Kentucky judge extends block on state abortion ban
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[July 23, 2022]
By Nate Raymond
(Reuters) -A Kentucky judge on Friday
extended a block on the state from enforcing a ban on abortions
triggered by the U.S. Supreme Court's decision last month to overturn
its 1973 ruling Roe v. Wade guaranteeing women nationally a right to
obtain abortions.
Jefferson County Circuit Judge Mitch Perry agreed with two abortion
clinics, including a Planned Parenthood affiliate, that the ban and an
separate law barring abortions after about six weeks of pregnancy likely
violated the state's constitution.
The Louisville judge had previously on June 30 temporarily blocked
enforcement of the laws while he considered whether to issue Friday's
injunction, which will allow abortion services to continue during the
duration of the lawsuit.
Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron, who is running for governor,
in a statement said he would appeal, saying Perry's "suggestion that
Kentucky’s constitution contains a right to abortion is not grounded in
the text and history of our state's governing document."
The ruling came amid a flurry of litigation by abortion clinics
nationally challenging bans and restrictions that began springing into
effect in mostly Republican-led states after the conservative-majority
U.S. Supreme Court's June 24 decision.
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The Supreme Court is seen in Washington, U.S., December 11, 2020.
REUTERS/Joshua Roberts/File Photo
About half of the states have or are expected to seek
to ban or curtail abortions. Those states include Kentucky, which
like 12 others adopted "trigger" laws banning or restricting
abortion upon Roe v. Wade ever being overturned.
But in a 20-page ruling, Perry said there was a substantial
likelihood that Kentucky's laws would violate women's rights to
privacy and self-determination under the state's constitution as
well as rights to equal protection and religious freedom.
He said that state's "trigger" ban was vague and likely an
unconstitutional delegation of legislative authority to the U.S.
Supreme Court itself.
"The plaintiffs have demonstrated at the very least a substantial
question as to the merits regarding the constitutionality of both
the trigger ban and the six week ban," Perry wrote.
Kentuckians will vote in November on a constitutional amendment
declaring nothing in the state constitution creates a right to
abortion.
(Reporting by Nate Raymond in Boston, Editing by Franklin Paul,
Diane Craft and Aurora Ellis)
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