Federal judge strikes down two abortion
restrictions in Alabama
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[October 27, 2017]
By Chris Kenning
(Reuters) - A U.S. judge on Thursday struck
down two abortion restrictions in Alabama that limited how close clinics
can be to public schools and banned a procedure used to terminate
pregnancies in the second trimester.
The decision is a blow to abortion opponents in Alabama, who have joined
conservatives in other states in enacting new laws that critics said
were chipping away at the U.S. Supreme Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade decision
legalizing abortion.
U.S. District Judge Myron Thompson in the Middle District of Alabama
found the laws unconstitutional and permanently enjoined the state from
enforcing the measures, which were signed into law in May 2016 by former
Alabama Governor Robert Bentley, a Republican.
The same court last year temporarily blocked both measures in a
preliminary injunction, which was under appeal to the 11th Circuit Court
of Appeals.
The school-proximity law banned clinics within 2,000 feet of a K-8
public school and was the only law of its kind in the United States.
Thompson said it would likely have forced the closing of clinics in
Huntsville and Tuscaloosa, where 72 percent of the state's abortions are
performed.
The "fetal-demise law," which effectively banned the most common method
of second-trimester abortion, known as dilation and evacuation, would
have prohibited abortions after 15 weeks, Thompson wrote.
"Because these laws clearly impose an impermissible undue burden on a
woman's ability to choose an abortion, they cannot stand," he wrote.
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The ACLU of Alabama had challenged the laws on behalf of two women's
health clinics in a state where abortion providers have faced what
Thompson's ruling called a "climate of hostility."
"Both would have had a devastating impact on the ability of women to
access abortion in Alabama," said Randall Marshall, executive
director of the ACLU of Alabama.
Alabama's Attorney General and Republican Governor Kay Ivey's office
did not respond to requests for comment.
U.S. state legislatures enacted 41 new abortion restrictions in the
first half of 2017, according to the Guttmacher Institute, a
reproductive health think tank that supports abortion rights.
Those laws have led to a spate of legal challenges in Alabama and
elsewhere. Last year, the U.S. Supreme Court struck down parts of a
Texas law that required clinics to meet hospital-like standards and
for clinic doctors to have admitting privileges at nearby hospitals.
(Reporting by Chris Kenning; editing by Patrick Enright and Grant
McCool)
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