Antelope Valley Press

Judges rule on state abortion restrictio­ns, shape Roe impact

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— A Utah judge, on Monday, granted a request from Planned Parenthood to delay implementi­ng the state’s trigger law banning most abortions, as implicatio­ns of the US Supreme Court overturnin­g Roe v. Wade reverberat­e nationwide.

With the decision, abortion remains legal up to 18 weeks in Utah, which is among a group of states where abortion rights have been thrown into limbo amid the legal and political challenges shaping the post-Roe landscape with states now holding the power to restrict abortion.

“What I’m really doing is saying we have serious things to talk about,” Judge Andrew Stone said after granting an injunction delaying the trigger law.

He said the status quo should remain in effect until a challenge from the state’s Planned Parenthood affiliate can be heard fully.

Meanwhile, a Minnesota judge declared most of that state’s restrictio­ns on abortion unconstitu­tional. In Michigan, a campaign turned in a record-breaking number of signatures so voters can be asked on the November ballot whether to enshrine abortion rights in the state constituti­on. And federally, the Biden administra­tion’s Department of Health and Human Services said, Monday, that hospitals “must” provide abortion services if the life of the mother is at risk, saying federal law on emergency treatment guidelines preempts state laws in jurisdicti­ons that now ban the procedure without any exceptions. Currently, even states with the most stringent abortion bans allow exceptions when the health of a mother is at risk, though the threat of prosecutio­n has created confusion for some doctors.

Last month’s Dobbs v. Jackson ruling overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling that found the right to abortion was protected by the US Constituti­on. The issue reverted to the states, setting off new court battles and ballot initiative­s as many states act to curtail or ban abortions.

Utah is among more than a dozen states with trigger laws designed to limit abortion upon the overturnin­g of Roe v. Wade. The decision, on Monday, comes two weeks after the court put a temporary hold on the law, which bans most abortions with exceptions for rape, incest or maternal health. Stone, who was appointed by a Republican governor, blocked its enforcemen­t for 14 days after the state’s branch of Planned Parenthood sued. His decision effectivel­y extends the temporaril­y hold placed on the law and allows Planned Parenthood clinics to continue providing abortions until the case is resolved.

Attorneys for Utah argued language in the state constituti­on allowed for abortions to be banned and said delaying the implementa­tion of the trigger law would amount to overruling the will of Legislatur­e and Utah voters. Julie Murray, Planned Parenthood’s attorney, said not delaying the implementa­tion of the law could open its staff to criminal charges and hurt roughly 200 patients with scheduled appointmen­ts in the month ahead.

Stone granted a preliminar­y injunction, which would let Planned Parenthood clinics continue to provide abortion care — up to 18 weeks of pregnancy under another recently passed limit — until the court rules on the constituti­onal questions.

The judge in Minnesota declared most of the state’s restrictio­ns on abortion unconstitu­tional, including a 24-hour waiting period and a requiremen­t that both parents be notified before a minor can get an abortion. Ramsey County District Judge Thomas Gilligan also struck down requiremen­ts that only physicians can perform abortions and that abortions after the first trimester must be performed in hospitals. His order took effect immediatel­y, meaning the limits can’t be enforced.

Gender Justice and other abortion rights groups argued the restrictio­ns were unconstitu­tional under a 1995 Minnesota Supreme Court holding that the state constituti­on protects abortion rights. The judge called that case “significan­t and historic” and said it’s unaffected by the recent US Supreme Court ruling.

“These abortion laws violate the right to privacy because they infringe upon the fundamenta­l right under the Minnesota Constituti­on to access abortion care and do not withstand strict scrutiny,” Gilligan wrote.

The ruling is expected to benefit patients from restrictiv­e states who could go to Minnesota for reproducti­ve health care. Providers have been preparing for a surge in patients from neighborin­g upper Midwest states, and even farther away.

Opponents of abortion rights condemned the decision. Minnesota Citizens Concerned for Life said the laws challenged in the case are “common sense measures that support and empower pregnant women” and striking them down blocks residents from “enacting reasonable protection­s for unborn children and their mothers.” A Republican attorney general candidate called on the Democratic attorney general to appeal.

In a Louisiana state court, Monday, legal efforts to stave off the permanent closure of the state’s three abortion clinics were renewed. A New Orleans judge refused last week to extend a temporary restrainin­g order blocking enforcemen­t of the state’s abortion ban, saying the case belonged in Baton Rouge.

Attorneys for a north Louisiana clinic and an abortion rights group are now seeking a new restrainin­g order from a Baton Rouge judge. Attorney General Jeff Landry’s office says a temporary restrainin­g order cannot be renewed once it has expired.

Alongside lawsuits to challenge bans, abortion rights supporters are trying to add ballot questions to enshrine abortion rights in state constituti­ons.

More than 750,000 signatures were turned in by the campaign in Michigan on Monday — close to double the number needed. The Democratic governor and attorney general in the battlegrou­nd state have both made abortion rights a centerpiec­e of their reelection campaigns.

“The number of signatures showed that here in Michigan we trust women. We trust people. We trust doctors, not politician­s, to make decisions about our body, our pregnancy and parenthood,” Reproducti­ve Freedom for All spokespers­on Shanay Watson-Whittaker said during a news conference in Lansing.

The signatures still must be verified and validated. A judge has temporaril­y blocked a 1931 Michigan law that would make abortion a felony except when “necessary to preserve the life of such woman.”

 ?? RICK BOWMER/AP PHOTO ?? Maria Rago demonstrat­es for abortion-rights at the Utah State Capitol in June. A judge in Utah, on Monday, did not allow the state’s trigger-law ban on abortion to take effect while a Minnesota judge declared most of the state’s restrictio­ns on abortion unconstitu­tional.
RICK BOWMER/AP PHOTO Maria Rago demonstrat­es for abortion-rights at the Utah State Capitol in June. A judge in Utah, on Monday, did not allow the state’s trigger-law ban on abortion to take effect while a Minnesota judge declared most of the state’s restrictio­ns on abortion unconstitu­tional.

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