rezendes and Dearen sit down with guest host Michael Montgomery to discuss why states across the country exempt clergy from mandatory reporting laws that are meant to protect children from abuse.
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The state of Idaho, represented by the Alliance Defending Freedom – designated a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Center – asked the U.S. Supreme Court on Monday to allow its abortion ban to take full effect. Idaho’s Defense of Life Act is one of the strictest abortion bans in the country and imposes criminal penalties on doctors who perform abortions in the state. In 2022…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
Bonner General Health, a hospital in Bonner County, Idaho, has discontinued its obstetrics, labor and delivery services, citing the state’s “legal and political climate.” Bonner Health staffed the county’s only OB-GYNs. County residents will now have to drive at least an hour south to access OB-GYN care. “To go into labor at home and arrive at the hospital five minutes later was a blessing that I…
This post was originally published on Latest – Truthout.
Eight women across three states — Idaho, Tennessee and Oklahoma — have filed legal actions to ensure that pregnant people with dangerous complications can access abortion care in those states. “The Supreme Court’s unwarranted reversal of Roe v. Wade has led repeatedly, in multiple states, to women being denied abortion care when they face serious complications in their pregnancies,” Nancy Northup…