U.S. judge reinstates North Carolina ban on late-term abortions
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[August 18, 2022]
By Steve Gorman
(Reuters) -A federal judge on Wednesday
reinstated a decades-old North Carolina ban on abortions performed after
20 weeks of gestation, citing the U.S. Supreme Court's recent decision
allowing states to freely regulate procedures to terminate pregnancy.
Although so-called late-term procedures are rare, abortion rights
proponents said Wednesday's ruling chips away at reproductive healthcare
access in one of the last Southern states where abortion has remained
relatively unencumbered.
U.S. District Judge William Osteen in Greensboro lifted an injunction he
had imposed in May 2019 barring enforcement of the 20-week cutoff as a
violation of the Supreme Court's 1973 landmark Roe v. Wade opinion that
broadly legalized abortion nationally.
Under Roe, the high court established women's constitutional right to
terminate a pregnancy and ruled that states could only restrict
abortions once the fetus was potentially viable outside the womb -
generally starting at 24 to 28 weeks of gestation - unless a mother's
health was at risk.
Roe's precedent was overturned on June 24 by the Supreme Court's new
conservative majority in a Mississippi case titled Dobbs v. Jackson,
immediately clearing the way for all states to regulate abortion as they
see fit, regardless of fetal viability.
The North Carolina statute restored by Osteen outlaws abortions after 20
weeks of pregnancy, except for medical emergencies that endanger the
mother's life.
A full-term pregnancy typically runs to about 40 weeks, and abortions
after 20 weeks accounted for fewer than 1% of all abortions nationwide
in 2019, according to data published by the U.S. Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
Women seeking such abortions are typically those who had wanted to carry
their pregnancies to term but faced an unexpected late-stage medical
complication for themselves or their fetuses, said Molly River, a
spokesperson for the group Planned Parenthood Votes! South Atlantic.
In most cases, such a diagnosis would not be covered under North
Carolina's narrow exemption to its 20-week abortion limit, Rivera said.
Following the Dobbs ruling, Osteen had invited all parties involved in
litigation challenging the 20-week abortion limit, first enacted in
1973, to file court briefs arguing whether or not his injunction should
remain in force.
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Abortion rights supporters protest
outside the U.S. Supreme Court two days after the United States
Supreme Court ruled in the Dobbs v Women's Health Organization
abortion case, overturning the landmark Roe v Wade abortion
decision, in Washington, U.S., June 26, 2022. REUTERS/Elizabeth
Frantz
Ultimately siding with North Carolina's Republican legislative
leaders, Osteen wrote in a 14-page decision that Dobbs removed any
"constitutional right to a pre-viability abortion," thus erasing any
legal basis for his injunction.
He also dismissed arguments from local district attorneys who said
dissolving the injunction would have no practical effect because
they had no intention of enforcing the 20-week cutoff.
North Carolina, whose governor and attorney general are both
Democrats who support abortion access, has remained one of the
South's few remaining redoubts for largely unrestricted reproductive
health services after the Dobbs decision.
Several neighboring states have since outlawed abortions after six
weeks, when many pregnant women have often yet to even realize they
are expecting. As a result, the number of out-of-state abortion
patients treated at North Carolina's Planned Parenthood clinics
alone has more than tripled since June, Rivera said.
Wednesday's ruling is likely to further amplify abortion as a
campaign issue heading into November elections in which North
Carolina Republicans are aiming to pick up three seats in the
General Assembly and two in the state Senate to regain
super-majorities that can override vetoes of Governor Roy Cooper, a
Democrat.
"Reproductive rights are absolutely on the ballot," Rivera said.
Cooper on July 6 signed an executive order protecting abortion
access in his state and declaring it a safe haven for women seeking
reproductive services from other states, despite existing
restrictions such as a mandatory 72-hour waiting period.
In a related development on Wednesday, the highest state court in
South Carolina blocked enforcement of its six-week abortion cutoff
while the court weighs a challenge to that law by a Planned
Parenthood affiliate and other abortion providers.
(Reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Leslie Adler
and Stephen Coates)
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