Court Opinion

ID: 4578006
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-10-16 21:01:23.562652+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:38:36.151726
License: Public Domain

RECOMMENDED FOR PUBLICATION
                                    Pursuant to Sixth Circuit I.O.P. 32.1(b)
                                           File Name: 20a0332p.06

                     UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                                      FOR THE SIXTH CIRCUIT

EMW WOMEN’S SURGICAL CENTER, P.S.C., on behalf                   ┐
of itself, its staff, and its patients; ERNEST MARSHALL,         │
M.D., on behalf of himself and his patients,                     │
                                        Plaintiffs-Appellees,    │
                                                                 │
                                                                  >        No. 18-6161
PLANNED PARENTHOOD OF INDIANA AND KENTUCKY,                      │
INC.,                                                            │
                    Intervenor Plaintiff-Appellee,               │
                                                                 │
                                                                 │
        v.                                                       │
                                                                 │
ERIC FRIEDLANDER, in his official capacity as                    │
Secretary of Kentucky’s Cabinet for Health and                   │
Family Services; ANDREW G. BESHEAR, Governor of                  │
Kentucky, in his official capacity,                              │
                                                                 │
                                Defendants-Appellants,
                                                                 │
                                                                 │
DANIEL J. CAMERON, Attorney General of the                       │
Commonwealth of Kentucky,                                        │
                                 Intervenor.                     │
                                                                 ┘

                           Appeal from the United States District Court
                        for the Western District of Kentucky at Louisville.
                      No. 3:17-cv-00189—Gregory N. Stivers, District Judge.

                                        Argued: August 8, 2019

                                 Decided and Filed: October 16, 2020

                        Before: CLAY, LARSEN, and READLER, Circuit Judges.
                                    _________________

                                                COUNSEL

ARGUED: S. Chad Meredith, OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR, Frankfort, Kentucky, for
Appellants. Easha Anand, ORRICK, HERRINGTON & SUTCLIFFFE LLP, San Francisco,
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California, for Appellee Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc. Brigitte Amiri,
AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION, New York, New York, for
Appellees Women’s Surgical Center, P.S.C. and Ernest Marshall, M.D. ON BRIEF: S. Chad
Meredith, M. Stephen Pitt, Matthew F. Kuhn, OFFICE OF THE GOVERNOR, Frankfort,
Kentucky, for Appellants.         Easha Anand, Karen G. Johnson-McKewan, ORRICK,
HERRINGTON & SUTCLIFFFE LLP, San Francisco, California, Carrie Y. Flaxman,
PLANNED PARENTHOOD FEDERATION OF AMERICA, Washington, D.C., Michael P.
Abate, James E. McGhee, KAPLAN JOHNSON ABATE & BIRD LLP, Louisville, Kentucky,
Lisa T. Simpson, Jennifer M. Keighley, ORRICK, HERRINGTON & SUTCLIFFE LLP, New
York, New York, Melanie L. Bostwick, ORRICK, HERRINGTON & SUTCLIFFE LLP,
Washington, D.C., Robert L. Uriarte, ORRICK, HERRINGTON & SUTCLIFFE LLP, Menlo
Park, California, for Appellee Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc. Brigitte Amiri,
Elizabeth Watson, AMERICAN CIVIL LIBERTIES UNION FOUNDATION, New York, New
York, Donald L. Cox, LYNCH, COX, GILMAN & GOODMAN, P.S.C., Louisville, Kentucky,
Heather L. Gatnarek, ACLU OF KENTUCKY, Louisville, Kentucky, Amy D. Cubbage,
ACKERSON & YANN, PLLC, Louisville, Kentucky, for Appellees Women’s Surgical Center,
P.S.C. and Ernest Marshall, M.D. Thomas M. Fisher, OFFICE OF THE INDIANA
ATTORNEY GENERAL, Indianapolis, Indiana, Heidi Parry Stern, OFFICE OF THE NEVADA
ATTORNEY GENERAL, Carson City, Nevada, La Tasha Buckner, OFFICE OF THE
KENTUCKY ATTORNEY GENERAL, Frankfort, Kentucky, Kimberly A. Parker, WILMER
CUTLER PICKERING HALE AND DORR LLP, Washington, D.C., for Amici Curiae.

         LARSEN, J., delivered the opinion of the court in which READLER, J., joined. CLAY,
J. (pp. 38–73), delivered a separate dissenting opinion.
                                      _________________

                                           OPINION
                                      _________________

       LARSEN, Circuit Judge. Two decades ago, the Kentucky General Assembly enacted a
law requiring abortion facilities to obtain transfer agreements with a local hospital and transport
agreements with a local ambulance service. Ky. Rev. Stat. (KRS) § 216B.0435. Regulations
promulgated in 2017 imposed stricter conditions on the agreements but also allowed successive,
ninety-day waivers for facilities unable to comply with the law. 902 Ky. Admin. Regs. (KAR)
20:360 § 10. The plaintiffs in this case, who were, at the time, Kentucky’s only licensed
abortion facility, its owner, and another facility seeking licensure, challenged the transfer- and
transport-agreement requirements as imposing an undue burden on abortion access.               The
plaintiffs argued that it had become impossible for them to obtain the required agreements, and
that the law’s enforcement would leave Kentucky without a licensed abortion facility, thereby
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eliminating abortion access in the Commonwealth. Agreeing with the plaintiffs, the district court
held that Kentucky’s requirements were facially invalid and permanently enjoined them.

        Kentucky1 appeals the permanent injunction, arguing, among other things, that the
plaintiffs failed to show that the law would in fact leave the Commonwealth without a licensed
facility, because a facility unable to obtain the required agreements could still obtain a waiver.
Kentucky also appeals the district court’s order imposing monetary sanctions for failure to
produce a designee for a properly noticed deposition. We conclude that the district court did not
abuse its discretion by imposing monetary sanctions, so we AFFIRM in part. But because the
district court erred in concluding that Kentucky would be left without an abortion facility, we
REVERSE in part, VACATE the permanent injunction, and REMAND for further proceedings.

                                                         I.

                                                        A.

        In 1998, the Kentucky General Assembly imposed new licensing requirements on
abortion providers in response to concerns about the appalling, unsanitary conditions in some
Kentucky abortion facilities. As part of the new licensing scheme, the General Assembly
enacted KRS § 216B.0435, which required abortion facilities to acquire “a written agreement
with a licensed acute-care hospital capable of treating patients with unforeseen complications
related to an abortion facility procedure” as well as “a written agreement with a licensed local
ambulance service for the transport” of patients to the hospital. Id. § 216B.0435(1), (3). The
statute also requires abortion facilities to file these agreements with Kentucky’s Cabinet for
Health and Family Services (CHFS or “the Cabinet”). Id. § 216B.0435(4). The Office of
Inspector General oversees abortion facilities’ compliance with these regulations. Id.
§ 194A.030(1)(c)(1)–(4).         In addition to abortion facilities, Kentucky requires ambulatory
surgical centers to “have a transfer agreement . . . in place with at least one (1) acute care
hospital.” Ky. Cabinet for Health & Fam. Servs., 2020–2022 State Health Plan 52 (Aug. 2020);
see 900 KAR 5:020 § 2(1) (incorporating by reference the state health plan).

        1The  defendants in this case are the Secretary of Kentucky’s Cabinet for Health and Family Services and
the Governor of Kentucky in their official capacities. We refer to the defendants collectively as “Kentucky” or “the
Commonwealth.”
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       Prior to 2017, Kentucky’s regulations implementing the transfer- and transport-agreement
requirements for abortion facilities merely parroted the statute. See 902 KAR 20:360 § 10
(2016). But beginning in 2016, Kentucky started scrutinizing these agreements more closely,
requiring that they adhere to stricter standards. And during the early stages of this litigation in
June 2017, Kentucky promulgated an emergency regulation amending 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 to
address concerns raised by Kentucky’s Inspector General regarding the lack of applicable
compliance standards. The new regulation imposed more stringent conditions on the necessary
agreements, including the requirement that transfer agreements be with a Kentucky-licensed
acute care hospital in the same county as the abortion facility or within a twenty-minute drive.
See 902 KAR 20:360 § 10(3)(a).

       The new regulation also authorized ninety-day waivers of the transfer- and transport-
agreement requirements. Id. § 10(5). To apply for a waiver, the facility must certify that it “has
exhausted all reasonable efforts to obtain a transfer or transport agreement for a continuous
ninety (90) calendar day period prior to the request.” Id. § 10(5)(a)(2). In adjudicating the
waiver request, the Inspector General must consider the facility’s “[r]egulatory compliance
history” along with whether the facility has made “a good faith effort to obtain a transfer or
transport agreement” and whether the facility “can provide the same level of patient care and
safety via alternative health services during any extension period.” Id. § 10(5)(b)(1)–(3).
Though initially promulgated as an emergency regulation, these requirements are now embedded
in 902 KAR 20:360 § 10.

                                                B.

       For almost two decades, the transfer- and transport-agreement requirements posed no
challenge for facilities seeking a license to perform abortions. According to the district court,
compliance with KRS § 216B.0435 “appears to have been merely an item on the checklist of
licensure requirements, and the submitted agreements did not receive serious scrutiny.” But as
noted above, Kentucky began to scrutinize the required agreements more closely in 2016.
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                                                 1.

        Back in 2009, Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky had begun taking steps to
provide abortions in the Louisville area. Toward that end, Planned Parenthood raised nearly
$4 million to build a new Louisville facility, which was completed in 2015. Planned Parenthood
also obtained a transfer agreement with the Obstetrics and Gynecology Department at University
of Louisville Hospital and a transport agreement with Louisville Metro Emergency Medical
Services. It then filed an application with CHFS for an abortion-facility license in November
2015.

        Health facilities in Kentucky may obtain a license only after the licensing agency
performs an unannounced, on-site inspection to determine that the facility complies with all
applicable regulations. 902 KAR 20:008 § 2(7). On December 1, 2015, an attorney for Planned
Parenthood sent an email to then-Inspector General Maryellen Mynear communicating the
organization’s understanding that the on-site-inspection provision “requires the applicant to
initiate business operations after filing an application so that your office will have an operational
facility to review when the unannounced licensure survey is conducted.” Inspector Mynear
responded, agreeing that “a facility must be performing services for which it seeks licensure so
that the survey (i.e., inspection) process may fully evaluate compliance with the applicable
regulations.” Planned Parenthood consequently began performing abortions in Louisville on
December 3.

        Matthew Bevin became Governor of Kentucky five days later on December 8, 2015,
succeeding Steven Beshear. The following month, Stephanie Hold, the new acting Inspector
General, sent a letter directing Planned Parenthood to stop performing abortions because its
transfer and transport agreements were deficient and because Planned Parenthood was not yet
licensed. The letter stated that the Cabinet could not continue its review of Planned Parenthood’s
license application until Planned Parenthood had submitted new, compliant agreements. It also
rejected Inspector Mynear’s interpretation of the licensing regulations, asserting that Planned
Parenthood “is not permitted to perform the abortion procedure until a license is issued following
an inspection of [its] facility.” Planned Parenthood responded the next day, confirming that it
was no longer performing abortions at its Louisville facility.
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       Adopting acting Inspector Hold’s interpretation of the regulations, CHFS sued Planned
Parenthood in state court in February 2016, alleging that the abortions Planned Parenthood had
performed in December 2015 and January 2016 without a license had been illegal.              The
Cabinet’s complaint requested that Planned Parenthood be fined for the alleged misconduct.

       In the meantime, Planned Parenthood sought compliant transfer and transport agreements
in order to complete its license application. It entered into new agreements with University of
Louisville Hospital, but the hospital rescinded them shortly after signing them.       Planned
Parenthood then tried unsuccessfully to obtain an agreement with other Louisville hospitals. It
ultimately entered into a transfer agreement with Clark Memorial Hospital in Indiana, which is
five miles away from Louisville, as well as with University of Kentucky Hospital in Lexington.
CHFS denied Planned Parenthood’s license application in June 2016, finding the submitted
transfer agreements inadequate. To support its decision, the Cabinet cited the distance between
Planned Parenthood’s Louisville facility and the University of Kentucky Hospital in Lexington
and the fact that Clark Memorial Hospital was not a Kentucky-licensed hospital.

       Later that month, the Jefferson Circuit Court dismissed the Cabinet’s lawsuit against
Planned Parenthood for failure to state a claim. Commonwealth v. Planned Parenthood of Ind. &
Ky., No. 16-CI-0802, slip op. at 4 (Jefferson Cir. Ct. June 30, 2016). The Kentucky Court of
Appeals subsequently reversed the dismissal, holding that the Cabinet’s “allegations are
sufficient to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.”     Commonwealth v. Planned
Parenthood of Ind. & Ky., Inc., No. 2016-CA-001125-MR, 2017 WL 6398298, at *2 (Ky. Ct.
App. Dec. 15, 2017). The suit remained ongoing throughout the proceedings below in this case.

                                              2.

       In addition to reviewing Planned Parenthood’s new agreements, CHFS also took a hard
look at the existing transfer and transport agreements of EMW Women’s Surgical Center,
P.S.C.—Kentucky’s only licensed abortion facility at the time. Owned by Ernest Marshall,
M.D., EMW’s Louisville facility has performed abortions since the 1980s. Prior to 2020, the
Louisville facility performed nearly all abortions in the Commonwealth. Dr. Marshall and all
other physicians on staff at EMW maintain admitting privileges at local hospitals. And prior to
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2017, EMW maintained a transfer agreement with University of Louisville Hospital and a
transport agreement with Mercy Ambulance Service.

       EMW had renewed its abortion facility license without issue in early 2016. The new
license was valid through May 31, 2017. But in March 2017, CHFS notified EMW that its
license had been renewed in error. EMW’s transfer and transport agreements, the Cabinet
explained, were not in compliance with Kentucky law. EMW was given ten days to cure the
deficiencies. If it failed to do so, it would have to either file an administrative appeal or lose its
license. EMW sought to cure the deficiencies, but no Louisville hospital would enter into a
compliant transfer agreement.

                                                 C.

       Unable to secure a transfer agreement that would satisfy the Cabinet’s seemingly new
and more rigorous interpretation of the transfer-agreement regulation, EMW and Dr. Marshall
sued Vickie Yates Brown Glisson, then the Secretary of CHFS, in her official capacity in the
United States District Court for the Western District of Kentucky. They alleged that (1) the
enforcement of the transfer- and transport-agreement requirements violated substantive due
process by “impos[ing] a substantial obstacle on women seeking abortions,” (2) revoking
EMW’s license would violate procedural due process, (3) Kentucky had unconstitutionally
“delegate[d] standardless and unreviewable authority to private parties,” and (4) Kentucky’s
arbitrary enforcement of the requirements constituted First Amendment retaliation. EMW and
Dr. Marshall asked the district court to declare Kentucky’s requirements unconstitutional and to
enjoin CHFS from enforcing those requirements.

       Two days after the plaintiffs filed suit, the district court granted an ex parte motion for a
temporary restraining order prohibiting Kentucky from enforcing KRS § 216B.0435 and 902
KAR 20:360 for fourteen days.          The parties then agreed that the terms of the temporary
restraining order “will continue in full force and effect as a Preliminary Injunction until a final
judgment is entered in this action.”

       In June 2017, Planned Parenthood intervened in the lawsuit. Besides suing the Secretary
of CHFS, Planned Parenthood also named then-Governor Bevin as a defendant in his official
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capacity. Planned Parenthood alleged that (1) Kentucky’s transfer- and transport-agreement
requirements had the purpose and effect of imposing an undue burden on women seeking an
abortion, (2) the requirements violated the Equal Protection Clause by discriminating against
abortion facilities, (3) CHFS’s denial of Planned Parenthood’s license application violated
procedural due process, (4) Kentucky’s requirements constituted an unconstitutional delegation
of authority to private parties, (5) Kentucky’s failure to credit Planned Parenthood’s agreement
with an Indiana hospital violated the Full Faith and Credit Clause, and (6) Kentucky’s
requirements were void for vagueness. Like EMW, Planned Parenthood asked the district court
to declare Kentucky’s requirements unconstitutional and to enjoin their further enforcement.

         After a three-day bench trial, the district court found “that the scant medical benefits from
transfer and transport agreements are far outweighed by the burden” they “impose[] on Kentucky
women seeking abortions.” EMW Women’s Surgical Ctr., P.S.C. v. Glisson, No. 3:17-CV-
00189-GNS, 2018 WL 6444391, at *1 (W.D. Ky. Sept. 28, 2018).                                  The court therefore
concluded “that the challenged laws impermissibly ‘place[] a substantial obstacle in the path of
women seeking a previability abortion [and] constitute[] an undue burden on abortion access.’”
Id. (alterations in original) (quoting Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt, 136 S. Ct. 2292, 2300
(2016)). On this basis, the district court held that both the statute and the new regulations (which
had yet to be enforced) were unconstitutional. Id. at *30. The court issued a permanent
injunction against their enforcement. Id.

         After granting judgment for the plaintiffs on their substantive due process claims, the
district court dismissed with prejudice EMW and Dr. Marshall’s procedural due process and First
Amendment retaliation claims along with Planned Parenthood’s procedural due process, full
faith and credit, and vagueness claims. Id. The district court dismissed the plaintiffs’ other
claims as moot.2 Id. Kentucky timely filed a notice of appeal.

         2Based   on what appears to be a clerical error in the district court’s opinion, Kentucky claims that the court
erroneously granted judgment on Planned Parenthood’s equal protection claim without making any relevant factual
findings or legal conclusions. See 2018 WL 6444391, at *30 (granting judgment in favor of Planned Parenthood on
Counts I and II of its complaint). But the district court expressly declined to adjudicate the equal protection claim.
See id. at *28 n.29. And the court’s judgment confirms that it granted judgment only on the plaintiffs’ substantive
due process challenge.
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        In addition to the parties, several amici submitted briefs on appeal.                     Most notably,
Andrew Beshear, then the Attorney General of Kentucky, filed a brief in support of the plaintiffs,
arguing that the district court should be affirmed because 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 is
unconstitutional.

                                                        D.

        After Kentucky filed its notice of appeal, Planned Parenthood again applied for an
abortion-facility license in July 2019. CHFS denied the application in August 2019 on the
ground that Planned Parenthood had illegally performed abortions without a license in December
2015 and January 2016. Kentucky filed notice of this denial with the district court.

        In December 2019, Attorney General Andrew Beshear became the new Governor of
Kentucky, replacing Matthew Bevin.               That same month, Governor Beshear appointed Eric
Friedlander as Secretary of CHFS. Shortly thereafter, the Cabinet reversed its position on the
legality of Planned Parenthood’s December 2015 and January 2016 abortions. In January 2020,
the Cabinet voluntarily dismissed its lawsuit against Planned Parenthood because it had
“determined that there was not a ‘substantial failure to comply’ with the provisions of KRS
§ 216B by the Defendant when applying for a license to begin operation of its Louisville
facility.” Stipulation of Dismissal, Commonwealth v. Planned Parenthood of Ind. & Ky., Inc.,
No. 16-CI-0802 (Jefferson Cir. Ct. filed Jan. 14, 2020).3 That same month, and for the same
reason, the Cabinet rescinded its denial of Planned Parenthood’s license application and invited
the organization to reapply. Planned Parenthood did so and received a provisional license for its
Louisville facility by January 31, 2020. The facility presently performs abortions.4

        3The   parties have not fully informed this court of the developments that have occurred since Governor
Beshear’s election. We may, however, “take judicial notice of developments in related ‘proceedings in other courts
of record.’” Chase Bank USA, N.A. v. City of Cleveland, 695 F.3d 548, 553 n.2 (6th Cir. 2012) (quoting Walburn v.
Lockheed Martin Corp., 431 F.3d 966, 972 n.5 (6th Cir. 2005)).
        4See   Additional Citation of Att’y Gen. Cameron, ECF No. 96, at 2 (“Planned Parenthood has been granted
a license to operate an abortion facility in Louisville.”); Appellees’ Opp’n to Mot. to Intervene, ECF No. 90, at 11
(acknowledging that “Planned Parenthood was . . . able to obtain a license”); Planned Parenthood to Expand
Abortion      Access     in     Kentucky,      Planned       Parenthood    (Jan.    31,     2020,    10:25     PM),
https://www.plannedparenthood.org/planned-parenthood-indiana-kentucky/newsroom/planned-parenthood-to-
expand-abortion-access-in-kentucky [https://perma.cc/W4QU-7DRK]; Louisville Health Center of Louisville, KY,
Planned Parenthood, https://www.plannedparenthood.org/health-center/kentucky/louisville/40203/louisville-health-
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         On June 29, 2020, the Supreme Court decided June Medical Services L.L.C. v. Russo,
140 S. Ct. 2103 (2020), striking down a Louisiana law requiring abortion doctors to have
admitting privileges at a local hospital. Eight days later, the plaintiffs in this case submitted a
letter to the clerk of this court citing June Medical Services as a supplemental authority in favor
of affirmance. See Fed. R. App. P. 28(j). Kentucky did not respond to the letter. Then, on July
24, Daniel Cameron, who replaced now-Governor Beshear as Attorney General of Kentucky,
filed a motion in this court to intervene in his official capacity as a defendant-appellant so that he
could submit a Rule 28(j) letter on behalf of the Commonwealth responding to the plaintiffs’
letter. We granted the motion on August 6, and Attorney General Cameron submitted a letter on
August 12.

                                                          II.

         Kentucky challenges the district court’s ruling that KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR
20:360 § 10 violate Kentucky women’s substantive due process right to abortion and its
permanent injunction of their enforcement. The Commonwealth claims as a threshold matter
that EMW and Planned Parenthood, as abortion providers, do not have standing to challenge
health regulations on the ground that they violate their patients’ right to abortion. It further
argues that the challenged provisions are constitutional because they serve a legitimate purpose
and do not impose a substantial obstacle to abortion access. Kentucky’s standing argument is
now foreclosed by Supreme Court precedent. See June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2118–20
(plurality opinion); id. at 2139 n.4 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment). We therefore
proceed to the merits.

center-3290-90500 [https://perma.cc/EKP2-V256] (last visited Sept. 18, 2020) (listing “Abortion” under “Services
Offered”). We “may judicially notice a fact that is not subject to reasonable dispute because it . . . can be accurately
and readily determined from sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.” United States v. Ferguson,
681 F.3d 826, 834 (6th Cir. 2012) (alteration in original) (quoting Fed. R. Evid. 201(b)); see Little Sisters of the
Poor Saints Peter & Paul Home v. Pennsylvania, 140 S. Ct. 2367, 2375 (2020) (taking judicial notice of information
from a nongovernmental organization’s website); City of Monroe Emps. Ret. Sys. v. Bridgestone Corp., 399 F.3d
651, 655 n.1 (6th Cir. 2005) (same).
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A.
1.

       “In determining whether a district court has properly granted a permanent injunction, we
review factual findings for clear error, legal conclusions de novo, and the scope of injunctive
relief for abuse of discretion.” Lee v. City of Columbus, 636 F.3d 245, 249 (6th Cir. 2011)
(quoting Gibson Guitar Corp. v. Paul Reed Smith Guitars, LP, 423 F.3d 539, 546 (6th Cir.
2005)). A finding of fact is clearly erroneous when, after reviewing the full record, “we are ‘left
with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.’” June Med. Servs.,
140 S. Ct. at 2141 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment) (quoting United States v. U.S.
Gypsum Co., 333 U.S. 364, 395 (1948)); accord United States v. Ramamoorthy, 949 F.3d 955,
964 (6th Cir. 2020). Although this standard “is deferential, it is not nugatory,” and we “may
reverse a lower [court’s] factual finding for clear error . . . even though the record contains some
evidence in support of the finding.” Indmar Prods. Co. v. Comm’r, 444 F.3d 771, 778 (6th Cir.
2006) (quoting Holmes v. Comm’r, 184 F.3d 536, 543 (6th Cir. 1999)). Moreover, the clear-
error rule “does not inhibit an appellate court’s power to correct errors of law, including those
that may infect . . . a finding of fact that is predicated on a misunderstanding of the governing
rule of law.” Bose Corp. v. Consumers Union of U.S., Inc., 466 U.S. 485, 501 (1984); accord
Abbott v. Perez, 138 S. Ct. 2305, 2326 (2018).

       Injunctive relief is “an extraordinary remedy that may only be awarded upon a clear
showing that the plaintiff is entitled to such relief.” Winter v. Nat. Res. Def. Council, Inc., 555
U.S. 7, 22 (2008); see Mazurek v. Armstrong, 520 U.S. 968, 972 (1997) (per curiam) (applying
this standard in the abortion context). To obtain a permanent injunction, the plaintiffs must
“establish that” their patients have “suffered a constitutional violation and will suffer ‘continuing
irreparable injury’ for which there is no adequate remedy at law.” Women’s Med. Pro. Corp. v.
Baird, 438 F.3d 595, 602 (6th Cir. 2006) (quoting Kallstrom v. City of Columbus, 136 F.3d 1055,
1067 (6th Cir. 1998)). It is not enough for plaintiffs to show a “possibility” of a constitutional
violation or even a “likelihood” of one; to obtain permanent injunctive relief, the plaintiffs must
make a clear showing that the challenged provisions “actual[ly]” violate their patients’
constitutional rights. See Winter, 555 U.S. at 21, 32 (quoting Amoco Prod. Co. v. Village of
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Gambell, 480 U.S. 531, 546 n.12 (1987)).              If they succeed in demonstrating an actual
constitutional violation and continuing irreparable injury, the plaintiffs must also show “that the
public interest would not be disserved by a permanent injunction.” eBay Inc. v. MercExchange,
L.L.C., 547 U.S. 388, 391 (2006).

                                                 2.

       The constitutionality of laws regulating abortion is governed by the “undue burden” test
set forth in Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833, 869–79
(1992) (joint opinion of O’Connor, Kennedy, and Souter, JJ.). See Stenberg v. Carhart, 530 U.S.
914, 921 (2000). Under that standard, a law regulating abortion is invalid if it “imposes an
undue burden on a woman’s ability” to choose to have an abortion before viability. Casey,
505 U.S. at 874 (joint opinion). “A finding of an undue burden is a shorthand for the conclusion
that a state regulation has the purpose or effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the path of a
woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus.” Id. at 877. Conversely, a law which “serves a
valid purpose” without imposing a substantial obstacle is constitutional, even if it “has the
incidental effect of making it more difficult or more expensive to procure an abortion.” Id. at
874.

       Twenty-four years after Casey, the Supreme Court stated in Whole Woman’s Health v.
Hellerstedt that the undue burden test “requires that courts consider the burdens a law imposes
on abortion access together with the benefits those laws confer.” 136 S. Ct. at 2309; see also id.
at 2310 (stating that district court properly “weighed the asserted benefits” of the regulations at
issue “against the burdens”). Relying on this language, the district court in the present case
framed its inquiry not as whether KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 served a valid
purpose yet imposed a substantial obstacle; instead it asked whether the benefits of the
challenged provisions outweighed their burdens.

       While this case was pending on appeal, the Supreme Court again considered the meaning
of the undue burden test in June Medical Services L.L.C. v. Russo, 140 S. Ct. 2103 (2020).
There, a fractured majority of the Court invalidated a Louisiana statute requiring abortion doctors
to have admitting privileges at a hospital within thirty miles of where they perform abortions. Id.
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at 2112, 2133 (plurality opinion); id. at 2142 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment). The
plurality opinion, joined by four Justices, took a balancing approach, determining that the undue
burden “standard requires courts independently to review the legislative findings upon which an
abortion-related statute rests and to weigh the law’s ‘asserted benefits against the burdens’ it
imposes on abortion access.” Id. at 2112 (plurality opinion) (quoting Whole Woman’s Health,
136 S. Ct. at 2310). The district court in that case had found that the Louisiana law would not
advance the state’s interest in women’s health and that many women seeking an abortion in
Louisiana would be unable to obtain one if the law went into effect. Id. Because the district
court’s findings were not clearly erroneous, the plurality upheld the district court’s determination
“that the balance tipped against the statute’s constitutionality.” Id. at 2120.

       Writing for himself, Chief Justice Roberts agreed with the plurality that the district
court’s findings as to the law’s burdens were not clearly erroneous. Id. at 2139–41 (Roberts,
C.J., concurring in the judgment). “Because Louisiana’s admitting privileges requirement would
restrict women’s access to abortion to the same degree as Texas’s law” invalidated in Whole
Woman’s Health, the Chief Justice concluded that the Louisiana law could not “stand under [the
Court’s] precedent.” Id. at 2139. At the same time, however, he parted ways with the plurality
on what that precedent meant. According to the Chief Justice, “[n]othing about Casey suggested
that a weighing of costs and benefits of an abortion regulation was a job for the courts.” Id. at
2136. Instead, “the ‘traditional rule’ that ‘state and federal legislatures [have] wide discretion to
pass legislation in areas where there is medical and scientific uncertainty’ is ‘consistent with
Casey.’” Id. (alteration in original) (quoting Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. 124, 163 (2007)).
And, because the Court in Whole Woman’s Health said “that it was applying the undue burden
standard of Casey” and “[n]othing more,” Chief Justice Roberts explained that he read Whole
Woman’s Health, like Casey, as “requiring a substantial obstacle before striking down an
abortion regulation.” Id. at 2138–39. Meanwhile, he read “the discussion of benefits in Whole
Woman’s Health []as not necessary to its holding.” Id. at 2139 n.3. In other words, the Chief
Justice explained, “Whole Woman’s Health held that Texas’s admitting privileges requirement
placed ‘a substantial obstacle in the path of women seeking a previability abortion,’ independent
of its discussion of benefits.” Id. at 2139 (quoting Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2300).
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       According to the Chief Justice, an abortion-related law’s asserted “benefits” are relevant
only “in considering the threshold requirement that the State have a ‘legitimate purpose’ and that
the law be ‘reasonably related to that goal.’” Id. at 2138 (quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 878, 882
(joint opinion)). “So long as that showing is made, the only question for a court is whether a law
has the ‘effect of placing a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a
nonviable fetus.’” Id. (quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 877 (joint opinion)).

                                              3.

       Because no opinion in June Medical Services garnered a majority, we, as a lower court,
have the “vexing task” of deciding which opinion controls. Triplett Grille, Inc. v. City of Akron,
40 F.3d 129, 133 (6th Cir. 1994). In this situation, the Supreme Court has instructed us to treat
the “position taken by [the Justice or Justices] who concurred in the judgment[] on the narrowest
grounds” as “the holding of the Court.” Marks v. United States, 430 U.S. 188, 193 (1977)
(quoting Gregg v. Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 169 n.15 (1976) (opinion of Stewart, Powell, and
Stevens, JJ.)). We therefore “must follow the reasoning of the concurring opinion with the
narrowest line of reasoning” that is “capable of supporting the Court’s judgment in that case.”
Grutter v. Bollinger, 288 F.3d 732, 741 n.6 (6th Cir. 2002) (en banc), aff’d, 539 U.S. 306 (2003).
“[T]he rationales supporting the Court’s judgment need not overlap on essential points in order
to provide a holding that binds lower courts. Indeed, if the Justices agreed on essential points,
the Marks analysis would be unnecessary.” Id. at 740. Instead, we are to look to the “results”
that the rationales of the concurring opinions “will . . . produce” when applied in future cases.
United States v. Kratt, 579 F.3d 558, 562–63 (6th Cir. 2009) (quoting Triplett Grille, 40 F.3d at
134); see Grutter, 288 F.3d at 741.

       In a fractured decision where two opinions concur in the judgment, an opinion will be the
narrowest under Marks if the instances in which it would reach the same result in future cases
form “a logical subset” of the instances in which the other opinion would reach the same result.
Kratt, 579 F.3d at 562 (quoting King v. Palmer, 950 F.2d 771, 781 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (en banc)).
This is so because in that subset of cases, a majority of the Court which issued the fractured
decision would necessarily agree with the result. See Triplett Grille, 40 F.3d at 134. In a
fractured decision upholding the constitutionality of a law, that means the narrowest opinion is
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the one whose rationale would uphold the fewest laws going forward.5 For example, in Regents
of the University of California v. Bakke, 438 U.S. 265 (1978), which upheld a state medical
school’s policy of considering race in admissions, Justice Brennan’s four-Justice opinion
concluded that “the more permissive intermediate scrutiny standard would apply” to the
consideration of race in admissions, whereas Justice Powell concluded that “strict scrutiny would
apply.” Grutter, 288 F.3d at 741. We held that “[b]ecause the set of constitutionally permissible
racial classifications under intermediate scrutiny by definition includes those classifications
constitutionally permissible under strict scrutiny, Justice Powell’s rationale would permit the
most limited consideration of race; therefore, it is Bakke’s narrowest rationale.” Id.

        Conversely, when a fractured decision strikes down a law as unconstitutional, the
narrowest opinion is the one whose rationale would invalidate the fewest laws going forward.
Memoirs v. Massachusetts, 383 U.S. 413 (1966), for instance, “revers[ed] the Massachusetts
Supreme Court’s holding that a book depicting a prostitute’s life was suppressible obscenity.”
Grutter, 288 F.3d at 739. “Justices Brennan and Fortas and the Chief Justice found the book was
not suppressible obscenity because it was not ‘utterly without redeeming social value,’” whereas
“Justices Black and Douglas did not reach the issue of whether the book was suppressible
obscenity because they believed the First Amendment provides an absolute shield against
government regulation of expression.” Id. (citations omitted).       Anytime Justice Brennan’s
opinion would conclude that a writing was not suppressible obscenity, Justices Black and
Douglas would agree, but the reverse is not true. The Supreme Court thus held in Marks that
Justice Brennan’s opinion controlled because it “provided the most limited First Amendment
protection.” Id. at 739–40; see Marks, 430 U.S. at 194.6

        5Citing    United States v. Cundiff, the dissent argues that we have read Marks to say that the “narrowest
opinion . . . is the concurring opinion that offers the least change to the law.” 555 F.3d 200, 209 (6th Cir. 2009)
(citations and quotation marks omitted). But the court’s discussion of Marks in Cundiff is entirely dictum, as
evidenced by its own language. The court decided to “leave ultimate resolution of the [Marks] debate to a future
case that turns on which test in-fact controls.” Id. at 210.
        6Justice  Stewart also concurred in Memoirs, concluding that the book at issue “was not suppressible
obscenity because it was not hardcore pornography.” Grutter, 288 F.3d at 739 (citation omitted). Although his
opinion “was also a logical subset of Justice Black and Douglas’ opinion,” it “would only have spoken for three
Justices and could therefore not have been the controlling rationale.” King, 950 F.2d at 781 n.6.
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         Turning now to June Medical Services, because the Court invalidated the Louisiana
statute at issue, the narrowest opinion concurring in the judgment is the one that would strike
down the fewest laws regulating abortion in future cases. The Chief Justice read the rule laid
down in the Court’s precedents to say that laws not “reasonably related” to a “legitimate
purpose” or that impose a “substantial obstacle” are unconstitutional. June Med. Servs., 140 S.
Ct. at 2138 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment) (quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 878, 882
(joint opinion)). All other laws regulating abortion, however, “are valid.” Id. at 2138 n.2. Like
the Chief Justice, the plurality would invalidate any law with “the effect of placing a substantial
obstacle in the path of a woman’s choice” to obtain a previability abortion. Id. at 2120 (plurality
opinion) (quoting Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2309). But the plurality would also
invalidate any law where “the balance” between the law’s benefits and its burdens “tipped
against the statute’s constitutionality.” Id. Presumably, this would include some laws that are
reasonably related to a legitimate purpose and that do not impose a substantial obstacle, so long
as the law’s burdens sufficiently outweighed its benefits.7

         Because all laws invalid under the Chief Justice’s rationale are invalid under the
plurality’s, but not all laws invalid under the plurality’s rationale are invalid under the Chief
Justice’s, the Chief Justice’s position is the narrowest under Marks. His concurrence therefore
“constitutes [June Medical Services’] holding and provides the governing standard here.”
Grutter, 288 F.3d at 741; see also Hopkins v. Jegley, 968 F.3d 912, 916 (8th Cir. 2020) (per

         7The    plurality expressly reserved the question of what “standard of review” to “apply in cases where a
regulation is found not to impose a substantial obstacle to a woman’s choice.” June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2133
(plurality opinion). Even with this reservation, however, the plurality’s approach to reviewing the benefits of
abortion regulations is still more stringent (or is at least not less stringent) than the Chief Justice’s. An abortion
regulation is reasonably related to a legitimate state interest under the Chief Justice’s rationale if it has a rational
basis. See id. at 2135. The plurality, on the other hand, would require states to introduce evidence affirmatively
establishing the benefits their laws confer. See id. at 2132 (concluding the challenged statute had no substantial
health benefit because “the State introduced no evidence” to that effect). That approach is more stringent than
traditional rational-basis review, under which “the government ‘has no obligation to produce evidence to sustain the
rationality of its action.’” Liberty Coins, LLC v. Goodman, 748 F.3d 682, 694 (6th Cir. 2014) (quoting TriHealth,
Inc. v. Bd. of Comm’rs, 430 F.3d 783, 790 (6th Cir. 2005)). In any event, even if the precise level of scrutiny it
would apply is unclear, the plurality would clearly scrutinize the benefits of abortion-related laws to some extent.
See June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2120 (plurality opinion) (“[C]ourts must ‘consider the burdens a law imposes on
abortion access together with the benefits those laws confer.’” (citation omitted)). And rational-basis review is “the
least demanding” tier of scrutiny “used by the courts.” Berger v. City of Mayfield Heights, 154 F.3d 621, 625 (6th
Cir. 1998). It is therefore logically impossible for the plurality opinion’s standard to be more generous than the
Chief Justice’s.
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curiam) (holding that “Chief Justice Roberts’s separate opinion in June Medical . . . is
controlling”).8      “While ‘there is some awkwardness in attributing precedential value to an
opinion of one Supreme Court justice to which no other justice adhered, it is the usual practice
when that is the determinative opinion.’” Triplett Grille, 40 F.3d at 134 (quoting Blum v. Witco
Chem. Corp., 888 F.2d 975, 981 (3d Cir. 1989)); accord Grutter, 288 F.3d at 741–42.9

         Under the Chief Justice’s controlling opinion, a law regulating abortion is valid if it
satisfies two requirements. First, it must be “‘reasonably related’ to a legitimate state interest.”
June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2135 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment) (quoting Casey,
505 U.S. at 878 (joint opinion)). Because we are to apply “the ‘traditional rule’” of deference to
the state’s “medical and scientific” judgments, id. at 2136 (quoting Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 163),
this requirement is met whenever a state has “a rational basis to . . . use its regulatory power,”
Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 158. Second, the law must not “ha[ve] the ‘effect of placing a substantial
obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus.’” June Med. Servs.,
140 S. Ct. at 2138 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment) (quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 877
(joint opinion)). Under the law of our circuit, a woman faces a substantial obstacle when she is
“deterred from procuring an abortion as surely as if the [government] has outlawed abortion in

         8Although    we join the Eighth Circuit in this conclusion, a divided panel of the Fifth Circuit disagrees,
concluding “that the challenged Louisiana law posed an undue burden on women seeking an abortion is the full
extent of June Medical’s ratio decidendi.” Whole Woman’s Health v. Paxton, 972 F.3d 649, 653 (5th Cir. 2020) (per
curiam). But see id. at 654 (Willett, J., dissenting) (concluding that the Chief Justice’s opinion states “the now-
governing legal standard”). The Fifth Circuit concluded that the Chief Justice’s opinion cannot “be viewed as a
logical subset of the” plurality because “the Chief Justice expressly disavowed the plurality’s test.” Id. at 652–53
(majority opinion). “But fundamental disagreements about how to interpret [the provision of law at issue] do not
necessarily destroy a subset-superset relationship between the two opinions.” Kratt, 579 F.3d at 562; accord
Grutter, 288 F.3d at 740. The Chief Justice’s opinion is a logical subset of the plurality’s not because it agrees with
all of the plurality’s reasoning but because in every case in which it would invalidate an abortion regulation, the
plurality would also invalidate that regulation. If that were not so, Marks itself would be wrongly decided. The
Memoirs plurality disavowed Justices Douglas and Black’s view that the First Amendment absolutely prohibited
suppressing obscenity. Thus, under the logic of Paxton, the Memoirs plurality would not control because “the only
common denominator between the plurality and the concurrence is their shared conclusion that the challenged
[conviction] constituted [a First Amendment violation].” Paxton, 972 F.3d at 652.
         9We   are buoyed in this position by Supreme Court orders vacating two Seventh Circuit decisions and
remanding for further consideration in light of June Medical Services. See Box v. Planned Parenthood of Ind. &
Ky., No. 19-816, 2020 WL 3578672, at *1 (U.S. July 2, 2020); Box v. Planned Parenthood of Ind. & Ky., No. 18-
1019, 2020 WL 3578669, at *1 (U.S. July 2, 2020). The vacated circuit decisions used a balancing approach to
invalidate the laws at issue. If the Court believed that the balancing approach was the appropriate test, it is unclear
why it issued these orders.
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all cases.” Cincinnati Women’s Servs., Inc. v. Taft, 468 F.3d 361, 370 (6th Cir. 2006) (alteration
in original) (quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 894).            Even if a law regulating abortion is
unconstitutional in some applications, the law remains facially valid so long as it does not
impose an undue burden “in a large fraction of the cases in which [the regulation] is relevant.”
Casey, 505 U.S. at 895; accord Cincinnati Women’s Servs., 468 F.3d at 369.

                                                 4.

       The dissent faults us for treating “the entirety of Chief Justice Roberts’ concurring
opinion” as authoritative and argues that we should instead look only to the reasoning that was
“necessary to his vote to concur.” Dissenting Op. at 46–47. If this were the Marks rule,
applying Marks would be pointless. The way we distinguish the “narrower” concurring opinion
in a fractured decision from the “broader” one is by identifying differences in their reasoning.
But because the narrower and broader opinions both concur in the judgment, the narrower
opinion’s points of disagreement with the broader one—i.e. the very feature of the opinion that
makes it “narrower”—are by definition not necessary to its ultimate conclusion that the judgment
is correct. Thus, in any case where it matters which opinion has the narrower view, the dissent’s
approach would have us set aside the narrower opinion’s points of disagreement as dictum, and
the application of Marks would fail to provide a governing rule of law. Yet “[t]he principal
objective of this Marks rule . . . requires that, whenever possible, there be a single legal standard
for the lower courts to apply in similar cases.” Triplett Grille, 40 F.3d at 133 (citation omitted).
It comes as no surprise, then, that binding precedent forecloses the dissent’s approach.

       Start with Marks itself. The majority in Memoirs, the decision analyzed in Marks, split
on the states’ power to treat written works with no redeeming social value as suppressible
obscenity. The plurality took a more permissive approach, concluding that states may suppress a
book if “(a) the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to a prurient interest in
sex; (b) the material is patently offensive because it affronts contemporary community standards
relating to the description or representation of sexual matters; and (c) the material is utterly
without redeeming social value.” Memoirs, 383 U.S. at 418 (plurality opinion). Justices Black
and Douglas adopted a stricter approach, concluding that “the First Amendment provides an
absolute shield against governmental action aimed at suppressing obscenity.” Marks, 430 U.S. at
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193. But because the book at issue did have redeeming social value, see Memoirs, 383 U.S. at
419 (plurality opinion), the plurality agreed with Justices Black and Douglas that the work was
not constitutionally suppressible, and the plurality’s view on the status of works with no
redeeming social value was not necessary to their votes to concur.

       Under the dissent’s logic, the “narrowest reasoning supporting the judgment” in Memoirs
would be “simply and only” that a book with some redeeming social value is not suppressible
obscenity. Though the three-Justice plurality rejected the view that the First Amendment is an
absolute shield against obscenity laws, that conclusion would be treated as “dicta, as it was not
necessary to [their] vote[s] to concur.” See id. Accordingly, under the dissent’s reasoning, the
Memoirs plurality’s discussion of the constitutional status of books with no redeeming social
value would not control, just as, the dissent believes, the Chief Justice’s discussion of abortion
regulations not imposing a substantial obstacle is not controlling.

       The Supreme Court, however, rejected that view in Marks. According to the Court,
“[t]he view of the Memoirs plurality . . . constituted the holding of the Court and provided the
governing standards” for what constituted suppressible obscenity, meaning that states could
suppress obscene materials if “the prosecution carried the burden of proving that they were
‘utterly without redeeming social value,’ and otherwise satisfied the stringent Memoirs
requirements.” Marks, 430 U.S. at 194 (emphasis added); see also id. at 194 n.8 (citing with
approval United States v. Groner, 479 F.2d 577, 588–89 (5th Cir. 1973) (en banc) (Clark, J.,
concurring), and Huffman v. United States, 470 F.2d 386, 394 (D.C. Cir. 1971), which affirmed
obscenity convictions because the government had established all three requirements set out in
the Memoirs plurality). Marks itself therefore establishes that the entirety of the test articulated
in the narrowest opinion concurring in the judgment—and not merely those conclusions strictly
necessary to its view that the judgment is correct—is “the controlling opinion” in that case.
430 U.S. at 193.

       The dissent’s approach also contravenes our own caselaw. In Grutter, we held that “this
court must follow the reasoning of the concurring opinion [in Bakke] with the narrowest line of
reasoning on the issue of why the California Supreme Court could not permanently enjoin [the
University of California at] Davis from considering race.” 288 F.3d at 741 n.6 (emphasis
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added).     Accordingly, we concluded that “this court is bound by Justice Powell’s Bakke
opinion.” Id. at 742; see also id. at 758 (Clay, J., concurring) (“Justice Powell’s opinion in
Bakke is controlling.”). Although the only admissions program before the Court in Bakke was
U.C. Davis’s, Justice Powell, writing only for himself, discussed at length Harvard College’s
consideration of race in admissions and concluded that it survived strict scrutiny under the Equal
Protection Clause. Bakke, 438 U.S. at 316–18 (opinion of Powell, J.).

          This was, of course, pure dictum.     But because it was “our view that whether the
[Michigan] Law School’s admissions policy passes constitutional muster turns on Justice
Powell’s opinion,” we held that “an admissions policy modeled on the Harvard plan, where race
and ethnicity are considered a ‘plus,’ does not offend the Equal Protection Clause.” Grutter, 288
F.3d at 745–46. Because we thought the University of Michigan Law School’s use of race in
admissions was “virtually indistinguishable from the Harvard plan Justice Powell approved in
Bakke,” we upheld it as constitutional. Id. at 747; see also id. at 758 (Clay, J., concurring) (“I
concur in Chief Judge Martin’s majority opinion, finding it correct and insightful in all
respects.”). The lead dissent in Grutter contended that it was inappropriate to rely on Justice
Powell’s endorsement of the Harvard plan because that discussion was “non-binding dicta.” Id.
at 786 (Boggs, J., dissenting). The majority squarely rejected that argument, holding that the
endorsement of the Harvard plan provided the “appropriate basis for our opinion,” “[e]ven if this
portion of Justice Powell’s opinion could be labeled dicta.” Id. at 746 n.9 (majority opinion).

          In short, the narrowest concurring opinion does not merely state the Court’s holding; it
“is the Court’s opinion” in that case, entitled to as much authority and respect as any other
opinion of the Supreme Court. J.L. Spoons, Inc. v. Dragani, 538 F.3d 379, 386 n.2 (6th Cir.
2008); see United States v. Duvall, 740 F.3d 604, 611 (D.C. Cir. 2013) (Kavanaugh, J.,
concurring in the denial of rehearing en banc) (“The binding opinion from a splintered decision
is as authoritative for lower courts as a nine-Justice opinion. . . . This is true even if only one
Justice issues the binding opinion.” (citation omitted)). We therefore adhere to both the holding
of the narrowest concurring opinion and its well-considered dictum setting forth a general
standard for how to apply the doctrine at issue. See ACLU of Ky. v. McCreary County, 607 F.3d
439, 447–48 (6th Cir. 2010) (Clay, J.) (“[T]his court considers itself bound by Supreme Court
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dicta almost as firmly as by the Court’s outright holdings, particularly when the dicta is recent
and not enfeebled by later statements.” (citation omitted)).         Because the Chief Justice’s
controlling opinion in June Medical Services sets forth, in a considered opinion, a general
standard for how to apply the undue burden test, we must treat that standard as authoritative.

       The dissent also invokes Agostini v. Felton, which says that a lower court may not hold
that “more recent cases” of the Supreme Court “have, by implication, overruled an earlier
precedent.” 521 U.S. 203, 237 (1997). Instead, “[i]f a precedent of [the Supreme] Court has
direct application in a case, yet appears to rest on reasons rejected in some other line of
decisions,” we “should follow the case which directly controls, leaving to [the Supreme] Court
the prerogative of overruling its own decisions.” Id. (first alteration in original) (quoting
Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/Am. Express, Inc., 490 U.S. 477, 484 (1989)). But as the
dissent rightly acknowledges, “Chief Justice Roberts emphasized from the start that he was not
considering the validity of Whole Woman’s Health.” Dissenting Op. at 47. By its own terms,
the Chief Justice’s opinion interpreted and applied Whole Woman’s Health and did not overrule
it. As a lower court, we are bound by the Chief Justice’s interpretation of Whole Woman’s
Health, regardless of whether we would adopt that interpretation as a matter of first impression.

       To see this, we need look no further than Casey itself. In that case, only three Justices
embraced the undue burden standard. See Casey, 505 U.S. at 874–79 (joint opinion). Although
those three Justices concluded that “the essential holding of Roe [v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973),]
should be reaffirmed,” Casey, 505 U.S. at 871 (joint opinion), they nevertheless “reject[ed] the
trimester framework” established by Roe as not “part of the [decision’s] essential holding.” Id.
at 873. A lower court applying Roe as a matter of first impression would certainly not have felt
free to reject the trimester framework, see, e.g., Wolfe v. Schroering, 541 F.2d 523, 525 (6th Cir.
1976) (applying the trimester framework in the aftermath of Roe), and the other six Justices in
Casey rejected the joint opinion’s reading of Roe, see Casey, 505 U.S. at 914 (Stevens, J.,
concurring in part and dissenting in part); id. at 930 (Blackmun, J., concurring in part, concurring
in the judgment in part, and dissenting in part); id. at 954 (Rehnquist, C.J., concurring in the
judgment in part and dissenting in part).
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         But it does not matter whether any lower court judge might believe, to paraphrase the
dissent, that the three Justices’ “conclusion [about Roe] is contradicted by the clear language of
that case, as well as by [their] fellow justices in [Casey].” See Dissenting Op. at 47 n.4 (citation
omitted).      Because the Casey joint opinion controls under Marks, we are bound by its
interpretation of Roe. See Women’s Med. Pro. Corp. v. Voinovich, 130 F.3d 187, 192 (6th Cir.
1997) (holding that “a plurality of the Casey Court discarded the trimester framework of Roe”).
Likewise, because the Chief Justice’s opinion in June Medical Services controls under Marks,
we are bound by its interpretation of Whole Woman’s Health. And if Casey’s joint opinion did
not implicitly overrule Roe, neither did the Chief Justice’s opinion implicitly overrule Whole
Woman’s Health.

         For similar reasons, we are not swayed by the dissent’s appeal to the plurality opinion in
Ramos v. Louisiana, 140 S. Ct. 1390 (2020). Ramos is inapposite because, again, we do not rely
on “a single Justice’s opinion” that purports to “overrule prior precedents.” Id. at 1403 (plurality
opinion). And, in any event, the three-Justice plurality in Ramos is itself not controlling under
Marks.10 The Ramos plurality’s statement therefore does not govern.

         The Chief Justice’s opinion in June Medical Services concurs in the judgment on the
narrowest grounds, so it is the “controlling opinion” from that decision. Marks, 430 U.S. at 193.
We must apply its reasoning as we would the reasoning of any other controlling Supreme Court
opinion. Duvall, 740 F.3d at 611 (Kavanaugh, J., concurring in the denial of rehearing en banc).

         10Six    Justices in Ramos agreed that Apodaca v. Oregon, 406 U.S. 404 (1972), a split decision with no
readily identifiable “narrowest” opinion, should be overruled. With the exception of Justice Thomas, the Justices
concurring in the judgment disagreed solely on whether Apodaca carried precedential force. In such a case where
the Court overrules a decision, the narrowest opinion will be the one that will overrule the fewest future decisions.
Because the plurality lends no stare decisis weight to fractured decisions with no single controlling opinion, it would
overrule all such decisions that reached an incorrect result. See Ramos, 140 S. Ct. at 1402 (plurality opinion).
Justices Sotomayor and Kavanaugh, on the other hand, would overrule all such decisions that reached an incorrect
result if the stare decisis factors militated in favor of overruling. See id. at 1409 (Sotomayor, J., concurring as to all
but Part IV-A); id. at 1414 (Kavanaugh, J., concurring in part). Thus, whenever Justices Sotomayor and Kavanaugh
would agree that a case with no controlling rationale should be overturned, a majority of the Court would concur in
the result, because the three Justices in the plurality would necessarily agree. When the stare decisis factors would
not favor overruling a decision with no controlling opinion, on the other hand, at most only four Justices (the
plurality plus Justice Thomas) would concur in the result. Justice Sotomayor’s and Kavanaugh’s view is therefore a
logical subset of, and controls over, the plurality’s.
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                                                 5.

       Because the controlling opinion in June Medical Services clarified that the undue burden
standard is not a balancing test, the district court erred in attempting to weigh the benefits of
KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 against their burdens. In our review of the
challenged provisions, we need only consider whether they are reasonably related to a legitimate
state interest and whether they impose a substantial obstacle.

                                                B.

       We begin with the threshold requirement that KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360
§ 10 be reasonably related to a legitimate state interest. June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2135
(Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment). The district court, not having the benefit of June
Medical Services, determined for itself what risks are associated with abortion, to what extent
transfer and transport agreements mitigate those risks, and whether the challenged provisions
were effective at protecting women’s health. To aid the court, the parties presented competing
expert witnesses and medical-journal articles. After weighing the conflicting evidence and
making its own scientific and medical findings, the district court found that transfer- and
transport-agreements do not confer a substantial medical benefit. Accordingly, the district court
held that KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 “do not advance a legitimate interest in
promoting the health of women seeking abortions in Kentucky.” 2018 WL 6444391, at *25.
The plaintiffs contend that, even after June Medical Services, the district court’s findings
establish that the challenged provisions are “not reasonably related to a legitimate purpose” and
are therefore unconstitutional even if they do not impose a substantial obstacle. Additional
Citation of Pls.-Appellees, ECF No. 87, at 2.

       The district court’s independent weighing of the challenged provisions’ asserted benefits
does not comport with the “‘traditional rule’ that ‘state and federal legislatures [have] wide
discretion to pass legislation in areas where there is medical and scientific uncertainty.’” June
Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2136 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment) (alteration in original)
(quoting Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 163). The Chief Justice’s opinion makes clear that it is not the
role of courts to attempt to “objectively assign weight” to “the State’s interests” in passing
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regulations on abortion, including its interest in “the health of the woman.” Id. “Pretending that
we could pull that off would require us to act as legislators, not judges.” Id.

       For the purposes of this threshold inquiry, it matters not at all whether the district court or
we believe the requirements of KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 to be sound policy.
Indeed, the Chief Justice noted that an abortion regulation may serve a legitimate purpose even if
a court were to determine it “ha[s] little if any benefit.” See id. at 2137. We are only to ascertain
whether the Kentucky General Assembly and the Cabinet had “a rational basis to act.”
Gonzales, 550 U.S. at 158. Under this highly deferential standard of scrutiny, a law “need not,”
in the court’s view, “be in every respect logically consistent with its aims” to be reasonably
related to a legitimate government interest. Williamson v. Lee Optical of Okla., Inc., 348 U.S.
483, 487 (1955); see Casey, 505 U.S. at 885 (joint opinion) (relying on Lee Optical to determine
that Pennsylvania’s informed consent provision served a legitimate purpose).              Instead, a
reasonable relationship exists if there is a problem “at hand for correction” and “it might be
thought that the particular legislative measure was a rational way to correct it.” Lee Optical, 348
U.S. at 488.

       The Chief Justice explained that the Supreme Court has consistently applied this
deferential standard in determining whether abortion regulations are reasonably related to a
legitimate state interest. See June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2136–38 (Roberts, C.J., concurring
in the judgment). Casey itself held that a state could require that “a physician, as opposed to a
qualified assistant, provide information relevant to a woman’s informed consent.” 505 U.S. at
884 (joint opinion). It did so because “the States” have “broad latitude to decide that particular
functions may be performed only by licensed professionals, even if an objective assessment
might suggest that those same tasks could be performed by others.” Id. at 885 (citing Lee
Optical, 348 U.S. at 483); see June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2137 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in
the judgment). Mazurek likewise held that a law “restricting the performance of abortions to
licensed physicians” served a valid purpose. 520 U.S. at 969. In so holding, the Court rejected
as irrelevant the respondents’ contention that “‘all health evidence contradicts the claim that
there is any health basis’ for the law,” resting instead on the broad discretion of states to impose
licensing requirements. Id. at 973 (citation omitted); see June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2138
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(Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment). Finally, the Court held in Gonzales that the federal
ban on partial-birth abortion (i.e. intact dilation and extraction) served a legitimate purpose, even
though arguably “the standard D & E is in some respects as brutal, if not more, than the intact D
& E.” 550 U.S. at 160. The Court reached that conclusion by determining that “[i]t was
reasonable for Congress to think that partial-birth abortion, more than standard D & E,”
undermined the integrity of the medical profession and respect for human life, not by making its
own assessment of the matter. Id.

       Applying the same standard here, we cannot say that laws requiring abortion facilities to
have transfer and transport agreements with a local hospital are not reasonably related to a
legitimate government end. The district court found that it is sometimes necessary to transfer a
patient from an abortion facility to an emergency room because of an abortion-related
complication. See 2018 WL 6444391, at *11. There is thus a problem at hand for the Kentucky
legislature to correct. Lee Optical, 348 U.S. at 488. And one could easily see how requiring
abortion facilities to have transfer and transport agreements with a local hospital is a “rational
way to correct” that problem. Id. Transfer and transport agreements determine in advance what
duties each party has in an emergency and how the patient’s information will be transmitted from
the abortion facility to the hospital. It is reasonable to think that fixing these details ahead of
time streamlines the treatment of a patient in an emergency, thereby leading to better patient
health outcomes.

       Indeed, such is the law of our circuit. In Baird, we considered the constitutionality of an
Ohio law requiring abortion facilities to “have a written transfer agreement with a local
hospital.” 438 F.3d at 599. As in this case, the plaintiffs in Baird introduced evidence that their
“patients rarely need to be hospitalized,” testimony from a physician that “he was not personally
aware of a single instance in which the presence of a transfer agreement made a difference in the
care a patient received,” and expert testimony that “written transfer agreements do not ensure
optimum patient care.” Id. at 601. Nevertheless, without delving into the record evidence, we
held that Ohio’s law “serve[s] a valid purpose,” because it “ensure[s]” that each abortion facility
“meets certain minimum standards.” Id. at 607. For the same reason, KRS § 216B.0435 and 902
KAR 20:360 § 10 “are ‘reasonably related’” to Kentucky’s “legitimate state interest” in maternal
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health. June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2135 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment) (quoting
Casey, 505 U.S. at 878 (joint opinion)). The district court, not having the benefit of the June
Medical Services decision, failed to perform traditional rational-basis review, and erred in
holding otherwise.

                                                         C.

        Having determined that KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 are reasonably
related to a legitimate state interest, we now turn to whether the provisions “ha[ve] the ‘effect of
placing a substantial obstacle in the path of a woman seeking an abortion of a nonviable fetus.’”
June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2138 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment) (quoting Casey,
505 U.S. at 877 (joint opinion)).

        The district court held that KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 would impose a
substantial obstacle for women seeking abortion in Kentucky by leaving the Commonwealth
without any operating abortion facility. The plaintiffs have not presented any other basis for
concluding that the challenged provisions impose a substantial obstacle. Thus, so long as either
EMW or Planned Parenthood would be able to operate with the provisions in effect, we cannot
conclude that they impose a substantial obstacle.11 Kentucky concedes that EMW and Planned
Parenthood were not, at the time they applied, able to obtain compliant transfer and transport
agreements, but the Commonwealth maintains that both organizations’ facilities could operate by
obtaining waivers of the provisions’ requirements every ninety days under 902 KAR 20:360
§ 10(5).12 Because CHFS promulgated the waiver provision after the parties had already agreed

        11The   dissent maintains that the plaintiffs need not establish that both facilities will close, because the
closure of just one facility would create an undue burden “if the remaining facility was left unable to meet the
demand for abortions.” Dissenting Op. at 62 n.16. But the plaintiffs’ sole argument on the issue of burdens
throughout this litigation has been that the challenged provisions will prevent both EMW and Planned Parenthood
from operating, leaving Kentucky with zero operating abortion facilities.
        12Kentucky     also offers several reasons why the challenged provisions would not impose a substantial
obstacle even if they were to cause EMW’s and Planned Parenthood’s facilities in Louisville to close. First, it
claims that abortions could still be legally obtained in the Commonwealth at hospitals, ambulatory surgical centers,
and physicians’ offices. Second, it argues that EMW and Planned Parenthood could begin providing abortions at
their facilities in Lexington. Third, the Commonwealth claims that even if women could not obtain abortion in
Kentucky, they could obtain abortions in neighboring states. Because we conclude that EMW and Planned
Parenthood have not shown that the challenged provisions would cause their Louisville facilities to close, we need
not consider these alternative arguments.
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to preliminarily enjoin the challenged licensing requirements, EMW and Planned Parenthood
never had an opportunity to apply for a waiver. To prevail, therefore, the plaintiffs must make a
clear showing that their facilities would close if the waiver provision were given an opportunity
to take effect and they “attempted in good faith” to obtain waivers. June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct.
at 2141 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment) (citation omitted).13 A finding of good faith
is “necessary to ensure that the [facilities’] inability to [operate] [would be] attributable to the
[challenged provisions] rather than a halfhearted attempt to obtain [waivers].” Id.14

         The district court dismissed the effect of the waiver provision in just two sentences,
finding that it would be “exceedingly difficult” for EMW and Planned Parenthood’s facilities “to
survive” if they had to apply for a waiver every ninety days. 2018 WL 6444391, at *19. This
was so, the district court found, because they “would not likely be able to hire and keep staff
without knowing whether they could continue operating beyond ninety days, and no prudent
organization would risk millions of dollars investing in [an abortion] facility whose temporary
license would be based on the administrative whim of the Inspector General.” Id.

         13The   dissent argues that Kentucky cannot rely on the waiver provision to defend the constitutionality of
the challenged provisions, because the waiver provision has been preliminarily enjoined from the moment it was
promulgated. To obtain a permanent injunction, however, the plaintiffs must show that their patients “will continue
to suffer irreparable injury” “[a]bsent an injunction,” not assuming the waiver provision continues to be enjoined.
Saieg v. City of Dearborn, 641 F.3d 727, 742 (6th Cir. 2011) (emphasis added); see also Winter, 555 U.S. at 20, 32.
A court enjoins the enforcement of a law because it has found the law to be unconstitutional, not the other way
around.
         14Relying   on Northland Family Planning Clinic v. Cox, 487 F.3d 323 (6th Cir. 2006), EMW argues that
the waiver provision has no bearing on whether the challenged regulations impose a substantial obstacle because it is
merely “a government official’s interpretation of an abortion restriction” that CHFS can revoke at any time. In Cox,
a panel of this court invalidated Michigan’s ban on partial-birth abortion because it banned both dilation-and-
extraction (D & X) abortions and dilation-and-evacuation (D & E) abortions. Id. at 339. Michigan argued that the
plaintiffs’ challenge was moot because the Michigan attorney general had issued an opinion interpreting the state’s
ban as applying only to D & X abortions. Id. at 341. We disagreed because the attorney general’s opinion lacked
the force of law under state law; it did not even bind the office of the attorney general. Id. at 342. Here, by contrast,
902 KAR 20:360 § 10(5) is a “duly promulgated” regulation; as such, it “ha[s] the force and effect of law.” Faust v.
Commonwealth, 142 S.W.3d 89, 98 (Ky. 2004). Moreover, CHFS is “bound by the regulations it promulgates.”
Hagan v. Farris, 807 S.W.2d 488, 490 (Ky. 1991). Because 902 KAR 20:360 § 10(5) alters the substantive law
governing abortion in Kentucky, any claim for injunctive relief EMW may have had based on the effect of the
Commonwealth’s licensing requirements before the waiver provision was promulgated is moot; that CHFS
promulgated 902 KAR 20:360 § 10(5) mid-litigation makes no difference. See N.Y. State Rifle & Pistol Ass’n, Inc.
v. City of New York, 140 S. Ct. 1525, 1526 (2020) (per curiam).
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                                                 1.

       The district court’s findings of fact rest in part on an error of law. The district court
presumed that because the issuance of waivers is discretionary, it is a matter of “administrative
whim.” But “[d]iscretion is not whim,” Martin v. Franklin Capital Corp., 546 U.S. 132, 139
(2005), and a discretionary decision is not one unconstrained by law or objective standards, see
Halo Elecs., Inc. v. Pulse Elecs., Inc., 136 S. Ct. 1923, 1931–32 (2016) (“‘[I]n a system of laws
discretion is rarely without limits,’ even when the statute ‘does not specify any limits upon the
[agency’s] discretion.’” (first alteration in original) (citation omitted)). In determining whether
to grant a waiver to an abortion facility, the Inspector General must consider (1) whether the
facility is making “a good faith effort to obtain a transfer or transport agreement,” (2) whether
the facility “can provide the same level of patient care and safety via alternative health services
during any extension period,” and (3) the facility’s history of regulatory compliance. 902 KAR
20:360 § 10(5)(b); see Hagan v. Farris, 807 S.W.2d 488, 490 (Ky. 1991) (“An agency must be
bound by the regulations it promulgates.”). If the Inspector General denies an application for a
waiver, an abortion facility may seek administrative review of the denial and ultimately judicial
review in state court. See 902 KAR 20:360 §§ 4(2)–(3), 10(5)(f); Lindall v. Ky. Ret. Sys., 112
S.W.3d 391, 394 (Ky. Ct. App. 2003) (explaining that a court can reverse an administrative
decision “if the agency acted arbitrarily or outside the scope of its authority, if the agency
applied an incorrect rule of law, or if the decision itself is not supported by substantial evidence
in the record”); Commonwealth v. Frasure’s Riverview Pers. Care Home, No. 2012-CA-002128-
MR, 2014 WL 97472, at *4 (Ky. Ct. App. Jan. 10, 2014) (holding that a hearing denial by CHFS
“was arbitrary and capricious”).

       Absent “clear evidence to the contrary,” we must “presume that [public officials] have
properly discharged their official duties.” United States v. Martin, 438 F.3d 621, 634 (6th Cir.
2006) (alteration in original) (quoting United States v. Chem. Found., Inc., 272 U.S. 1, 14–15
(1926)); see also U.S. Postal Serv. v. Gregory, 534 U.S. 1, 10 (2001) (“[A] presumption of
regularity attaches to the actions of Government agencies.”); Jones v. FBI, 41 F.3d 238, 242 (6th
Cir. 1994) (“[A]gency actions . . . are normally entitled to a presumption of good faith.”);
Comprehensive Health of Planned Parenthood Great Plains v. Hawley, 903 F.3d 750, 756 (8th
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Cir. 2018) (holding that courts must presume state officials will act in good faith when state law
grants them discretion to waive regulations on abortion facilities). The district court made no
findings of fact as to whether the Inspector General would act in good faith; instead it assumed
that the Inspector General would act based on “whim.” But we must presume that the Inspector
General will consider waiver applications in good faith and will not act “simply to make it more
difficult for [women] to obtain an abortion.” Memphis Planned Parenthood, Inc. v. Sundquist,
175 F.3d 456, 461 (6th Cir. 1999).15

         “Because the record is practically devoid of any information on the mechanics of the
Waiver Provision,” and because we must presume good faith, we simply have “no way” of
determining how the Inspector General will act on waiver applications. Hawley, 903 F.3d at
756. We cannot rule out the possibility that he will grant EMW and Planned Parenthood
quarterly waivers as a matter of course. And because the plaintiffs bear the burden of making a
“clear showing” of an “actual” constitutional violation, Winter, 555 U.S. at 22, 32, and of a
“continuing irreparable injury,” Baird, 438 F.3d at 602 (citation omitted), they must establish
that both EMW and Planned Parenthood would be unable to operate on the basis of waivers even
if they could reasonably expect to obtain a new waiver every ninety days.16

                                                          2.

         Turning now to the facts, no evidence supports the district court’s finding that Planned
Parenthood would be unable to operate on the basis of quarterly waivers. Planned Parenthood’s
only evidence at trial addressing this issue was the testimony of Kimberly Greene, the Chair of
the Board of Directors of Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky. Greene never testified
that Planned Parenthood would be unable to hire or retain staff if it had to rely on waivers to

         15We   note, moreover, that since the election of Governor Beshear, the Cabinet has reversed its position that
Planned Parenthood had illegally performed abortions in December 2015 and January 2016, voluntarily dismissed
its lawsuit against Planned Parenthood despite prevailing at the Kentucky Court of Appeals, and rescinded, on its
own initiative, its August 2019 denial of Planned Parenthood’s license application. These actions cannot be squared
with an assertion that the Inspector General will act simply to make it more difficult for women to obtain abortions.
         16The   dissent faults the Commonwealth for failing to produce affirmative evidence that the plaintiffs will
be able to operate under quarterly waivers, but it is the plaintiffs’ burden to show the existence of a constitutional
violation, not the Commonwealth’s burden to show the absence of one. The plaintiffs accordingly must show that
they will not be able to operate on the basis of waivers, as Planned Parenthood conceded at oral argument. See Oral
Arg. Audio at 37:35–42.
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retain its license.17 Instead, she testified that she did not believe Planned Parenthood “would
have been able to raise money” for its Louisville facility if its board had known it “would only
get a 90-day provisional license.” Tr. Trans., Vol. 2B, R. 116, PageID 4304. But that facility
was already built and outfitted at the time of trial, and Planned Parenthood performs abortions
there now. Greene’s counterfactual discussion of past events has no bearing on the prospective
effect of the challenged provisions. As the district court itself observed at trial:

         THE COURT: All right. I want to make sure I understand this. The money has
         been raised. The facility has been built. It’s been equipped. And at this point not
         only is the facility operational, but you-all did actually perform abortion services
         there prior to getting the letter on January 28th?
         THE WITNESS [Greene]: That’s right.
Id. at PageID 4305. When asked on cross-examination why Planned Parenthood would “not ask
for a time extension [i.e. a ninety-day waiver] and see what happens,” Greene responded,
“Maybe we will.” Id. at PageID 4321.

         None of this testimony supports the finding that Planned Parenthood would be unable to
operate if it applied for quarterly waivers while seeking transfer and transport agreements.
If anything, Greene’s testimony on cross-examination suggests that Planned Parenthood itself
had not ruled out the possibility of operating on that basis. Accordingly, the district court’s
finding as to Planned Parenthood was clearly erroneous. See United States v. Mahaffey, 53 F.3d
128, 133 (6th Cir. 1995) (holding that a finding that “totally lacks an evidentiary basis in the
record . . . is clearly erroneous”).          Because the plaintiffs have failed to show that KRS
§ 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 would prevent Planned Parenthood from performing
abortions in its Louisville facility, they have failed to show that the challenged provisions would
leave Kentucky without a licensed abortion facility. Accordingly, they have not shown that the
statute and regulation would have the effect of imposing a substantial obstacle to abortion access
in Kentucky.

         17The   dissent claims that testimony from EMW’s owner that EMW would not be able to retain staff is
sufficient to establish that Planned Parenthood would not be able to retain staff. The undue burden standard,
however, requires an individuated assessment of each abortion provider’s ability to comply with licensing
regulations. If that were not the case, it hardly would have been necessary for the plurality in June Medical Services
to painstakingly analyze each abortion doctor in Louisiana’s ability to comply with the requirements at issue in that
case. See 140 S. Ct. at 2122–28 (plurality opinion); id. at 2141 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment).
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        Moreover, even if we disregarded Planned Parenthood, the district court’s finding that
EMW would not be able to operate by applying for quarterly waivers is clearly erroneous as
well. The district court relied for its finding on the trial testimony of Dr. Marshall. When asked
whether EMW would be able to operate by applying for a waiver every ninety days, Dr. Marshall
testified:

        Well, I think the problem is that your license is at stake every 90 days, so you’re
        at the whim of being closed every 90 days. There’s no security that you can
        even—you can’t offer a person a job and say, “Well, I have you a job for 90 days,
        but I don’t know if I’m going to have you a job past that.” We wouldn’t be able
        to hire any staff.

Tr. Trans., Vol. 1B, R. 112, PageID 4121. In response to subsequent questioning, Dr. Marshall
acknowledged that his answer contradicted his deposition testimony. He continued:

        . . . I’ve thought about what you asked me a lot, and my answer has changed since
        then. . . . Because at that time I was just thinking about the technicality of it, not
        the ramifications. And once I thought about the ramifications, then it would be
        burdensome.
Id. at PageID 4122.

        Dr. Marshall’s testimony rests on the assumption that EMW would be “at the whim of
being closed every 90 days” if it relied on quarterly waivers. Accepted as true, this establishes
only that EMW would be unable to retain staff if the Inspector General’s decision on whether to
grant a waiver were arbitrary. As we explained above, however, as a matter of law we may not
make that assumption.

        And even if we were to accept the district court’s legally erroneous assumption,
Dr. Marshall’s testimony would still be too conclusory to make a clear showing that a “good
faith” (and not merely “halfhearted”) attempt to operate on quarterly waivers would be futile.
See June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2141 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment). The
substantial-obstacle determination in June Medical Services turned on whether the district court
had clearly erred in finding that three Louisiana abortion doctors who were unable to obtain
admitting privileges at a local hospital had made good-faith efforts to do so. See id. at 2124–28
(plurality opinion); id. at 2141 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment) (endorsing the
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plurality’s discussion of the physicians’ efforts to obtain admitting privileges). All three made
some attempt to comply. From the plurality’s close examination of the record to determine what
each doctor did and did not do to obtain admitting privileges, we can see that while “[g]ood faith
does not require an exercise in futility,” id. at 2128 (plurality opinion), a finding of futility
requires more than an abortion provider’s subjective belief that efforts at compliance would be
futile. The provider’s belief must be “reasonabl[e],” and the reasonableness of the belief must be
established by record evidence. Id. at 2125.

        Here, the record evinces only Dr. Marshall’s subjective belief that it would be impractical
to operate on the basis of quarterly waivers. No evidence in the record speaks to whether that
belief is objectively reasonable. There is no indication, for instance, that Dr. Marshall asked any
current employees whether they would be willing to remain on staff if EMW were to operate on
the basis of waivers. Nor is there any evidence that he sought replacements for any critical staff
members he would be likely to lose, if he would be likely to lose any. Nor does the record
contain any other specific facts that would give rise to the inference that it would be pointless to
attempt to retain or hire staff. Without relevant evidence in the record, we simply cannot know
whether an abortion provider making a wholehearted effort to comply with the waiver provision
would reasonably conclude that he would be unable to maintain a staff.18

        Despite our explicit reliance on the plurality opinion in June Medical Services (endorsed,
in this part, by Chief Justice Roberts), the dissent curiously accuses us of relying on Justice
Alito’s dissent. A review of the plurality’s substantial-obstacle determination in June Medical
Services shows why this is wrong.

        As noted above, the question in June Medical Services was whether three Louisiana
abortion doctors had made good-faith efforts to obtain hospital admitting privileges. The district
court, “after monitoring the doctors’ efforts for a year and a half,” determined that they had. Id.

        18We    note that both of the physicians who perform abortions at EMW alongside Dr. Marshall are also
professors at the University of Louisville School of Medicine. If they have an alternative source of employment and
only perform abortions at EMW part time, would they necessarily be unwilling to continue working there if EMW
had to rely on waivers to keep its license? Or if keeping physicians on staff is not the problem, which position
would EMW not be able to fill? We have no way of knowing the answers to these questions from Dr. Marshall’s
testimony, nor do we know whether Dr. Marshall asked himself these sorts of questions before concluding that
EMW would be unable to retain staff.
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at 2124 (plurality opinion). The Supreme Court plurality, and Chief Justice Roberts, agreed. Id.;
id. at 2141 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment). But not before devoting many pages of
the U.S. Reports to a doctor-by-doctor, and hospital-by-hospital, analysis of the record evidence
supporting each physician’s claim of futility.19 Id. at 2124–28 (plurality opinion).

        We take the plurality’s painstaking review of the evidence supporting the district court’s
determination that each doctor acted in good faith as our model. From that example, we learn
that good-faith efforts to comply with the law matter; that record evidence must support a
physician’s assertion of futility; and that appellate courts should do as the Supreme Court
plurality did—review the record for some support of the claim. We have done that here. What
this record contains is a legally erroneous assumption that the Inspector General would act in bad
faith and an unsupported assertion from Dr. Marshall that he could not operate with such
uncertainty. That is a far cry from the evidence that the plurality deemed sufficient to support
the substantial-obstacle determination in June Medical Services. Justice Alito, to be sure, would
have demanded more. Id. at 2158–65 (Alito, J., dissenting). We are not sure why that matters; it
does not follow that the plurality would have been satisfied with less. The plurality’s careful
look at each doctor’s efforts is our guide. Guided by the analysis of the plurality opinion, the
evidence in this case was insufficient to establish a good-faith attempt, even under the deferential
clearly erroneous standard.

          19To illustrate: The plurality noted that in response to Doe 2’s application, the Willis-Knighton Health
Center sent a letter requiring him “to submit records of hospital admissions” in order to establish his eligibility,
“even though he had not ‘done any in-hospital work in ten years.’” June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2125 (citation
omitted) (plurality opinion). “The record also show[ed] that Doe 2 could not have maintained the ‘adequate number
of inpatient contacts’ Willis-Knighton requires to support continued privileges.” Id. “Doe 2” therefore “reasonably
believed there was no point in” continuing to pursue admission privileges there. Id. Doe 5 needed a covering
physician at the hospital to obtain admitting privileges so he asked “the doctor” with whom his “clinic already had a
patient transfer agreement.” Id. at 2126. That doctor declined because he “worried that it could make him a target
of threats and protests.” Id. Doe 5 knew that other physicians with whom he had a less-established relationship
would likely raise the same objection, because “[a]nti-abortion protests had previously forced him to leave his
position as a staff member of a hospital northeast of Baton Rouge.” Id. “With his own experience and their existing
relationship in mind, Doe 5 could have reasonably thought that, if this doctor wouldn’t serve as his covering
physician, no one would.” Id. Finally, “Doe 6 testified that he did not apply to other hospitals because he did not
admit a sufficient number of patients to receive active admitting privileges.” Id. at 2127. “The State’s own
admitting-privileges expert . . . testified that a doctor in Doe 6’s position would ‘probably not’ be able to obtain
‘active admitting and surgical privileges’ at any hospital,” and both witness’s testimony was “well-supported” by
other evidence in the record. Id. at 2127–28 (citation and emphases omitted). Doe 6 therefore acted in good faith as
well. Id. at 2128.
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          We are thus “left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been
committed.” Id. at 2141 (Roberts, C.J., concurring in the judgment) (quoting Gypsum, 333 U.S.
at 395). There was insufficient evidence for the district court to find that it would be futile for
EMW to make a “good faith” attempt to operate on the basis of ninety-day waivers. Id. The
plaintiffs have failed to show that EMW’s inability to operate on the basis of waivers would be
properly “attributable to the [challenged provisions] rather than a halfhearted attempt” to comply
with the waiver provision, even if we indulge the improper assumption on which Dr. Marshall’s
testimony is premised. Id.

          EMW and Planned Parenthood have failed to make a clear showing that both of their
abortion facilities would close if KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 go into effect.
But that is the showing they must make. The district court’s permanent injunction was based on
the assumption that the regulations requiring transport and transfer agreements would impose an
undue burden on the right to abortion by leaving Kentucky without an operating abortion facility.
That conclusion cannot be sustained. Accordingly, we reverse the district court’s judgment in
favor of the plaintiffs on their substantive due process claims, and we vacate the permanent
injunction. The district court should consider on remand the plaintiffs’ remaining claims for
relief.

                                               III.

          One final matter requires resolution. During discovery, Kentucky failed to produce a
representative from the Governor’s Office for a deposition properly noticed by Planned
Parenthood. Planned Parenthood moved for sanctions. A magistrate judge granted Planned
Parenthood’s motion and ordered the Governor’s Office to reimburse Planned Parenthood for the
reasonable expenses caused by its failure to appear. EMW Women’s Surgical Ctr., P.S.C. v.
Glisson, No. 3:17CV-00189-GNS, 2017 WL 4897528, at *5 (W.D. Ky. Oct. 30, 2017). Planned
Parenthood then submitted a bill of costs to the district court. Rejecting Kentucky’s objections to
both the bill of costs and the magistrate judge’s order, the district court awarded Planned
Parenthood $21,140.25 in attorney’s fees and costs. EMW Women’s Surgical Ctr., P.S.C. v.
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Bevin, No. 3:17-CV-189-GNS, 2018 WL 10229473, at *9 (W.D. Ky. Sept. 28, 2018).20
Kentucky appeals, contesting both the decision to order sanctions and the amount of the award.

         A district court may order sanctions if “a party . . . fails, after being served with proper
notice, to appear for that person’s deposition.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(d)(1)(A)(i). Such a failure “is
not excused on the ground that the discovery sought was objectionable, unless the party failing to
act has a pending motion for a protective order under Rule 26(c).” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(d)(2).
When a district court orders sanctions under Rule 37(d), it “must require the party failing to act,
the attorney advising that party, or both to pay the reasonable expenses, including attorney’s
fees, caused by the failure, unless the failure was substantially justified or other circumstances
make an award of expenses unjust.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(d)(3). “A district court’s decision to
invoke Rule 37 sanctions is reviewed by this court for an abuse of discretion.” McCarthy v.
Ameritech Publ’g, Inc., 763 F.3d 488, 490 (6th Cir. 2014) (quoting Beil v. Lakewood Eng’g &
Mfg. Co., 15 F.3d 546, 551 (6th Cir. 1994)).

         Relying on Rule 37(d)(2), Kentucky argues that a party’s failure to appear is always
excused if the party has a pending motion for a protective order; and here the Commonwealth
had filed a motion for a protective order the night before the deposition. But having a pending
protective order is merely a necessary condition for excusing a party’s failure to appear. It is not
alone sufficient. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 37 advisory committee’s note to 1970 amendment (“[Rule
37(d)(2) was] added to make clear that a party may not properly remain completely silent even
when he regards a notice to take his deposition . . . as improper and objectionable. If he desires
not to appear or not to respond, he must apply for a protective order.”); Albert v. Starbucks
Coffee Co., 213 F. App’x 1, 2 (D.C. Cir. 2007) (per curiam) (rejecting “the proposition that the
mere filing of a motion for protective order requires the court to excuse a party’s failure to obey
a court order compelling attendance at a deposition”). The district court did not abuse its

         20Planned     Parenthood actually requested $21,190.25 in its bill of costs. The district court found that
“Planned Parenthood requests $19,395 in attorneys’ fees . . . and $1,795.25 for airfare and hotel costs,” adding up to
$21,190.25. 2018 WL 10229473, at *4. The district court determined that both of these sums were reasonable, id.
at *8, but its order at the end of the opinion awards Planned Parenthood $50 less, $21,140.25, see id. at *9 (awarding
“$19,395.00 in attorneys’ fees and $1,745.25 in costs”). This $50 discrepancy appears to be a clerical error.
 No. 18-6161         EMW Women’s Surgical Center, et al. v. Friedlander, et al.          Page 36

discretion by taking into account the last-minute nature of Kentucky’s motion for a protective
order.

         Kentucky further contends that the Governor’s Office was substantially justified in
failing to send a representative because one of its attorneys, Jennifer Wolsing, was not timely
notified of Planned Parenthood’s notice of deposition. Even assuming this allegation is true, it is
irrelevant.   The magistrate judge found that Planned Parenthood had served a notice of
deposition on two other attorneys for the Governor’s Office more than two weeks before the
scheduled deposition. Kentucky does not challenge this finding on appeal. A deposing party
“must give reasonable written notice to every other party,” not every attorney. Fed. R. Civ. P.
30(b)(1) (emphasis added); see also Fed. R. Civ. P. 5(a)(1). “When a party is represented by
more than one attorney, service upon any one of them satisfies” this requirement. 4B Charles
Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1145 (4th ed. 2008, Apr.
2020 update); accord Buchanan v. Sherrill, 51 F.3d 227, 228 (10th Cir. 1995) (per curiam);
Daniel Int’l Corp. v. Fischbach & Moore, Inc., 916 F.2d 1061, 1063 (5th Cir. 1990).

         Turning to the amount of the award, Kentucky objects to paying the travel costs of Karen
Johnson-McKewan, Planned Parenthood’s lead counsel. The Commonwealth claims that she did
not need to fly from California to Kentucky because counsel for the Governor’s Office had
clearly communicated that no representative would attend the deposition. If the only purpose of
the trip was to make a record that the Governor’s Office did not appear, Kentucky argues,
Planned Parenthood could have relied on local counsel instead. Although “reasonable expenses”
under Rule 37(d)(3) do not include “expenses and fees” that “could have been avoided and were
self-imposed,” INVST Fin. Grp., Inc. v. Chem-Nuclear Sys., Inc., 815 F.2d 391, 404 (6th Cir.
1987), here it was reasonable for Johnson-McKewan to travel to Kentucky. Both parties knew
that the Governor’s Office had a duty to send a representative under threat of sanction. Planned
Parenthood “could reasonably have believed that [the Governor’s Office] might consider the
consequences of failing to attend and change [its] mind.” John Wiley & Sons, Inc. v. Book Dog
Books, LLC, 298 F.R.D. 145, 151 (S.D.N.Y. 2014).            It was thus reasonable for Planned
Parenthood to prepare fully for the deposition and send its lead counsel in case the Governor’s
Office decided to appear.
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       Kentucky also claims it was excessive for Planned Parenthood to bill 23.5 hours for the
time spent on its sanctions motion and 20 hours for the reply in support of it. Those figures do
seem high, but the district court determined them to be reasonable after considering “[t]he
content and quality” of the filings in detail. 2018 WL 10229473, at *7. Kentucky presents no
argument why the time was excessive beyond italicizing the numbers involved and asserting that
they are too high. We cannot conclude that the district court abused its discretion in awarding
$21,140.25 in fees and costs.

                                             ***

       For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM the district court’s award of sanctions,
REVERSE its judgment in favor of the plaintiffs’ substantive due process claims, VACATE the
permanent injunction, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
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                                      _________________

                                            DISSENT
                                      _________________

       CLAY, Circuit Judge, dissenting. Today, the majority openly disregards our standard of
review and discards binding precedent.       In doing so, it condones the evisceration of the
constitutional right to abortion access in Kentucky.

       This case presents the straightforward issue of whether Kentucky’s requirement that
abortion facilities enter into both a transfer agreement with a Kentucky-licensed acute-care
hospital and a transport agreement with a Kentucky-licensed ambulance service constitutes an
undue burden on abortion access. See Ky. Rev. Stat. (“KRS”) § 216B.0435; 902 Ky. Admin.
Regs. (“KAR”) 20:360 § 10. In the last five years, the Supreme Court has twice found laws
imposing lesser burdens unconstitutional in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment. June Med.
Servs. v. Russo, 140 S. Ct. 2103, 2112–13 (2020) (plurality opinion); id. at 2134 (Roberts, C.J.,
concurring); Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt, 136 S. Ct. 2292, 2300 (2016). Yet the
majority refuses to recognize the burden imposed on women by Kentucky’s requirement,
claiming that the district court clearly erroneously found that this requirement would effectively
eliminate abortion access in the Commonwealth.         Instead, the majority contends—without
grounding in fact or reason—that Kentucky’s abortion facilities could continue to provide
abortions if they continually and indefinitely applied for ninety-day extensions of the deadline to
obtain transfer and transport agreements. See 902 KAR 20:360 § 10(5). To reach that end, it
disregards substantial evidence supporting the district court’s determination, as well as basic
common sense and logical reasoning.

       More perilously, the majority altogether refuses to apply—let alone adhere to—the
Supreme Court’s decision in Whole Woman’s Health v. Hellerstedt. Instead, it wrongly adopts
an analysis put forward in dicta by Chief Justice Roberts’ concurring opinion in June Medical
Services v. Russo, and then reaches a result directly opposing Chief Justice Roberts’. In doing
so, the majority completely undermines the principle driving that concurrence—stare decisis—
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and ignores Supreme Court precedent dictating that lower courts should not find the Court to
have implicitly overruled prior precedent. See Agostini v. Felton, 521 U.S. 203, 237 (1997).

           At the end of the day, no matter what standard this Court is bound to apply, the
majority’s decision today is terribly and tragically wrong. The majority directly contravenes
both the plurality and concurring opinions in June Medical Services, as well as the majority
opinion in Whole Woman’s Health. Correctly analyzed, the record and the law definitively
demonstrate that Kentucky’s transfer and transport agreement requirements impose an undue
burden under any possible analysis. And the consequences of today’s decision could not be
more dire. As a result of the majority’s deeply flawed analysis, millions of individuals will be
altogether deprived of abortion access.

                                           BACKGROUND

           At issue in this case is a Kentucky statute and regulation that together require abortion
facilities to enter into both a transfer agreement with a Kentucky-licensed acute-care hospital and
a transport agreement with a Kentucky-licensed ambulance service. See KRS § 216B.0435; 902
KAR 20:360 § 10. KRS § 216B.0435 has been in place since 1998, and states:

           (1) Each abortion facility shall enter into a written agreement with a licensed acute-care
               hospital capable of treating patients with unforeseen complications related to an
               abortion facility procedure by which agreement the hospital agrees to accept and treat
               these patients.
           (2) If unforeseen complications arise prior to or during an abortion facility procedure, the
               patient shall be transferred to the licensed acute-care hospital with which the abortion
               facility has a written agreement as provided under subsection (1) of this section or the
               hospital selected by the patient, if the patient so chooses.
           (3) Each abortion facility shall enter into a written agreement with a licensed local
               ambulance service for the transport of any emergency patient within the scope of
               subsection (1) of this section to the licensed acute-care hospital.
           (4) The written agreements of an abortion facility with an acute-care hospital and with a
               local ambulance service shall be filed by the abortion facility with the [Cabinet for
               Health and Family Services].

The regulation 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 was enacted in 1999 and, until 2017, nearly mirrored this
statute.
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       However, in 2017, the Commonwealth’s Cabinet for Health and Family Services
(“CHFS”) promulgated a new version of the regulation. CHFS is part of Kentucky’s executive
branch and is responsible for the administration and enforcement of Kentucky’s abortion facility
licensure requirements, in part through the Office of the Inspector General (“OIG”). The new
regulation required abortion facilities to enter into transfer and transport agreements with very
particular hospitals and ambulance services. Both must either be in the same county as the
abortion facility or within a certain number of miles or minutes’ drive—the hospital within
twenty minutes normal driving time, and the ambulance service within ten minutes or a five-mile
distance. 902 KAR 20:360 §§ 10(3)(a), (4)(a). Likewise, the new regulation established very
particular requirements for the transfer and transport agreements between abortion facilities and
those hospitals and ambulance services. The transfer and transport agreements must detail
numerous specified responsibilities of the abortion facility, hospital, and ambulance service and
must be signed by individuals who certify that they have the authority to execute such
agreements on the organization’s behalf. Id. §§ 10(3)(c)–(f), 10(4)(b)–(c).

       If an abortion facility does not enter into both a transfer agreement and a transport
agreement in accordance with these provisions, it will lose its (or be unable to obtain a) license to
perform abortions in Kentucky. KRS § 216B.990. A facility may receive ninety-day extensions
of the time provided to comply with these provisions by submitting a written request to the OIG.
902 KAR 20:360 § 10(5). Such a request must certify under oath that the facility “has exhausted
all reasonable efforts to obtain a transfer or transport agreement for a continuous ninety (90)
calendar day period prior to the request” and must describe in detail “the efforts taken to secure
the agreements.” Id. § 10(5)(a). The Inspector General may grant or deny an extension based on
“all factors” he or she “deems relevant under the circumstances,” but must consider at least
whether the facility “made, and continues to make, a good faith effort to obtain a transfer or
transport agreement,” whether the facility “can provide the same level of patient care and safety
via alternative health services” during the extension period, and the regulatory compliance
history of the facility and any other facility “owned, in whole or in part, by the applicant or any
other individual or entity having an ownership interest with the facility.” Id. § 10(5)(b). The
Inspector General can rescind his or her grant of an extension “at any time” that he or she
determines the facility has not met or is not meeting these requirements. Id. § 10(5)(e).
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       Plaintiff EMW Women’s Surgical Center, P.S.C. (“EMW”) was—at the time of this
lawsuit’s initiation and the district court’s trial—Kentucky’s only licensed abortion facility. It
has been performing abortions at its facility in Louisville, Kentucky since the early 1980s, and
performs an average of 3,000 abortions per year, which historically has accounted for the
overwhelming majority of abortions performed in Kentucky. For instance, in 2016, the latest
year for which data was available at the time of trial, EMW performed 2,833 out of 2,848—or
99.47%—of abortions received by Kentuckians in the Commonwealth.                   Plaintiff Ernest
Marshall, M.D. is the owner of EMW.

       Plaintiff Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc. (“Planned Parenthood”) is a
non-profit healthcare provider that has been providing healthcare services at its facility in
Louisville, Kentucky since 1933. In 2015, Planned Parenthood applied to become a licensed
abortion facility. Between December 2015 and January 2016, Planned Parenthood performed
twenty-three abortions at its facility, ostensibly as part of the license application process. Since
the district court issued its decision in this case, Planned Parenthood has been granted a license
to perform abortions in the Commonwealth and has begun doing so.

       Prior to the events underlying this case, KRS § 216B.0435 had been in effect for
approximately nineteen years without issue. During that time, abortion facility transfer and
transport agreements were largely a formality and did not receive serious scrutiny from CHFS
during the license application process. Indeed, from the enactment of KRS § 216B.0435 until
2016, it appears that CHFS never found a single transfer or transport agreement to be deficient
for any reason. Accordingly, EMW maintained a transfer agreement with the University of
Louisville Hospital (“Louisville Hospital”) and a transport agreement with Mercy Ambulance
Services. And Planned Parenthood, as part of the license application process, entered into a
transfer agreement with Louisville Hospital and a transport agreement with Louisville Metro
Emergency Medical Services.       Neither EMW nor Planned Parenthood had any difficulties
entering into or maintaining these agreements prior to 2016.

       However, beginning in 2016, CHFS made an about-face and dramatically increased its
scrutiny of abortion facility transfer and transport agreements.       For instance, CHFS asked
Planned Parenthood to revise its transfer agreement with Louisville Hospital so that it included
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more specific language about the responsibilities of each party. CHFS also asked Planned
Parenthood to provide an extensive list of additional records in support of its transfer and
transport agreements, including a fire marshal certificate and certain personnel records. Planned
Parenthood complied.

       Shortly thereafter, Louisville Hospital terminated its transfer agreement with Planned
Parenthood. Planned Parenthood then attempted to enter into transfer agreements with the other
hospitals in Louisville, but none agreed. Accordingly, Planned Parenthood instead entered into
transfer agreements with the University of Kentucky Hospital in Lexington, Kentucky and Clark
Memorial Hospital in Jeffersonville, Indiana. However, CHFS rejected both of these agreements
on the grounds that the University of Kentucky Hospital was seventy miles away from Planned
Parenthood, and that Clark Memorial Hospital, though only four miles away from Planned
Parenthood, was not a Kentucky-licensed hospital. At this point, CHFS was still operating under
the version of 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 that mirrored KRS § 216B.0435. Because of its inability to
enter into a satisfactory transfer agreement until after the district court’s permanent injunction of
KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10, Planned Parenthood was unable to obtain a license
to perform abortions in Kentucky.

       Similarly, in early 2017, CHFS informed EMW that its transfer agreement with
Louisville Hospital was deficient for several reasons. Specifically, CHFS informed EMW that
the agreement was not signed by an acceptable representative of Louisville Hospital, did not
correctly name Louisville Hospital as the transferee, and did not state with reasonable certainty
the responsibilities of each party in the event the agreement was employed. In an effort to
remedy these purported deficiencies, EMW obtained the signature of the President and CEO of
Louisville Hospital. However, he cancelled the transfer agreement on the same day, stating that
he was concerned he did not have the authority to sign the agreement. EMW attempted to enter
into transfer agreements with the other hospitals in Louisville, but none agreed. Although every
Louisville hospital that Planned Parenthood and EMW contacted refused to enter into a transfer
agreement with them, each confirmed that it would provide emergency medical care to any of
their abortion patients if they were transferred there. Nevertheless, because of its inability to
 No. 18-6161         EMW Women’s Surgical Center, et al. v. Friedlander, et al.         Page 43

enter into a sufficient transfer agreement, EMW faces revocation of its license to perform
abortions in Kentucky.

        Plaintiffs EMW and Dr. Marshall then filed this lawsuit against then-Secretary of CHFS
Vickie Yates Brown Glisson in her official capacity. Now-Acting Secretary of CHFS Eric
Friedlander has since been substituted for Glisson. Planned Parenthood later intervened in the
lawsuit, alleging claims against both the Secretary and then-Governor Matthew Bevin in their
official capacities. Current Governor Andrew Beshear has since been substituted for Bevin.
This Court also recently permitted Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron to intervene as a
defendant in this suit.

        Plaintiffs’ complaints both allege, among other claims, that Kentucky’s requirement that
abortion facilities enter into both a transfer agreement with a Kentucky-licensed acute-care
hospital and a transport agreement with a Kentucky-licensed ambulance service unduly burdens
individuals’ right to elect abortion, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United
States Constitution. Plaintiffs seek facial and as-applied injunctive relief.

        The district court entered a temporary restraining order that enjoined the enforcement of
KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10, which was later converted into a preliminary
injunction pending the outcome of the lawsuit. Months after the initiation of this lawsuit and the
entry of the preliminary injunction, and even longer after CHFS began heightening its scrutiny of
abortion facilities’ transfer and transport agreements, CHFS promulgated the version of
902 KAR 20:360 § 10 in place today. In particular, the newly amended regulation added the
ninety-day extension provision.      The district court then conducted a bench trial, and on
September 28, 2018, converted its preliminary injunction into a permanent injunction,
concluding that the relevant law and regulation indeed imposes an undue burden on abortion
access, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment.

        This appeal followed.
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                                                 DISCUSSION

         The Supreme Court has twice considered—and twice found unconstitutional—laws
imposing burdens lesser than those presented in this case. See June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at
2112–13 (plurality opinion); id. at 2134 (Roberts, C.J., concurring); Whole Woman’s Health,
136 S. Ct. at 2300. Although my colleagues make every effort to assert otherwise, under any
possible interpretation, that precedent requires us to affirm the district court’s decision in this
case.

         Plaintiffs are “entitled to a permanent injunction if [they] can establish that [they]
suffered a constitutional violation and will suffer ‘continuing irreparable injury’ for which there
is no adequate remedy at law.”1 EMW Women’s Surgical Ctr. v. Friedlander, 960 F.3d 785, 793
(6th Cir. 2020) (quoting Women’s Med. Pro. Corp. v. Baird, 438 F.3d 595, 602 (6th Cir. 2005)).
In reviewing the district court’s decision to permanently enjoin KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR
20:360 § 10, “we apply three standards of review. We review the scope of injunctive relief for
an abuse of discretion, the district court’s legal conclusions de novo, and the court’s factual
findings for clear error.” Id.

         This Court has repeatedly emphasized that our role on review “is a narrow one.”
Am. Civil Liberties Union of Ohio v. Capitol Square Review & Advisory Bd., 243 F.3d 289, 309
(6th Cir. 2001) (en banc). “[A]s a lower federal court,” we must “apply all pertinent Supreme
Court precedent.” United States v. Lucido, 612 F.3d 871, 876 (6th Cir. 2010) (quoting Rosales-
Garcia v. Holland, 322 F.3d 386, 414 (6th Cir. 2003)). To the extent that we disagree with such
precedent, we must “leave the Supreme Court to overrule its own decisions.” Zagorski v. Mays,
907 F.3d 901, 905 (6th Cir. 2018).

         Likewise, as an appellate court, we must “let district courts do what district courts do
best—make factual findings—and steel ourselves to respect what they find.”                              Taglieri v.
Monasky, 907 F.3d 404, 408 (6th Cir. 2018) (en banc). As Chief Justice Roberts himself
emphasized in his concurring opinion in June Medical Services, “[c]lear error review follows

         1Both the majority opinion and this dissent agree that Plaintiffs unquestionably have standing to seek this
injunction. June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2118–120 (plurality opinion); id. at 2139 n.4 (Roberts, C.J., concurring).
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from a candid appraisal of the comparative advantages of trial courts and appellate courts.
‘While we review transcripts for a living, they listen to witnesses for a living. While we largely
read briefs for a living, they largely assess the credibility of parties and witnesses for a living.’”
140 S. Ct. at 2141 (Roberts, C.J., concurring) (quoting Taglieri, 907 F.3d at 408). Thus, we
“will not disturb the factual conclusions of the trial court unless we are ‘left with the definite and
firm conviction that a mistake has been committed,’” id. (quoting United States v. U.S. Gypsum
Co., 333 U.S. 364, 395 (1948)), or more evocatively, those findings “strike us as wrong with the
force of a five-week-old, unrefrigerated dead fish,” Taglieri, 907 F.3d at 409 (quoting United
States v. Perry, 908 F.2d 56, 58 (6th Cir. 1990)). “Where there are two permissible views of the
evidence, the [district court’s] choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous.” Anderson v.
City of Bessemer City, 470 U.S. 564, 574 (1985).

       Today, the majority usurps the district court’s duly defined role and casts aside our
standard of review. When properly undertaken, a review of the district court’s decision leads to
the unavoidable conclusion that we must affirm.

                                                  I.

       This case turns entirely on whether Plaintiffs suffered a constitutional violation—that is,
on whether KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 constitute an undue burden on abortion
access, in violation of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. For nearly
fifty years, this nation’s courts have recognized individuals’ fundamental right to choose to have
an abortion before fetal viability. Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 153–54 (1973). We have also
recognized that “[u]nnecessary health regulations that have the purpose or effect of presenting a
substantial obstacle to a woman seeking an abortion impose an undue burden on [that] right.”
Planned Parenthood of Se. Pa. v. Casey, 505 U.S. 833, 878 (1993) (plurality opinion).

       As explained in Whole Woman’s Health and reaffirmed by a plurality of the Court in
June Medical Services, in deciding whether a law or regulation presents a substantial obstacle,
courts must “consider the burdens a law imposes on abortion access together with the benefits
those laws confer.” Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2309; accord June Med. Servs., 140 S.
Ct. at 2120 (plurality opinion). However, as detailed in Chief Justice Roberts’ concurring
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opinion in June Medical Services, he understands the relevant test somewhat differently. 140 S.
Ct. at 2135, 2138 (Roberts, C.J., concurring).                   Under his analysis, a law must first be
“‘reasonably related’ to a legitimate state interest.” Id. at 2135 (quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 878).
A court may consider a law’s benefits in deciding if it meets this “threshold requirement.” Id. at
2138. If it does, a court must also consider whether the law creates a substantial obstacle to
abortion access. Id. Laws that create such an obstacle, regardless of their threshold relationship
to a state’s interest, impose an undue burden on abortion access in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment. Id.

         Today, the majority casts aside Whole Woman’s Health in favor of Chief Justice Roberts’
concurring opinion in June Medical Services, invoking Marks v. United States, 430 U.S. 188
(1997), to reach this desired end.2 But its analysis is deeply flawed and its rejection of Whole
Woman’s Health cannot be justified. In Marks, the Supreme Court explained that “[w]hen a
fragmented Court decides a case and no single rationale explaining the result enjoys the assent of
five Justices, ‘the holding of the Court may be viewed as that position taken by those Members
who concurred in the judgment on the narrowest grounds.’” Id. at 193 (quoting Gregg v.
Georgia, 428 U.S. 153, 169 n.15 (1976)). We have interpreted this to mean that “this court must
follow the reasoning of the concurring opinion with the narrowest line of reasoning” that is
“capable of supporting the Court’s judgment in that case.” Grutter v. Bollinger, 288 F.3d 732,
741 n.6 (6th Cir. 2002) (en banc), aff’d, 539 U.S. 306 (2003).

         The majority today concludes that “the narrowest line of reasoning” supporting the June
Medical Services decision is the entirety of Chief Justice Roberts’ concurring opinion, including
all dicta.3 This is wrong, and stands in clear violation of the principle of stare decisis and the

         2Itis worth noting that the majority’s analysis in this regard is not only incorrect, but is also apparently
unnecessary to its preordained result. The majority (wrongly) concludes that Plaintiffs have not shown that
Kentucky’s transfer and transport agreement requirement would cause them to be unable to provide abortions. If
this was true, the requirement would not impose either a burden or an obstacle, and therefore would equally fail
under the Whole Woman’s Health balancing test.
          Moreover, beyond a brief Rule 28(j) letter, neither party has had the opportunity to present arguments as to
what standard is appropriate for this Court to employ post-June Medical Services. This makes it especially unwise
for this Court to forge this new ground.
         3Although  not necessary to a resolution of this case because the parts of Chief Justice Roberts’ concurrence
relied on by the majority are dicta, I also dispute whether the Chief Justice’s concurrence is the narrowest opinion in
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Supreme Court’s admonitions that lower courts should not conclude that it has implicitly
overruled its prior precedent. Chief Justice Roberts’ concurring opinion does not free this Court
from its duty to apply the binding precedent of Whole Woman’s Health. Indeed, Chief Justice
Roberts emphasized from the start that he was not considering the validity of Whole Woman’s
Health; the question before the Court, he said, “[was] not whether Whole Woman’s Health was
right or wrong, but whether to adhere to it in deciding the present case.” 140 S. Ct. at 2133
(Roberts, C.J., concurring). He answered that question in the affirmative. Id. at 2133–34. The
basis for his concurrence, then—as he clearly and repeatedly stated—was his respect for the
decision in Whole Woman’s Health under the principle of stare decisis. Id. “The legal doctrine
of stare decisis requires us . . . to treat like cases alike.” Id. at 2134. “This principle,” he
emphasized, “is grounded in a basic humility that recognizes today’s legal issues are often not so
different from the questions of yesterday and that we are not the first ones to try to answer
them.” Id.

         To be sure, Chief Justice Roberts’ concurrence in June Medical Services critiques Whole
Woman’s Health.4 But that critique is dicta, as it was not necessary to his vote to concur. See
Wright v. Spaulding, 939 F.3d 695, 701 (6th Cir. 2019). The narrowest reasoning supporting the
judgment in June Medical Services is therefore simply and only that Whole Woman’s Health and
stare decisis required the Court to hold that Louisiana’s law requiring abortion providers to
obtain admitting privileges was as unconstitutional as Texas’, where the district court did not

June Medical Services. The majority opinion is based on the premise that Chief Justice Roberts’ concurrence is a
“logical subset” of the plurality opinion. United States v. Kratt, 579 F.3d 558, 562 (6th Cir. 2009) (quoting King v.
Palmer, 950 F.2d 771, 781 (D.C. Cir. 1991) (en banc)). However, we have also held that the “‘narrowest’ opinion
refers to the one which relies on the ‘least’ doctrinally ‘far-reaching-common ground’ among the Justices in the
majority: it is the concurring opinion that offers the least change to the law.” United States v. Cundiff, 555 F.3d 200,
209 (6th Cir. 2009) (quoting Johnson v. Bd. of Regents of the Univ. of Ga., 263 F.3d 1234, 1247 (11th Cir. 2001);
United States v. Johnson, 467 F.3d 56, 63 (1st Cir. 2006)). The plurality opinion merely applied the law from Whole
Woman’s Health while Chief Justice Roberts’ concurrence, according to the majority, limited Whole Woman’s
Health. Therefore, under this conception of the Marks test, the plurality offers the least change in the law and is
controlling.
         4To  the extent that the Chief Justice concluded that Whole Woman’s Health itself did not require a
balancing test, his conclusion is contradicted by the clear language of that case, Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct.
at 2309, as well as by his fellow justices in June Medical Services, 140 S. Ct. at 2154 (Alito, J., dissenting) (stating
that “the plurality adheres to the balancing test adopted in Whole Woman’s Health”); id. at 2181 (Gorsuch, J.,
dissenting) (“At no point [in Whole Woman’s Health] did the Court hold that the burdens imposed by the Texas law
alone—divorced from any consideration of the law’s benefits—could suffice to establish a substantial obstacle.”).
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clearly err in finding that the law imposed equivalent burdens. There is no basis in this Court or
the Supreme Court’s precedent for treating a single Justice’s commentary on a prior decision in
dicta as an overruling of an opinion duly issued by a majority of the Supreme Court.

       The majority, however, asserts that, under Marks, dicta and holding cannot be separated
and “the narrowest concurring opinion” in its entirety “is the Court’s opinion.” Ante at 20
(quoting J.L. Spoons, Inc. v. Dragani, 538 F.3d 379, 386 n.2 (6th Cir. 2008)). In its haste to
eviscerate the constitutional right to an abortion, the majority adopts an understanding of the
Marks rule that would lead to absurd results. In a Supreme Court case with a 4–4 split, no
precedent would be safe from the tiebreaking Justice deciding to seize the opportunity to rewrite
the law even if the other eight Justices disagreed. See Ramos v. Louisiana, 140 S. Ct. 1390, 1403
(2020) (plurality opinion).

       For example, suppose the Supreme Court heard a case raising the issue of whether the
Third Amendment’s protection against quartering of soldiers is incorporated against the states.
See McDonald v. City of Chicago, Ill., 561 U.S. 742, 765 n.13 (2010) (explaining that the Third
Amendment has not yet been incorporated against the states). In this hypothetical case, four
Justices agree that the Third Amendment is incorporated by the Due Process Clause of the
Fourteenth Amendment and conclude that the petitioner is entitled to relief.         Cf. Timbs v.
Indiana, 139 S. Ct. 682, 687 (2019). Another four Justices agree that the Due Process Clause is
the proper vehicle for incorporation but believe that the Third Amendment should not be
incorporated. Cf. Apodaca v. Oregon, 406 U.S. 404, 410 (plurality opinion). The tiebreaking
Justice authors an opinion stating that: (1) the Due Process Clause is the wrong vehicle for
incorporating fundamental rights against the states; (2) the Privileges or Immunities Clause is the
appropriate vehicle for incorporation, cf. Timbs, 139 S. Ct. at 691 (Thomas, J., concurring);
(3) the Privileges or Immunities Clause includes a “dual-track” incorporation approach under
which provisions of the Bill of Rights can provide less protection when invoked against a state
government than when invoked against the federal government; and (4) the Third Amendment is
incorporated against the states and, based on the specific circumstances of her Third Amendment
claim, the petitioner is entitled to relief, cf. Johnson v. Louisiana, 406 U.S. 366, 375 (1972)
(Powell, J., concurring).
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         In this hypothetical, the tiebreaking Justice’s opinion is most likely the narrowest; a dual-
track theory of incorporation would accept fewer Third Amendment challenges to state action
than a regime where rights apply with equal force against federal and state governments.5 See
Marks, 430 U.S. at 193–94 (explaining that Justice Brennan’s opinion, which provided the least
First Amendment protections, was the narrowest); see also ante at 15. The result, according to
the majority’s reasoning, is that decades of precedent dictating that fundamental rights are
incorporated against the states via the Due Process Clause and rejecting the idea of dual-track
incorporation would be overturned. See Ramos, 140 S. Ct. at 1397 (citing Duncan v. Louisiana,
391 U.S. 145, 148–150 (1968); Malloy v. Hogan, 378 U.S. 1, 10–11 (1964)).

         Fortunately, the Marks rule does not beget such absurd results for the simple reason that
it is only the holding from the narrowest opinion, and only the narrowest reasoning supporting
that holding, that is controlling—i.e., that the Third Amendment is incorporated and provides
protection in the specific circumstances addressed. Thus, in United States v. Santos, a case about
the definition of the term “proceeds” in the federal money laundering statute, Justice Scalia,
writing for a four Justice plurality, explained that because Justice Stevens’ “opinion rests upon
the narrower ground, the Court’s holding is limited accordingly.” 553 U.S. 507, 523 (2008)
(citing Marks, 430 U.S. at 193). Justice Scalia, however, also explained that the controlling
effect of Justice Stevens’ opinion was limited to the “narrowness of his ground.” Id. The
“speculations” in the remainder of Justice Stevens’ concurrence, according to Justice Scalia, “are
the purest of dicta, and form no part of today’s holding.”6 Id. According to the position taken by
the majority, however, had Justice Stevens’ speculations included his then-recently announced
belief that the death penalty was unconstitutional, see Baze v. Rees, 553 U.S. 35, 86 (2008)
(Stevens, J., concurring), his position on the death penalty would have been “entitled to as much

         5To  be sure, in this hypothetical, the plurality can be considered the “narrowest opinion” because, arguably,
“it is the concurring opinion that offers the least change to the law” as it does not topple decades of precedent.
Cundiff, 555 F.3d at 209. But under this conception of “narrowest opinion,” Chief Justice Roberts’ concurrence in
June Medical Services cannot be considered the narrowest opinion because the plurality leaves in place the
precedent set by Whole Woman’s Health.
         6Significantly, while Justice Stevens disagreed with Justice Scalia’s interpretation of his concurrence, he
did not assert, as the majority claims, that his opinion, dicta and all, was the Court’s opinion. See id. at 528 n.7
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authority and respect as any other opinion of the Supreme Court,” ante at 20. This, clearly, is an
incorrect understanding of the Marks rule.

         Moreover, the majority’s reliance on our decision in Grutter v. Bollinger is misplaced. In
Grutter, we held that Michigan Law School’s admissions policy passed constitutional muster
based on Justice Powell’s discussion of the Harvard admissions plan in his concurring opinion in
Regents of the University of California v. Bakke, 438 U.S. 265 (1978). See Grutter, 288 F.3d at
745–46. Because we held that it was appropriate to rely on Justice Powell’s endorsement of the
Harvard plan, “[e]ven if this portion of Justice Powell’s opinion could be labeled dicta,” the
majority argues that we are bound by dicta under the Marks rule. Id. at 746 n.9. However, the
majority omits a key distinction: in Grutter, we held that “Justice Powell’s endorsement of the
Harvard plan carries considerable persuasive authority” because Bakke was the only Supreme
Court case to have addressed the relevant issue. Id. (emphasis added). Thus, we explained that
Justice Powell’s opinion “provide[d] a more appropriate basis for our opinion than any test we
might fashion.” Id.

         Grutter, therefore, merely stands for the unremarkable proposition that, in the absence of
controlling Supreme Court precedent, we may decide to adopt persuasive dicta from a Justice’s
concurrence.7 In Whole Woman’s Health, however, a majority opinion of the Supreme Court
provided the controlling test for determining whether a state law constitutes an undue burden on
abortion access. Thus, unlike in Grutter, there is no occasion for us to rely on Chief Justice
Roberts’ dicta in his June Medical Services concurrence as persuasive authority.8

         7Moreover,  the Supreme Court declined to endorse our Marks determination in Grutter and instead held
that “[w]e do not find it necessary to decide whether Justice Powell’s opinion is binding under Marks. It does not
seem ‘useful to pursue the Marks inquiry to the utmost logical possibility when it has so obviously baffled and
divided the lower courts that have considered it.”’ Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 U.S. 306, 325 (2003) (quoting Nichols v.
United States, 511 U.S. 738, 745–746 (1994)).
         8The   majority’s reliance on Marks’ holding that “[t]he view of the Memoirs plurality . . . constituted the
holding of the Court and provided the governing standards” to support its position is also unavailing. Marks, 430
U.S. at 193 (citing Memoirs v. Massachusetts, 383 U.S. 413 (1966)). In Memoirs, the three Justice plurality set forth
a test for determining whether obscenity was protected by the First Amendment. See id. at 418. The plurality then
explained that the “judgment [of the lower court] must be reversed” because “the court misinterpreted” the test. Id.
at 419–420. Therefore, the governing standard articulated by the plurality in Memoirs was part of the holding
because it was “necessary to the judgment,” see Wright, 939 F.3d at 701—the plurality only determined that the
court below erred because its holding was “founded on an erroneous interpretation” of that standard. Memoirs,
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In fact, just this term, a plurality of the Supreme Court—including one of the dissenting justices
in June Medical Services—rejected the notion that a single justice could by him or herself
overturn prior precedent.          Ramos, 140 S. Ct. at 1402.               That plurality cautioned against
“embrac[ing] a new and dubious proposition: that a single Justice writing only for himself has
the authority to bind this Court to propositions it has already rejected.” Id. “This is not the rule,”
the Court explained, “and for good reason—it would do more to destabilize than honor
precedent.” Id.

         Applying Chief Justice Roberts’ opinion in such a manner is especially egregious, given
that the Chief Justice himself disavowed the notion that he was making any decision as to the
continued validity of Whole Woman’s Health. June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2133 (Roberts,
C.J., concurring); see also Whole Woman’s Health v. Paxton, 972 F.3d 649, 652 (5th Cir. 2020)
(per curiam) (holding that June Medical Services “has not disturbed the undue-burden test, and
[Whole Woman’s Health] remains binding law. . . .”). The majority’s interpretation thus also
flouts the Supreme Court’s admonitions that lower courts should not interpret a Supreme Court
opinion as implicitly overturning its prior precedent.9 See, e.g., Agostini, 521 U.S. at 237. This
Court should not “readily . . . anticipate the overruling of [the Supreme Court’s] prior holdings.”
Romo v. Largen, 723 F.3d 670, 675 (6th Cir. 2013). That is, “[i]n the words of Learned Hand, it
is not ‘desirable for a lower court to embrace the exhilarating opportunity of anticipating a
doctrine which may be in the womb of time, but whose birth is distant.’”10 Id. (quoting Specter
383 U.S. at 420. By contrast, in June Medical Services, Chief Justice Roberts “decide[d]” whether the Louisiana
law at issue was unconstitutional based only on stare decisis and the factual similarities to Whole Woman’s Health;
thus, his personal opinion about the consistency between Casey and Whole Woman’s Health was merely dicta and is
not controlling under Marks. Wright, 939 F.3d at 701–02.
         9Justice   Kavanaugh’s suggestion that “five Members of the Court reject[ed] the Whole Woman’s Health
cost-benefit standard” in June Medical Services, 140 S. Ct. at 2182 (Kavanaugh, J., dissenting), and indeed the
dissenting opinions as a whole, do not matter in this analysis. As we have explained, “Marks instructs lower courts
to . . . ignore dissents.” Bormuth v. County of Jackson, 870 F.3d 494, 515 (6th Cir. 2017) (en banc) (quoting
Cundiff, 555 F.3d at 208). And the Supreme Court itself has clarified that even “[t]he views of five Justices that [a]
case should be reconsidered or overruled cannot be said to have effected a change” in its jurisprudence where the
question of whether a case should be overruled “was not before [it].” Agostini, 521 U.S. at 217.
         10The   majority contends that the plurality opinion in Casey, which limited Roe, demonstrates that a
controlling concurrence under Marks can reinterpret earlier Supreme Court precedent. However, in Casey, the three
Justice plurality explicitly explained that they were reinterpreting Roe and that their holding was based on their
reinterpretation of the undue burden standard. See Casey, 505 U.S. at 878–79 (“These principles control our
assessment of the Pennsylvania statute . . .”). Treating the Casey plurality’s reinterpretation of the undue burden
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Motor Serv. v. Walsh, 139 F.2d 809, 823 (2d Cir. 1943) (Hand, J., dissenting), vacated sub nom.
Specter Motor Serv. v. McLaughlin, 323 U.S. 101 (1944)).

         Thus, absent an express holding overruling Whole Woman’s Health, our obligation is to
continue to apply its balancing test, and the majority wrongly concludes otherwise. However,
with all this said, even if the Chief Justice’s dicta criticizing Whole Woman’s Health controls, a
correct application of the test he enunciated also demonstrates that this Court should affirm.
Thus, I will apply both tests, starting with the binding Whole Woman’s Health standard.

                                                           II.

         Whole Woman’s Health requires this Court to determine whether an abortion restriction
constitutes an undue burden by “consider[ing] the burdens a law imposes on abortion access
together with the benefits those laws confer.” 136 S. Ct. at 2309; accord June Med. Servs.,
140 S. Ct. at 2120 (plurality opinion). I begin, then, with the burdens imposed by Kentucky’s
requirement, as identified by the district court.

         A. Burdens

         The district court found that KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 “create[] an
impediment to the availability of abortions by virtually assuring that abortion facilities will not
operate in Kentucky.” EMW Women’s Surgical Ctr. v. Glisson, No. 17-189, 2018 WL 6444391,
at *19 (W.D. Ky. Sept. 28, 2018).                 Specifically, the court found that EMW and Planned
Parenthood cannot enter into transfer or transport agreements that would satisfy Kentucky’s
requirement, and therefore would be unable to maintain licenses to perform abortions in the
Commonwealth. Id. If EMW and Planned Parenthood are unable to perform abortions, the court
further concluded, this would effectively eliminate abortion in Kentucky, thus unduly burdening

standard as controlling, therefore, is correct under Marks. In June Medical Services, however, Chief Justice Roberts’
concurrence stated that he was not deciding “whether Whole Woman’s Health was right or wrong” and, as explained
above, his opinion about the holding of Whole Woman’s Health was dictum. 140 S. Ct. at 2133. Moreover, unlike
the opinion of the four Justice plurality in June Medical Services, in Casey, the two concurrences that combined
with the plurality to form a majority of the Court recognized the plurality opinion as the opinion of the Court. See
Casey, 505 U.S. at 912–13 (Stevens, J., concurring) (“I also accept what is implicit in the Court’s analysis . . .); id. at
922–23 (Blackmun, J., concurring) (“I do not underestimate the significance of today’s joint opinion.”). Therefore,
Casey does not support the majority’s conclusion that the dicta in the Chief Justice’s concurrence in June Medical
Services implicitly overruled Whole Woman’s Health.
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individuals’ right to access an abortion. Id. Each of the district court’s findings is well-
supported by the judicial record. Thus, each is a permissible view of the evidence, and none is
clearly erroneous.       Anderson, 470 U.S. at 574.            Those findings demonstrate that KRS
§ 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 impose weighty burdens on the right to abortion
access—indeed, burdens far weightier than even those imposed by the laws at issue in Whole
Woman’s Health and June Medical Services. I address each finding in turn.

        First, as the majority acknowledges, Defendants do not dispute that EMW and Planned
Parenthood cannot enter into transfer or transport agreements that would satisfy KRS
§ 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10. The record clearly supports this finding. EMW
attempted to enter into transfer agreements with Louisville hospitals, but none agreed. Planned
Parenthood made similar efforts, to no avail.

        Though they effectively concede this point, Defendants contest the district court’s
resulting conclusion that EMW and Planned Parenthood will be unable to offer abortions in
Kentucky without compliant transfer and transport agreements. They say that Plaintiffs have not
shown that the lack of such agreements would prevent them from offering abortions because
Plaintiffs could continually and indefinitely apply for ninety-day extensions of the time required
to comply with Kentucky’s transfer and transport agreement requirement, pursuant to 902 KAR
20:360 § 10(5).11 According to Defendants, EMW and Planned Parenthood’s failure to apply for
an extension under this provision severs the chain of causation linking KRS § 216B.0435 and
902 KAR 20:360 § 10 with their inability to perform abortions in Kentucky.

        Defendants’ argument is farcical, at best. For starters, a good-faith effort does not require
exhausting every possible avenue for relief. See, e.g., June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2122–23
(plurality opinion) (explaining that “some providers could have chosen in good faith not to apply
to every qualifying hospital for admitting privileges”). Nor does “[g]ood faith . . . require an
exercise in futility.” Id. at 2128; accord Safeco Ins. Co. of Am. v. City of White House, 36 F.3d
540, 548 (6th Cir. 1994). A ninety-day extension from the Inspector General has never in fact

        11It  is worth noting at the outset that Defendants’ argument in this regard is inconsistent with their
contentions regarding the benefits of KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10—namely, that transfer and
transport agreements are necessary in order to “optimize[] patient safety.” (See Defs.’ Br. at 32.)
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been an available avenue for relief in this case. The extension provision Defendants point to was
added to 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 in June 2017, three months after the initiation of this case. And
by that time, the district court had already enjoined the enforcement of both KRS § 216B.0435
and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10. Accordingly, the extension provision has never taken effect, and it
has at all times been impossible for the Inspector General to grant EMW, Planned Parenthood, or
any abortion facility a ninety-day extension pursuant to 902 KAR 20:360 § 10(5).           Thus,
Defendants’ causation argument is unpersuasive.

       But setting that aside, the district court appropriately rejected Defendants’ extension
argument for an altogether different reason.      It concluded that even if EMW and Planned
Parenthood could secure an extension for some period of time, “the uncertainty of a discretionary
waiver would make it exceedingly difficult for an abortion facility to survive” because it would
“not likely be able to hire and keep staff without knowing whether [it] could continue operating
beyond ninety days” and because it would not be able to secure necessary investments as “no
prudent organization would risk millions of dollars investing in such a facility whose temporary
license would be based on the administrative whim of the Inspector General.” EMW v. Glisson,
2018 WL 6444391, at *19. This finding was not clearly erroneous, as the evidence plausibly
suggests that EMW and Planned Parenthood would be forced to stop providing abortions if they
were compelled to operate on the basis of ninety-day extensions.

       First, the owner of EMW, Dr. Marshall, testified that it would be impossible for EMW to
continue to operate on ninety-day extensions because there would be “no security” in such a
situation. (Trial Tr., R. 112 at PageID #4121.) He explained that EMW “wouldn’t be able to
hire any staff” without being able to offer more prolonged job security. (Id.) Altogether, he
said, “the ramifications” of such a situation would be burdensome. (Id. at #4122.) Likewise,
Kimberly Greene, the Chair of Planned Parenthood’s Board of Directors, added that it would
also be “very difficult” for Planned Parenthood to operate on indefinite ninety-day extensions,
noting that it could not have raised adequate funds for its current facility without a more
prolonged guarantee of operation. (Trial Tr., R. 116 at PageID #4321.) She further explained
that it would not even be “responsible of us as a board to even try to [raise money]” if Planned
Parenthood could only operate on ninety-day extensions. (Id. at #4304.)
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       Casting aside this evidence, the majority concludes that the district court’s finding was
clearly erroneous. It does so only by distorting the mandatory clear error standard of review and
subjecting the evidence to something more stringent than even de novo review. The majority
stretches the district court’s words, denies the court’s ability to make even the most reasonable of
inferences, distorts witness testimony, and altogether rejects the preponderance of the evidence
standard.   The law is clear that this Court may not overturn a district court’s plausible
interpretation of the evidence, even if it is “convinced that had it been sitting as the trier of fact,
it would have weighed the evidence differently.” Anderson, 470 U.S. at 574. Today, the
majority nonetheless “take[s] it upon [itself] to weigh the trial evidence as if [it] were the first to
hear it,” thus vastly overstepping the bounds of this Court’s role. Cooper v. Harris, 137 S. Ct.
1455, 1478 (2017).

       Despite the ample evidence presented by Plaintiffs and credited by the district court, the
majority points to no contrary evidence suggesting that Plaintiffs could indeed continue to
operate on continuous, indefinite ninety-day extensions. They cannot, because Defendants have
apparently presented none and thus cannot claim that the preponderance of the evidence did not
support Plaintiffs’ contention. Instead, all the majority can do to achieve its desired end is
attempt to undermine the evidence presented by the Plaintiffs and relied upon by the district
court. After scouring that evidence thoroughly, it comes up with only a few weak and legally
unprecedented rationalizations for rejecting it. First, the majority suggests that Dr. Marshall’s
trial testimony was unreliable because it partially conflicted with his deposition testimony. But
this analysis is a perfect example of the sort of review this Court is not permitted to undertake.
As Judge Larsen herself has recognized, “‘[our] function is not to decide factual issues de novo.’
Instead, we owe great deference to the trial court’s factual determinations, particularly when they
rest on its assessment of the credibility of witnesses.” Slusher v. U.S. Postal Serv., 731 F. App’x
478, 481 (6th Cir. 2018) (quoting Anderson, 470 U.S. at 573); accord Cooper, 137 S. Ct. at 1474
(explaining that appellate courts must “give singular deference to a trial court’s judgments about
the credibility of witnesses”).

       The majority next places unjustifiable weight on Dr. Marshall’s use of the word “whim”
in order to conclude that his testimony “establishes only that EMW would be unable to retain
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staff if the Inspector General’s decision on whether to grant a waiver were arbitrary.” Ante at 31.
This blatantly and impermissibly reinterprets Dr. Marshall’s testimony as if the majority were
“the first to hear it.” Cooper, 137 S. Ct. at 1478. Dr. Marshall explained:

       Well, I think the problem [with relying on the extension provision] is that your
       license is at stake every 90 days, so you’re at the whim of being closed every 90
       days. There’s no security that you can even—you can’t offer a person a job and
       say, “Well, I have you a job for 90 days, but I don’t know if I’m going to have
       you a job past that.” We wouldn’t be able to hire any staff.

(Trial Tr., R. 112 at PageID #4121.) Read reasonably, Dr. Marshall’s testimony suggests simply
that an abortion facility would be unable to hire and retain staff when the facility’s continued
existence is in question every ninety days—no matter whose determinations that existence
depends upon or how that person may undertake that decision. Indeed, Dr. Marshall never once
references the Inspector General. Nor does he suggest that the Inspector General’s decision
would be arbitrary.     The issue with relying on the extension provision is, simply and
fundamentally, that it causes insecurity.

       The majority also resorts to implicitly treating Justice Alito’s dissenting opinion in June
Medical Services, rejected by both the plurality and the Chief Justice, as binding. According to
the majority, “Dr. Marshall’s subjective belief,” based on his decades of experience in the field,
that EMW’s physicians and staff would resign and that he would be unable to hire replacements,
was an insufficient basis for the district court to conclude that a good faith attempt to operate
based on applying for a waiver every ninety day would be futile. Ante at 32. The majority
provides a list of questions that, had it been the triers of fact, it would have asked Dr. Marshall,
and states that we cannot determine whether Dr. Marshall’s subjective belief was reasonable
because “[w]e have no way of knowing the answers to these questions from Dr. Marshall’s
testimony.” Ante at 32 & n.18.

       In June Medical Services, the Supreme Court reviewed the Fifth Circuit’s holding that the
district court’s finding that the challenged Louisiana law would cause an undue burden was
“clearly erroneous” because “there was clear evidence in the record before the district court that
various doctors failed to seek admitting privileges in good faith.” June Med. Servs. L.L.C. v.
Gee, 905 F.3d 787, 811 (5th Cir. 2018). The Supreme Court reversed. According to the
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plurality, which the majority concedes was endorsed by Chief Justice Roberts,12 “[t]he problem”
with the Fifth Circuit’s approach was “that the law requires appellate courts to review a trial
court’s findings under the deferential clear-error standard.” June Medical Servs., 140 S. Ct. at
2124 (plurality opinion).          It is worth reiterating for the majority’s benefit that, under this
standard, “a district court’s findings of fact, ‘whether based on oral or other evidence, must not
be set aside unless clearly erroneous, and the reviewing court must give due regard to the trial
court’s opportunity to judge the witnesses’ credibility.”’ Id. at 2121 (citing Fed. R. Civ. P.
52(a)(6)); see also Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2313 (explaining that a district court is
entitled to credit “direct testimony as well as plausible inferences to be drawn” from the record).
Therefore, “[a] finding that is ‘plausible’ in light of the full record—even if another is equally or
more so—must govern.” Id. (citing Cooper, 137 S. Ct. at 1465).

         The discussion in June Medical Services concerning whether Doe 5 acted in good faith
demonstrates the majority’s blatant disregard of our role in reviewing the district court’s finding.
“The challenged law would have [had] no effect on [Doe 5] if he could [have found] a covering
doctor in Baton Rouge, but he asked only one doctor. He did little to pursue applications at two
other hospitals because he was not optimistic about his chances and those hospitals required a
certain amount of unpaid service to the poor.” Id. at 2164 (Alito, J., dissenting). Unlike Dr.
Marshall, Doe 5 did not testify at trial. Nonetheless, based only on a declaration and a transcript
of a deposition, the district court held that he acted in good faith. Because Doe 5 “asked the
doctor most likely to respond affirmatively,” the plurality concluded that “[w]ith his own
experience and their existing relationship in mind, Doe 5 could have reasonably thought that, if
this doctor wouldn’t serve as his covering physician, no one would. And it was well within the
District Court’s discretion to credit that reading of the record.” Id. at 2126. In other words,
contrary to the majority’s position, Dr. Marshall’s reasonable subjective belief, based on his
extensive experience, that EMW would be unable to operate on the basis of quarterly waivers is

         12The    Chief Justice explained that the district court had to determine that the physicians attempted in good
faith, as opposed to making a “halfhearted attempt,” to comply with the challenged law and obtain admitting
privileges. June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2141 (Roberts, C.J., concurring). The majority concedes that Chief
Justice Roberts “endors[ed] the plurality’s discussion of the physicians’ efforts to obtain admitting privileges,” ante
at 31–32, because he concluded that “the District Court’s [determination that the physicians acted in good faith]
reveals no . . . clear error, for the reasons the plurality explains,” June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2141 (Roberts, C.J.,
concurring).
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enough to support the district court’s finding that operating under the waiver system was not
feasible.13

         The majority, however, prefers to adhere to Justice Alito’s dissenting opinion. In dissent,
Justice Alito stated that “the factual finding on which the plurality and [the Chief Justice] rely—
that the Louisiana law would drastically reduce access to abortion in the State—depends on the
District Court’s finding that the doctors in question exercised ‘good faith’ in their quest for
privileges, but that test is woefully deficient.” June Medical Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2159 (Alito, J.,
dissenting). According to Justice Alito, “the District Court’s ‘good faith’ test was not up to the
task,” because “‘good faith’ might easily mean only that a doctor lacked the subjective intent to
avoid getting privileges.” Id. at 2159–160 (Alito, J., dissenting) (citing Black’s Law Dictionary
836 (11th ed. 2019)). Likewise, Justice Alito’s dissent “maintain[ed] that the plaintiffs could
have introduced still more evidence to support the District Court’s determination.” June Medical
Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2128 (plurality opinion). But this view was also rejected by the plurality
because “[w]e have no license to reverse a trial court’s factual findings based on speculative
inferences from facts not in evidence.” Id. at 2125, 2128 (plurality opinion).

         Although the majority apparently believes that Justice Alito had the better of the
argument in June Medical Services, its desired end of restricting access to abortion does not
allow it to adopt his dissent as binding. The district court accepted Dr. Marshall as an expert in

         13The    majority believes that the brevity of Dr. Marshall’s testimony renders it insufficient to support the
district court’s finding when compared to the “many pages” devoted by the June Medical Services plurality to the
issue of whether the doctors in that case had made a good faith effort to obtain hospital admitting privileges. Ante at
39. But the majority ignores the differences between the two cases. The plurality had to examine the different
hospital policies and the individual circumstances of the doctors in June Medical Services to ascertain whether each
of the doctors tried in good faith to obtain admitting privileges—i.e., that Doe 5 needed to find a covering doctor in
the Baton Rouge area and that he asked the doctor most likely to serve as his covering doctor. We are faced with a
different inquiry. The question before us is whether Dr. Marshall’s subjective belief was reasonable that operating
on the uncertainty of quarterly waivers would be futile because he would be unable to hire staff. The district court
credited Dr. Marshall’s testimony, and the record evidence provides support for the district court’s finding that the
“uncertainty of a discretionary waiver would make it exceedingly difficult for an abortion facility to survive.” EMW
v. Glisson, 2018 WL 6444391, at *19. Put simply, unlike the determination of whether it was reasonable for a doctor
to determine that taking certain action in pursuit of admitting privileges was futile—which requires a fact intensive
inquiry—common sense suggests that, faced with the uncertainty inherent with operating under quarterly waivers, it
would be extremely difficult to hire and retain staff. As “[c]ourts are free to base their findings on commonsense
inferences drawn from the evidence,” we have no right to require more. Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2137.
The majority speculates that some physicians might have been willing to continue working at EMW (although,
presumably, they would eventually retire) but “[w]e have no license to reverse a trial court’s factual findings based
on speculative inferences from facts not in evidence.” June Medical Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2125 (plurality opinion).
 No. 18-6161        EMW Women’s Surgical Center, et al. v. Friedlander, et al.             Page 59

abortion care and, based on his extensive experience performing abortions in Louisville, credited
his reasonable testimony that relying on obtaining a waiver every ninety days to remain in
operation was not feasible. Based on the majority’s refusal to accept the reasonable belief of the
highly experienced Dr. Marshall, and its inexplicable demand “for still more evidence to support
the District Court’s determination,” it can only be assumed that the majority is relying on Justice
Alito’s dissenting opinion. June Medical Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2128 (plurality opinion). The law,
as stated in the controlling opinion, however, makes it clear that the district court was entitled to
make the plausible finding that hiring staff would be exceedingly difficult without any long-term
security, and the majority wholly exceeds our role in so questioning the district court’s
discretion. The majority’s form of scrutiny is simply and obviously not clear error review.

       The majority next discards Greene’s testimony, saying that the district court could not
rely upon it because Greene spoke only to whether Planned Parenthood would have been able to
raise money to build its Louisville facility, which Planned Parenthood acknowledges it has
already built, if it had been relying on ninety-day extensions. But this wrongly limits the district
court’s factfinding capacity by denying it permission to make reasonable inferences. “Courts are
free to base their findings on commonsense inferences drawn from the evidence.”               Whole
Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2317; see also id. at 2313 (stating that causation can be shown
through “direct testimony as well as plausible inferences” drawn from the evidence). The court
could appropriately and rightly infer that if Planned Parenthood would not have been able to
raise money to build a facility while operating on ninety-day extensions, it also would not be
able to raise funds for other necessary resources or operations in the future.

       The majority denies the district court’s right to make reasonable inferences not only in
this regard, but also by unnecessarily and inappropriately segregating the evidence offered by
EMW and Planned Parenthood. For instance, it notes that “Greene never testified that Planned
Parenthood would be unable to hire or retain staff if it had to rely on” extensions. Ante at 29–30.
But simple common sense suggests that if one abortion facility would be unable to hire on such a
basis, another would face the same challenge. Likewise, simple common sense suggests that if
one abortion facility would be unable to raise necessary funds in such a situation, so too would
another.
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         Really, the majority denies the district court the right to exercise its common sense at all.
Even if Plaintiffs had put forth no evidence pertaining to the extension provision’s effect on
hiring or fundraising, a rational person would recognize that such an insecure situation would
place a business’s future in jeopardy. I have no doubt that my colleagues would not be so eager
to accept a job that might disappear ninety days later. I also doubt whether either would invest in
a business that might shutter in that period. They ignore basic reason only because it is
necessary to reach their desired end—upholding a law restricting abortion.

         The majority further rejects the district court’s conclusion based on this evidence—that
“the uncertainty of a discretionary waiver would make it exceedingly difficult for an abortion
facility to survive”—only by homing in on and rigidly interpreting select portions of the court’s
findings. EMW v. Glisson, 2018 WL 6444391, at *19. It centers the district court’s subsequent
statement that it would be imprudent for an organization to invest in a facility “whose temporary
license would be based on the administrative whim of the Inspector General.” Id. “[D]iscretion
is not whim,” says the majority, and it goes on to state its view of the factors the Inspector
General must consider and the presumption that public officials act in good faith. Ante at 28
(quoting Martin v. Franklin Capital Corp., 546 U.S. 132, 139 (2005)). Of course, this again
places undue weight on the district court’s use of the word “whim” and altogether ignores the
actual import of the district court’s finding—that abortion providers cannot continue to operate
in a constant state of uncertainty about their future.

         In any event, the majority’s speculation about whether the Inspector General will indeed
act arbitrarily is simply irrelevant, and it fails to justify its desired outcome. It may be true that
the Inspector General will act in good faith in deciding whether to grant EMW and Planned
Parenthood extensions, although the record suggests that previous Inspectors General have not
demonstrated such good faith in their treatment of abortion facilities.14 It may even be true that

         14Infact, the district court had every reason to conclude that the Inspector General would not act in good
faith. For one, CHFS started subjecting Planned Parenthood and EMW to heightened scrutiny and stringent
agreement requirements long before regulations justifying such scrutiny were enacted. EMW v. Glisson, 2018 WL
6444391, at *17 (“Despite [Inspector General] Silverthorn’s criticism [of EMW’s agreement with Louisville
Hospital in March 2017], it does not appear that these points violated either the statute or regulation in existence at
the time.”). Moreover, the record suggests that CHFS itself told Planned Parenthood that it was required to begin
performing abortions before it was licensed in order to secure that license only to reverse course and sue Planned
Parenthood simply because it followed CHFS’s instruction.
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this Court must presume that the Inspector General will act in good faith.15 Regardless, the
Inspector General’s good faith in granting extensions does not mean that EMW or Planned
Parenthood can depend upon receiving such extensions consistently and indefinitely and does
nothing to eliminate the state of uncertainty that makes it impossible for facilities to continue to
operate.

        The majority cites the Eighth Circuit’s decision in Comprehensive Health of Planned
Parenthood Great Plains v. Hawley, 903 F.3d 750 (8th Cir. 2018), in an attempt to justify its
deficient reasoning. In that case, the court held that the plaintiffs’ constitutional challenge to a
Missouri law imposing certain design requirements on abortion facilities was “not currently fit
for judicial resolution” because the court “lack[ed] sufficient information” on how Missouri
would implement a provision under which it could waive those requirements for select facilities.
Id. at 757. However, not only is that decision not binding upon this Court; it is also inapposite.
For starters, the relevant provision there was one through which requirements could be altogether
waived for facilities, not simply postponed. A waiver may allow an abortion facility certainty in
its continued operation in a manner that Kentucky’s extension provision does not. If indeed
EMW and Planned Parenthood could secure a wholesale waiver of Kentucky’s transfer and
transport requirement—rather than mere ninety-day extensions—this would be a different case
entirely. Moreover, in Hawley, Missouri had already agreed to waive the relevant requirements
for two abortion facilities, id. at 756, lending weight to the idea that waivers would be granted
and, if they were, abortion facilities could continue to operate under them. Finally, and most
critically, the court’s decision in Hawley depended upon the fact that “withholding constitutional
judgment” would not impose any hardship because “[n]o facilities currently providing abortions
would be closed because of” the law’s requirements. Id. at 757. In this case, the evidence
suggests that not only will Kentucky abortion facilities be closed as a result of the majority’s
decision today—all of those facilities will be closed.

        15Again,      though, this analysis is questionable. The majority cites Memphis Planned Parenthood, Inc. v.
Sundquist, 175 F.3d 456 (6th Cir. 1999) for the proposition that “we must presume that the Inspector General
. . . will not act ‘simply to make it more difficult for [women] to obtain an abortion.” Ante at 29 (quoting Memphis
Planned Parenthood, 175 F.3d at 461). Nothing in Memphis Planned Parenthood, however, establishes such a
presumption. The full clause quoted by the majority states only “that a state may not erect procedural hurdles in the
path of a woman seeking an abortion simply to make it more difficult for her to obtain an abortion.” Memphis
Planned Parenthood, 175 F.3d at 461.
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        Thus, then, I turn to the district court’s next finding—that if EMW and Planned
Parenthood cannot perform abortions, this will effectively eliminate access to abortion in
Kentucky. The majority does not contest this point because it is uncontestable based on the
evidence.16 EMW performs an average of 3,000 abortions per year, which has historically
accounted for over 99% of abortions performed in the Commonwealth. The remaining fraction
of a percent was performed by some combination of hospitals, ambulatory surgical centers
(“ASCs”), and physicians’ offices. Even assuming that Planned Parenthood provides some
significant percentage of abortions performed in Kentucky now, whatever portion it performs
will also be eliminated upon its close. And there is no evidence to suggest that hospitals, ASCs,
and physicians’ offices provide any greater percentage of abortions now than they have
historically. Thus, the district court’s finding is a permissible view of the evidence, and is not
clearly erroneous.

        Defendants nonetheless argue that EMW and Planned Parenthood’s inability to perform
abortions will not effectively eliminate abortion in Kentucky because hospitals, ASCs, and
physicians’ offices could meet the entirety of the demand for abortions. Clear Supreme Court
precedent counters this argument. As the Supreme Court held in Whole Woman’s Health,
“common sense suggests that, more often than not, a physical facility that satisfies a certain
physical demand will not be able to meet five times that demand without expanding or otherwise
incurring significant costs.” 136 S. Ct. at 2317; accord June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2140
(Roberts, C.J., concurring) (affirming district court finding that reducing the number of clinics in
Louisiana from three to two or one would “[e]ven in the best case” cause “the demand for
services [to] vastly exceed the supply” (quoting June Med. Servs. v. Kliebert, 250 F. Supp. 3d 27,
87 (M.D. La. 2017))). In this case, in which hospitals, ASCs, and physicians’ offices would have
to be able to meet more than one hundred times their current demand, common sense does much
more than suggest that conclusion; it compels it. Moreover, the Court in Whole Woman’s Health
also held that “[h]ealthcare facilities and medical professionals are not fungible commodities.”

        16The   majority does, however, suggest that Plaintiffs must show that “both” EMW and Planned Parenthood
would close in order to show that Kentucky’s requirement unduly burdens the right to access abortion. Ante at 29,
34. This is simply and obviously wrong. Even the closure of just one of the only two facilities could unduly burden
the right to an abortion if the remaining facility was left unable to meet the demand for abortions. See Whole
Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2317–18; June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2140 (Roberts, C.J., concurring).
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136 S. Ct. at 2318.     Accordingly, even if hospitals, ASCs, and physicians’ offices could
somehow meet that demand, in “attempting to accommodate [such] sudden, vastly increased
demand,” they would likely “find that quality of care declines.” Id.

       Defendants also argue that the inability of EMW and Planned Parenthood to perform
abortions will not effectively eliminate abortion in the Commonwealth because both providers
could open new abortion facilities in Lexington, Kentucky, where they were previously able to
enter into transfer agreements with the University of Kentucky Hospital. But this argument is
also unpersuasive. EMW’s Dr. Marshall testified that opening a new facility in Lexington would
be “impossible” in part because EMW would have to “buy a new building, equip it, [and] find
new staff.” (Trial Tr., R. 112 at PageID #4090.) Similarly, Kimberly Greene of Planned
Parenthood testified that opening a new facility in Lexington would not be possible in part
because Planned Parenthood would have to “raise another [$3 or] $4 million” to fund it. (Trial
Tr., R. 116 at PageID #4315.) Additionally, Dr. Marshall also testified that CHFS in fact
rejected several versions of EMW’s transfer agreement with the University of Kentucky
Hospital, explaining that “every time [EMW] complied with what [CHFS] requested, then
[CHFS] changed their request.” (Trial Tr., R. 112 at PageID #4113.) In any event, even if EMW
and Planned Parenthood could feasibly relocate to Lexington, Defendants’ argument that they
must do so finds no support in Supreme Court precedent. In neither June Medical Services nor
Whole Woman’s Health did the Court ever consider the possibility that abortion facilities could
move to cities in which their physicians were able to obtain admitting privileges, let alone hold
that they were required to do so. See June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2122–28 (plurality opinion);
id. at 2139–41 (Roberts, C.J., concurring); Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2312–14.

       Finally, then, I must consider the district court’s ultimate conclusion—that the effective
elimination of abortion in Kentucky will place a substantial obstacle in the path of Kentucky
women’s right to abortion access.      EMW and Planned Parenthood are the only remaining
abortion facilities in Kentucky. In June Medical Services, the Supreme Court held that the
closure of one- or two-thirds of Louisiana’s abortion clinics unduly burdened individuals’ right
to access abortions, 140 S. Ct. at 2115, 2132 (plurality opinion); id. at 2134 (Roberts, C.J.,
concurring); in Whole Woman’s Health, it held the same regarding the closure of half of Texas’
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abortion facilities, 136 S. Ct. at 2313. It necessarily follows, both as a matter of legal reasoning
and as a matter of common sense, that the closure of Kentucky’s only remaining abortion
facilities would do so as well. The closures would lead to the same consequences in each
scenario, such as “fewer doctors, longer waiting times, . . . increased crowding . . . [and]
increased driving distances.” Id.; see also June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2129–30 (plurality
opinion); id. at 2140 (Roberts, C.J., concurring). The district court found that each of those
consequences would follow from the closure of EMW, with the addition that all women seeking
abortions would be forced to travel to another state.

        Defendants attempt to refute even this obvious conclusion by arguing that the wholesale
closure of Kentucky’s abortion providers would not unduly burden abortion access because
individuals can simply travel to another state to receive an abortion.           This argument is
particularly unpersuasive, and was recently unequivocally rejected in another case in which the
Commonwealth presented it:

        As the Supreme Court [has] explained . . . obligations are “imposed by the
        Constitution upon the States severally as governmental entities—each responsible
        for its own laws establishing the rights and duties of persons within its borders.”
        States may not shift the burden of their constitutional obligations to other states,
        “and no State can be excused from performance by what another State may do or
        fail to do.”

EMW v. Friedlander, 960 F.3d at 811 (quoting Missouri ex rel. Gaines v. Canada, 305 U.S. 337,
350 (1938)). It is as meritless in this case as it was there.

        B. Benefits

        I turn then to the district court’s findings as to the benefits of Kentucky’s transfer and
transport agreement requirement. It is true that Kentucky has “a legitimate interest in seeing to it
that abortion, like any other medical procedure, is performed under circumstances that [e]nsure
maximum safety for the patient.” Roe, 410 U.S. at 150. However, it does not follow that every
law or regulation Kentucky may pass in the name of that interest necessarily benefits it. The
district court found that “neither KRS [§] 216B.0435 nor 902 KAR 20:360 Section 10 advances
Kentucky’s interest in protecting women’s health and safety.” EMW v. Glisson, 2018 WL
6444391, at *24. A review of the evidence confirms that this finding is not clearly erroneous.
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Indeed, the district court relied on evidence nearly identical to that relied upon by the plurality in
June Medical Services and the majority in Whole Woman’s Health in upholding identical
findings: that the laws at issue did not advance states’ legitimate interest in protecting patient
health. June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2130–32 (plurality opinion); Whole Woman’s Health, 136
S. Ct. at 2311, 2315–16.

       Before delving into the record, I must address the majority’s criticism of the district
court’s factfinding with regard to this point. My colleagues say that the district court’s weighing
of the benefits “does not comport with the ‘traditional rule that state and federal legislatures
[have] wide discretion to pass legislation in areas where there is medical and scientific
uncertainty.’” Ante at 23 (alteration in original) (quotations omitted) (quoting June Med. Servs.,
140 S. Ct. at 2136 (Roberts, C.J., concurring)). Again, they wrongly rely upon Chief Justice
Roberts’ concurring opinion in June Medical Services, rather than the Supreme Court’s clear
rejection of this idea in Whole Woman’s Health: “The statement that legislatures, and not courts,
must resolve questions of medical uncertainty is . . . inconsistent with this Court’s case law.”
136 S. Ct. at 2310. Thus, the district court properly independently assessed the evidence in
considering the benefits of Kentucky’s transfer and transport agreement requirement.

       The findings that the district court made based on that evidence are not clearly erroneous.
First, the record supports the district court’s finding that the situations in which transfer and
transport agreements might be employed—serious abortion complications that occur while a
patient is at an abortion facility—are exceedingly rare. After hearing the evidence, the district
court concluded that abortions are fundamentally a safe procedure. That conclusion found strong
grounding in multiple studies cited by the court, as well as in testimony heard by the court. (See
Ushma D. Upadhyay, et al., Incidence of Emergency Department Visits and Complications After
Abortion, 125 Obstetrics & Gynecology 175, 175 (2015) [hereinafter “the Upadhyay Study”]
(indicating that the major complication rate for abortions was 0.23%); Nat’l Acads. Of Scis.,
Eng’g & Med., The Safety and Quality of Abortion Care in the United States 55, 60 (2018)
(concluding based on data from several studies that the complication rate for medication
abortions was “no more than a fraction of a percent” and that aspiration abortions also “rarely
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result in complications”); Trial Tr., R. 108 at PageID #3910 (Plaintiffs’ expert testifies that
“abortion is a very safe procedure,” in which “complications are rare and rarely serious”).)

       The district court further concluded that abortion complications generally arise, if at all,
“after the patient has returned home” from the abortion facility, “rendering meaningless any
transfer or transport agreement between the abortion [facility] and another entity.” EMW v.
Glisson, 2018 WL 6444391, at *13. As before, this conclusion was well-grounded in medical
studies and expert testimony. See id. (citing Trial Tr., R. 108 at PageID ##3893–94 (Plaintiffs’
expert testifies that in the rare situations in which complications arise, they usually arise after the
patient has returned home); Upadhyay Study at 175 (indicating that abortions require same-day
transfer in 0.03% of cases)). Finally, the record also supports the district court’s determination
that complications that do arise at the abortion facility are often minor complications that can be
treated at the facility itself. See id. at *12 (citing Trial Tr., R. 108 at PageID #3896 (Plaintiffs’
expert testifies that abortion complications “typically can be managed in an outpatient facility,
[such as] a physician’s office or a clinic”)).

       Thus, the record amply justifies the district court’s finding that the situations in which
transfer and transport agreements might be employed arise only rarely. But even if that were not
the case, the district court also did not err in finding that transfer and transport agreements do not
improve patient care as compared to the care provided in the absence of such agreements. An
abundance of evidence supports this point.          For instance, then-Inspector General Robert
Silverthorn testified at trial that he was not aware of even a single instance in which the absence
of a transfer or transport agreement caused a woman harm or caused her to receive less than the
standard of care due.     Additionally, several witnesses explained that transfer and transport
agreements do not increase the quality of care that patients receive as compared to the quality of
care they receive in the absence of such agreements. Even the text of 902 KAR 20:360 § 10
recognizes that the quality of care provided with transfer and transport agreements can also be
provided without them, requiring the Inspector General to consider whether the abortion facility
“can provide the same level of patient care and safety via alternative health services during any
extension period” before granting a waiver. 902 KAR 20:360 § 10(5)(b).
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       This conclusion is further supported by recent updates to Centers for Medicare and
Medicaid (“CMS”) regulations, which remove a requirement that ambulatory surgical centers
participating in Medicare have either doctors with admitting privileges on staff or a transfer
agreement with a hospital. 84 Fed. Reg. 51732, 51733 (Sept. 30, 2019) (modifying 42 C.F.R.
§ 416.41(b)). CMS explained that “removing this requirement [was] necessary and appropriate”
because of the burdens it imposed and because transfer agreements are not a “necessary or
effective method” to promote communication between ASCs and hospitals. Id. at 51738. CMS
also noted that federal law “has rendered these transfer [agreements] . . . obsolete and
unnecessary,” id. at 51790, by requiring that emergency medical centers participating in
Medicare treat all patients without regard to whether such an agreement is in place, 42 U.S.C.
§ 1395dd. See also June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2132 (plurality opinion) (citing updated
regulation for the proposition that “[u]nder modern procedures, emergency responders . . . take
patients to hospital emergency rooms without regard to prior agreements between particular
physicians and particular hospitals”).

       In light of this wealth of evidence, a straightforward application of the Supreme Court’s
decisions in June Medical Services and Whole Woman’s Health confirms that the district court’s
finding that KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 “provide no meaningful benefit to
women’s health” is not clearly erroneous. EMW v. Glisson, 2018 WL 6444391, at *19. In both
of these cases, the Supreme Court upheld the district court’s nearly identical finding—that the
laws at issue did not advance the State’s legitimate interest in protecting women’s health—based
on nearly identical evidence. June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2130–32 (plurality opinion); Whole
Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2311, 2315–16. In June Medical Services, the Court concluded
that “expert and lay testimony presented at trial” sufficiently supported the district court’s
findings that abortion complications are rare, usually not serious, and generally do not require
transfer to a hospital or emergency room and that no evidence suggests Louisiana’s law caused
better outcomes for patients. 140 S. Ct. at 2131–32 (plurality opinion). In Whole Woman’s
Health, the Court concluded that the district court’s findings were well-grounded in “peer-
reviewed studies” and “[e]xpert testimony” showing that “abortions taking place in an abortion
facility are safe,” that abortion complications typically arise—if at all—only days after the
abortion, that abortion “complications rarely require hospital admission, much less immediate
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transfer to a hospital from an outpatient clinic,” and that “the quality of care that a patient
receives [was] not affected by” the requirements at issue. 136 S. Ct. at 2311, 2315 (quotation
omitted). In both cases, the Court found it significant that the State, like Inspector General
Silverthorn here, could not identify a single instance in which its requirements “would have
helped even one woman obtain better treatment.” Id. at 2311–12; June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at
2132 (plurality opinion). Thus, the district court’s finding that KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR
20:360 § 10 “provide no meaningful benefit to women’s health” is, at a minimum, a permissible
view of the evidence, and is not clearly erroneous.

         C. Balancing

         As the previous analysis shows, the district court did not clearly err in finding either that
Kentucky’s transfer and transport agreement requirement imposes unbearable burdens by
“virtually assuring that abortion facilities will not operate in Kentucky” or that it provides “no
meaningful benefit to women’s health.” EMW v. Glisson, 2018 WL 6444391, at *19. All that is
left for this Court to do, under binding law, is to balance these burdens and benefits. Once again,
the Supreme Court’s decision in Whole Woman’s Health and the plurality’s opinion in June
Medical Services clearly dictate the outcome of that balancing. The “virtual absence of any
health benefit,” when balanced against a substantial obstacle in the path of an individual’s right
to abortion access, constitutes an undue burden on abortion access, in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution. Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2313;
accord June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2132 (plurality opinion). Accordingly, KRS § 216B.0435
and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 impose an undue burden on abortion access, in violation of the
Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Because Whole Woman’s Health
continues to bind this Court—even post-June Medical Services—this Court must affirm.17

         17The   parties discuss at length the binding or persuasive weight of this Court’s opinion in Women’s
Medical Professional Corp. v. Baird. In that case, this Court upheld Ohio’s requirement that abortion facilities enter
into transfer agreements with local hospitals. 438 F.3d at 609. Defendants go so far as to argue that Baird stands for
the proposition that no transfer agreement requirement can ever constitute an undue burden. However, Baird was
decided before Whole Woman’s Health clarified the balancing analysis that the undue burden test requires.
Accordingly, Baird made no mention of the benefits, or lack thereof, of transfer agreements to women’s health, and
instead focused solely on the burdens their requirement would impose. Indeed, Defendants concede this point.
Thus, Baird does not figure in this analysis.
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                                                    III.

        KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 are clearly unconstitutional under Whole
Woman’s Health. However, even if the majority is correct in interpreting dicta from Chief
Justice Roberts’ concurring opinion in June Medical Services as effectively overruling Whole
Woman’s Health, KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 also clearly constitute an undue
burden on abortion access under the standards set forth in that opinion. As previously discussed,
under the undue burden analysis as Chief Justice Roberts would reconceptualize it, even if a law
is “‘reasonably related’ to a legitimate state interest,” it is unconstitutional if it presents a
substantial obstacle to abortion access. June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2135 (Roberts, C.J.,
concurring) (quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 878). KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10
clearly fail this test.

        This Court need not consider whether Kentucky’s requirement is reasonably related to its
asserted interest in promoting women’s health in order to affirm. Indeed, while Chief Justice
Roberts discussed that standard, he did not apparently apply it in considering Louisiana’s
admitting privileges requirement. See 140 S. Ct. at 2135, 2138 (Roberts, C.J., concurring). As it
happens, I question whether KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 could meet this test.
The majority elaborates upon Chief Justice Roberts’ opinion, suggesting that under this test, a
law need not “‘be in every respect logically consistent with its aims’ to be reasonably related to a
legitimate government interest,” and that instead, it is enough that “there is a problem ‘at hand
for correction’ and ‘it might be thought that the particular legislative measure was a rational way
to correct it.’” Ante at 24 (quoting Williamson v. Lee Optical of Okla., Inc., 348 U.S. 483, 487–
88 (1955)). Even accepting for the sake of argument that this is a correct articulation of the
threshold test, the district court’s findings suggest that in this case there was no “evil at hand for
correction.” Williamson, 348 U.S. at 488. That is, “there was no significant health-related
problem that the new law helped to cure.” EMW v. Glisson, 2018 WL 6444391, at *25 (quoting
Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2311).                 As the district court concluded, “abortion
procedures performed in Kentucky are safe.” Id. at *24. “[T]here [was] no evidence in the
record that any complications from abortions performed in Kentucky have been treated
improperly in even one instance . . . .” Id. And there was no evidence that a lack of transfer or
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transport agreements ever resulted in improper care to any Kentucky women. Id. The majority
says that the fact that “it is sometimes necessary to transfer a patient from an abortion facility to
an emergency room because of an abortion-related complication” shows that there is a problem
to address. Ante at 25. But as discussed previously, given the district court’s findings that this
transfer can be accomplished without any agreement, this is not a problem requiring correction.

       Even if there had been a problem to solve, the district court’s analysis suggests that
Kentucky’s transfer and transport agreement requirement could not be thought “a rational way to
correct it.” Williamson, 348 U.S. at 488. “[A]ll reasonable inferences drawn from the facts”
presented to the court, it concluded, confirmed that “the transfer and transport agreements
required by Kentucky law provide virtually no health benefits to women.” EMW v. Glisson,
2018 WL 6444391, at *24. And while the majority asserts that a law may not need to be “in
every respect” logically consistent with its aims, it must be logically consistent with those aims
in some respect. See Williamson, 348 U.S. at 487–88. Here, the district court found that
Kentucky’s requirement “[is] not medically necessary and do[es] absolutely nothing to further
the health and safety of women seeking abortions in the Commonwealth of Kentucky.” EMW v.
Glisson, 2018 WL 6444391, at *25. As previously established, the district court did not err in so
finding.

       In any event, regardless of whether Kentucky’s transfer and transport agreement
requirement is reasonably related to a legitimate state interest, it undoubtedly presents a
substantial obstacle to abortion access. As Chief Justice Roberts explained in June Medical
Services, that a law imposes a substantial obstacle is sufficient to render it unconstitutional.
140 S. Ct. at 2139 (Roberts, C.J., concurring). Chief Justice Roberts observed that Louisiana’s
admitting privileges law “would restrict women’s access to abortion to the same degree as
Texas’s law” considered in Whole Woman’s Health, and therefore was also unconstitutional. Id.
at 2139. In Texas, the law caused twenty of the state’s forty facilities providing abortion to stop
doing so; in Louisiana, the law caused the number of abortion clinics to drop from three to one or
two and the number of physicians providing abortion to drop from five to one or two. Id. at
2140. As previously discussed, this led to “fewer doctors, longer waiting times, and increased
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crowding,” as well as substantial travel distances for individuals seeking an abortion. 18 Id.
(quoting Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2313). As my earlier analysis demonstrated, in
this case, the district court did not clearly err in concluding that Kentucky’s requirement would
cause both of the Commonwealth’s two abortion clinics to cease providing abortions. This is not
just a substantial percentage drop in the number of clinics providing abortion—as in Whole
Woman’s Health and June Medical Services—but a wholesale elimination of those clinics. This
would also undoubtedly lead to “fewer doctors, longer waiting times, and increased crowding” at
the few non-clinic facilities that do provide abortions.                 See id.     Accordingly, Kentucky’s
requirement presents a substantial obstacle to abortion access and the district court’s decision
finding it unconstitutional must also be affirmed under Chief Justice Roberts’ analysis.

        This Court’s holding in Baird does not affect this conclusion, even when applying this
analysis. As the Chief Justice explained, “the validity of . . . laws ‘depend[s] on numerous
factors that may differ from State to State,’” and “[w]hen it comes to the factual record, litigants
normally start the case on a clean slate.” Id. at 2141 n.6 (first quoting id. at 2157 (Alito, J.,
dissenting); and then quoting id. at 2178 (Gorsuch, J., dissenting)).                      Enforcement of the
requirement at issue in Baird would have left several abortion facilities open in Ohio, 438 F.3d at
605, whereas in this case, enforcement of KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 would
result in the closure of Kentucky’s only remaining abortion facilities. Thus, Baird is inapposite.

                                                        IV.

        Having concluded that the district court correctly held KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR
20:360 § 10 to be unconstitutional, one final issue should be considered. Plaintiffs sought—and
the district court granted—both facial and as-applied relief permanently enjoining the
enforcement of this transfer and transport agreement requirement against any abortion facility.

        18Notably,    the majority says that this Court’s precedent establishes that individuals face a substantial
obstacle when they are “deterred from procuring an abortion as surely as if the [government] has outlawed abortion
in all cases.” Ante at 17–18 (quoting Cincinnati Women’s Servs., Inc. v. Taft, 468 F.3d 361, 370 (6th Cir. 2006)
(alteration in original)). As the above analysis shows, even under Chief Justice Roberts’ interpretation, this is not
the only situation in which an individual faces a substantial obstacle: such an obstacle also exists when the number
of abortion providers drops substantially, such that demand for abortion exceeds supply, and individuals are forced
to withstand consequences of that drop even short of being absolutely prevented from receiving an abortion. See
June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2139–40 (Roberts, C.J., concurring).
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Defendants contend that facial relief was improper because the district court did not explicitly
find that this requirement unduly burdens abortion access in “a large fraction of cases in which
[the challenged law] is relevant.” Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2320 (emphasis omitted)
(quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 894–95).

       Defendants’ argument is unpersuasive. The district court found that EMW performed
“almost all” of the “roughly 2,800” abortions Kentucky patients received in the Commonwealth
in 2016. EMW v. Glisson, 2018 WL 6444391, at *25 (citing Trial Tr., R. 115 at PageID #4136
(Defendants’ witness discusses reports showing that EMW performed 2,800 abortions in
Kentucky in 2016, Planned Parenthood performed ten, a hospital performed three, and ASCs and
private physicians’ offices reported no abortions)); (see also Planned Parenthood Trial Ex.
PX0052, Doc. No. 55 at A66 (showing that EMW provided 2,833 out of 2,848 abortions—or
99.47%—received by Kentuckians in the Commonwealth in 2016)). And as discussed above,
the district court also found that that the enforcement of KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360
§ 10 will force EMW to close, such that it can no longer perform those abortions. EMW v.
Glisson, 2018 WL 6444391, at *25. Thus, enforcing this requirement will altogether eliminate
abortion access in upwards of 99% of the cases in which it is sought. This is by itself a large
fraction of cases.

       But in fact, the fraction of cases in which this restriction is “relevant” is still larger,
because “the relevant denominator is ‘those [women] for whom [the provision] is an actual rather
than an irrelevant restriction.’” Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2320 (alterations in
original) (quoting Casey, 505 U.S. at 895); accord June Med. Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2132–33
(plurality opinion). Because KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 do not restrict
abortions that occur at hospitals, ASCs, or physicians’ offices, the transfer and transport
agreement requirement is not relevant to them. And eliminating those abortions from the
calculation, the fraction would rise to 100%. This is undoubtedly a large fraction. See EMW v.
Friedlander, 960 F.3d at 809–10. Defendants counter that the individuals who would still be
able to obtain an abortion at hospitals, ASCs, and physicians’ offices in Kentucky or at abortion
facilities in other states should be excluded from this fraction, because they purportedly would
not encounter a substantial obstacle to abortion access. This is incorrect. “An obstacle is an
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obstacle, regardless of whether some might be [able] to overcome it.” Id. at 810. Even those
individuals who may be able to obtain an abortion must deal with consequences of Kentucky’s
requirement, including “fewer doctors, longer waiting times, . . . increased crowding . . . [and]
increased driving distances.” Whole Woman’s Health, 136 S. Ct. at 2313; accord June Med.
Servs., 140 S. Ct. at 2129–30 (plurality opinion); id. at 2140 (Roberts, C.J., concurring).

       Because KRS § 216B.0435 and 902 KAR 20:360 § 10 impose an undue burden on all
individuals seeking an abortion from an abortion facility in Kentucky, it is facially
unconstitutional. Accordingly, the district court rightly granted Plaintiffs both facial and as-
applied injunctive relief.

                                          CONCLUSION

       Kentucky’s requirement that abortion facilities enter into both a transfer agreement with a
Kentucky-licensed acute-care hospital and a transport agreement with a Kentucky-licensed
ambulance service constitutes an undue burden on abortion access in violation of the Fourteenth
Amendment to the United States Constitution under any possible applicable test. Thus, this
Court is compelled to affirm the district court’s decision. The majority’s decision to the contrary
flies in the face of both the law and the facts. I therefore dissent.