South Dakota’s new law criminalizing the providing and advertising of abortion pills and other abortion-related items faces a lawsuit alleging the advertising prohibition is unconstitutional.
A New York-based nonprofit, Mayday Health, and a Democratic former South Dakota lawmaker, Nancy Turbak Berry, filed the lawsuit Friday in federal court against South Dakota’s Republican governor and attorney general.
The state’s Republican-dominated Legislature passed the bill in March, and Gov. Larry Rhoden signed it into law that same month. It’s scheduled to take effect July 1.
South Dakota already had a law that bans abortions except when necessary “to preserve the life of the pregnant female.” The new law says no person may knowingly dispense, distribute, sell or advertise an article or thing designed, adapted or intended to produce an abortion. The ban also covers any article, instrument, substance, drug, medicine or thing that is “advertised or described in a manner calculated to lead another to use or apply it for producing an abortion.”
Violations are felonies punishable by up to two years in prison and a $4,000 fine. The law also gives the state attorney general authority to recover civil penalties of $10,000 per violation.
The lawsuit alleges it’s unconstitutional to prohibit advertising that’s protected by the free speech guarantees in the First Amendment.
Turbak Berry previously led a group supporting a failed 2024 ballot question that would have restored abortion rights in the state. The lawsuit alleges her free speech is deterred by the new law. As an example, the lawsuit says the prohibition on advertising would prevent her from wearing a sweatshirt that features Mayday’s mission and web address.
“Unless this court grants relief, Turbak will be deterred from wearing the sweatshirt, and thereby deterred from engaging in lawsuit First Amendment-protected speech,” the lawsuit says.
Turbak Berry responded to South Dakota Searchlight with a written statement.
“Apparently, our state government isn’t satisfied with controlling women’s reproductive organs — they even want to control our eyes and ears,” Turbak Berry said. “They even want control over what women in South Dakota can see and hear. It’s outrageous.”
Gov. Rhoden responded to the lawsuit in a post on X, formerly Twitter.
“If Mayday Health and the abortion lobby want to sue us for defending unborn life, bring it on.”
State Attorney General Marty Jackley issued a written statement.
“The U.S. Supreme Court has made it clear that states have the right to protect life,” Jackley said. “As with Mayday’s previous unsuccessful lawsuit, I will defend innocent life.”
Mayday previously engaged in a legal battle with Jackley over advertisements Mayday placed at gas stations around the state saying “Pregnant? Don’t want to be?” and directing people to Mayday’s website, which includes information on obtaining abortion pills.
You can read the full article at South Dakota Searchlight.
