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		State abortion bans blocked by Florida, Kentucky judges
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		 [July 01, 2022] 
		By Nate Raymond and Joseph Ax 
 (Reuters) -Judges in Florida and Kentucky 
		on Thursday moved to block those states from enforcing bans or 
		restrictions on abortion after the U.S. Supreme Court last week 
		overturned the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision that had established a 
		nationwide right to it.
 
 In Tallahassee, Florida, Circuit Court Judge John Cooper said he would 
		grant a petition from abortion rights groups to temporarily put on hold 
		a state law that would bar abortions after the 15th week of pregnancy.
 
 In Kentucky, Jefferson County Circuit Judge Mitch Perry issued a 
		temporary restraining order preventing the state from enforcing a ban 
		passed in 2019 and triggered by the Supreme Court's decision.
 
 The Florida and Kentucky decisions came amid a flurry of litigation by 
		abortion rights groups seeking to preserve people's ability to terminate 
		pregnancies, after Friday's historic ruling by the conservative-majority 
		Supreme Court.
 
 That ruling gave states the authority to deny, limit or allow abortions. 
		On Thursday, the Supreme Court threw out lower federal court rulings 
		that had invalidated abortion limits in Arizona, Arkansas and Indiana 
		based on Roe.
 
 
		
		 
		Bans and restrictions are now taking effect or are poised to do so in 22 
		states, including 13 like Kentucky with so-called "trigger" laws 
		designed to take effect if Roe v. Wade was overturned, according to the 
		Guttmacher Institute, an abortion rights advocacy research group.
 
 State courts in Texas, Louisiana and Utah have also temporarily blocked 
		bans in those states since last week, and abortion providers are seeking 
		similar relief in states including Idaho, Ohio, Mississippi and West 
		Virginia.
 
 The injunctions have bought clinics time to continue providing services.
 
 "Delay is still saving lives," said Seema Mohapatra, a professor of 
		health law at Southern Methodist University in Dallas. "The longer safe 
		and accessible abortion is available in those states, the more pregnant 
		people seeking abortion care will be helped."
 
 In the long term, however, abortion rights supporters face tough odds. 
		The highest courts in many of those states are dominated by conservative 
		or Republican justices who may be more sympathetic to restrictions on 
		abortion access.
 
 Texas Attorney Ken Paxton, a staunch conservative, on Thursday asked the 
		state's all Republican-appointed Supreme Court to cancel a judge's 
		Tuesday order that blocked enforcement of the state's pre-Roe criminal 
		prohibitions on abortion.
 
 FLORIDA'S BAN TO BE PUT ON HOLD
 
 Florida's ban of abortions after 15 weeks, which Republican Governor Ron 
		DeSantis signed into law in April, had been set to take effect on 
		Friday. The law mirrors the Mississippi law at the heart of the Supreme 
		Court case that reversed Roe.
 
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			Nuns pray outside of a Planned Parenthood location in Columbus, 
			Ohio, U.S., November 12, 2021 as the state considers restrictive 
			abortion laws. REUTERS/Gaelen Morse 
            
			
			
			 In siding with Planned Parenthood 
			affiliates and other abortion providers in Florida, Circuit Court 
			Judge John Cooper concluded the law violates the state 
			constitution's privacy rights guarantees, which the state's high 
			court has said covers the right to abortion. State law had previously restricted abortions after 
			24 weeks.
 Cooper said his decision would only take effect after he signs a 
			written order, which is not likely until Tuesday or later.
 
 A spokesperson for Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody, a 
			Republican, said the state will appeal. The case could eventually 
			reach Florida's high court, whose composition has changed and now 
			includes all Republican-appointed justices.
 Only about a fifth of state Supreme Courts have 
			recognized a right to abortion independent of Roe v. Wade. The Iowa 
			Supreme Court earlier this month reversed itself by finding the 
			state's constitution does not include a "fundamental right" to 
			abortion.
 In Kentucky, Jefferson County Circuit Judge Mitch Perry sided with 
			two abortion clinics, including a Planned Parenthood affiliate. The 
			clinics had challenged a trigger ban and another law that bars 
			abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, before some people know they 
			are pregnant.
 
 Abortion services had halted in Kentucky since Friday, when the 
			Supreme Court cleared the way for states to enact new bans. 
			Kentucky's ban permits abortion only to protect people from death or 
			serious injury.
 
 "We're glad the court recognized the devastation happening in 
			Kentucky and decided to block the commonwealth's cruel abortion 
			bans," Planned Parenthood said in a statement.
 
			 The decision is temporary, though, and a further hearing is 
			scheduled on Wednesday on the clinics' request for an injunction to 
			block enforcement of the laws. 
 Kentucky Attorney General Daniel Cameron, a Republican, promptly 
			asked an appeals court to put Perry's order on hold, saying the 
			judge had no basis under Kentucky's constitution to allow clinics to 
			resume performing abortions.
 
 "We cannot let the same mistake that happened in Roe v. Wade, nearly 
			50 years ago, to be made again in Kentucky," he said.
 
 (Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston and Joseph Ax in Princeton, New 
			Jersey; editing by Colleen Jenkins, Jonathan Oatis and Josie Kao)
 
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