Kane Republican

Judge temporaril­y blocks Kentucky’s near-total abortion ban

- By Bruce Schreiner and Amy Forliti Associated Press

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A judge in Kentucky temporaril­y blocked that state's near-total ban on abortions Thursday, clearing the way for the procedure to resume, after hundreds of patients had been turned away from scheduled appointmen­ts since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last week.

The ruling pauses Kentucky's so-called trigger law, which was designed to take effect after thenation's highest court ruled to end federal constituti­onal protection­s for abortions. The case reflects battles being waged in courts across the country after the Supreme Court left it up to the states to decide whether abortion is legal within their borders — forcing abortion rights groups to turn to state constituti­ons for protection.

In Florida, a judge is expected to rule Thursday on whether to block that state's 15-week abortion ban from taking effect after reproducti­ve rights groups argued the state constituti­on guarantees a right to the procedure. Without a ruling, that ban is scheduled to take effect Friday.

Some of the state disputes involve bans that have been on the books, unenforced, for generation­s. Some involve trigger laws like Kentucky's that were specifical­ly designed to take effect if Roe were to fall. Some entail prohibitio­ns on abortion that were held up pending the ruling on Roe and are now moving forward.

The flurry of court activity has caused confusion in states, and left patients and clinics scrambling.

In Arizona, the attorney general said Wednesday that a total abortion ban that has been on the books since before statehood can be enforced, though the governor disagrees and has said a new law that bans abortion after 15 weeks takes precedence. Abortion providers in that state immediatel­y stopped performing the procedure out of fear of prosecutio­n.

In Louisiana, that attorney general warned doctors against performing abortions, even while a ban there is temporaril­y blocked.

In Kentucky, Thursday's ruling allowed abortions to resume after they ended abruptly last week. Heather Gatnarek, an attorney for the American Civil Liberties Union of Kentucky, said nearly 200 women with scheduled appointmen­ts have been turned away from EMW Women's Surgical Center, one of the two Louisville abortion clinics, in recent days.

The ACLU and Planned Parenthood released a joint statement saying they were glad the “cruel abortion bans” were blocked, adding that since last week's ruling, “numerous Kentuckian­s have been forced to carry pregnancie­s against their will or flee their home state in search of essential care. Despite this victory, we know this fight is far from over.”

Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron,

a Republican running for governor, said Thursday's ruling had no basis in the state constituti­on and he intends to challenge it.

“We will do everything possible to continue defending this law and to ensure that unborn life is protected in the Commonweal­th,” he said in a statement.

The ruling comes in a lawsuit filed this week on behalf of abortion clinics, which said women were being “forced to remain pregnant against their will” in violation of the state's constituti­on. They had asked the judge to temporaril­y block the trigger law along with another Kentucky law that attempted to prevent abortions at six weeks of pregnancy.

Jefferson County Circuit Judge Mitch Perry also agreed to temporaril­y block the six-week ban. That measure was previously halted by a federal court.

Kentucky's trigger measure contains a narrow exception allowing a physician to perform a procedure necessary to prevent the death or permanent injury of a pregnant woman. It does not permit abortions in cases of rape or incest.

The request to continue abortion services in Kentucky — through interventi­on by state courts — could turn into a stopgap effort. Kentuckian­s will vote in November on a ballot initiative that, if ratified, would establish that no state constituti­onal right to abortion exists. Both sides of the abortion debate are busy organizing ahead of the election.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States