Government & Politics

The KC Star moves to intervene in Kansas abortion lawsuit over hidden court records

A mural saying, “Abortion is Health Care” adorned the front window of Planned Parenthood health center in Kansas City, Kansas. The clinic, by coincidence, opened the same week the Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade in 2022.
A mural saying, “Abortion is Health Care” adorned the front window of Planned Parenthood health center in Kansas City, Kansas. The clinic, by coincidence, opened the same week the Supreme Court struck down Roe v. Wade in 2022. tljungblad@kcstar.com

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The Kansas City Star has intervened in a lawsuit over access to records in a civil dispute between Planned Parenthood and the state of Kansas regarding abortion.

In its filing, The Star asked a Johnson County District Court judge to unseal all exhibits filed under seal as a result of an agreement between lawyers representing Attorney General Kris Kobach and abortion providers, while allowing appropriate redactions to exclude patients’ names and personal information.

The suit, filed in 2023, challenges strict state requirements mandating that providers survey patients seeking an abortion, share medically inaccurate or unproven information with people considering the procedure, and require them to wait at least 24 hours before receiving an abortion.

Enforcement of the new restrictions adopted by the Legislature has been halted while the suit works its way through the courts.

“The public has a right to know what is happening in judicial proceedings,” Star Executive Editor Greg Farmer said. “The efforts in this case to hide records from public view are an attack on long-established democratic principles.

“Our goal with this motion is to fight for our readers and all Kansans and to ensure and advocate for transparency on their behalf,” Farmer said.

Lawyers representing the state filed their own motion seeking for certain records to be unsealed after attorneys for Planned Parenthood Great Plains, Hodes and Nauser Women’s Health and the Center for Reproductive Rights designated them as “confidential” or “attorneys’ eyes only.”

Among those records are two videos that are shown to patients at Planned Parenthood who are considering an abortion. Plaintiffs said in their response that “patients can only watch the videos in the office.”

“When Plaintiffs filed this lawsuit, they issued a press release which quoted Emily Wales, the president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Plains, as saying that ‘people deserve facts and honest conversations’ about a woman’s right to an abortion. The Kansas City Star could not agree more,” The Star’s attorney, Bernie Rhodes, wrote in the motion.

Plaintiffs are asking the court to block the enforcement of the full policy, which requires physicians to obtain detailed information from patients about their pregnancy 24 hours before the procedure.

The law also requires physicians to listen to the fetus’ heartbeat 30 minutes prior to an abortion. It would also require providers to, without evidence, post information in their clinics and websites that abortions could increase their risk of breast cancer and premature birth in future pregnancies.

The law would also mandate abortion providers survey women, asking them to choose the most important reason for getting an abortion. Included as options as part of the survey are the following potential reasons: financial stress, rape, fetal disabilities, or the health of the mother.

This story was originally published April 11, 2025 at 7:33 PM.

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Matthew Kelly
The Kansas City Star
Matthew Kelly is The Kansas City Star’s Kansas State Government reporter. He previously covered local government for The Wichita Eagle. Kelly holds a political science degree from Wichita State University.
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