Couple drops lawsuit that led to Alabama frozen embryo ruling
		
		 
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		 [December 18, 2024] 
		MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) — A judge last week dismissed a wrongful 
		death lawsuit that led the Alabama Supreme Court to rule that frozen 
		embryos are “extrauterine children,” a decision that drew national 
		attention and temporarily halted in vitro fertilization services in the 
		state. 
		 
		A couple, who filed a wrongful death lawsuit over the accidental 
		destruction of their last frozen embryo, asked to drop the suit. A judge 
		granted the request and dismissed the case Friday, according to state 
		court records. Two other couples had dropped similar lawsuits in August. 
		 
		The court order did not detail the reason for dropping the lawsuit or if 
		a settlement had been reached. Trip Smalley, a lawyer representing the 
		couple, did not immediately return an email and telephone message 
		seeking comment. 
		 
		The three couples had their embryos destroyed in 2020 when a hospital 
		patient wandered into the storage area. The patient opened the 
		container, picked up embryos and dropped them to the floor. 
		
		
		  
		
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			  The Alabama Supreme Court in 
			February ruled that the three couples could pursue wrongful death 
			claims for the destruction of the embryos. Justices, citing 
			anti-abortion language in the Alabama Constitution, ruled that an 
			1872 state law allowing parents to sue over the death of a minor 
			child, “applies to all unborn children, regardless of their 
			location.” 
			The decision became a flashpoint in the national 
			debate over abortion and raised liability concerns for fertility 
			clinics as they create, store and work with frozen embryos. Three 
			large IVF providers in Alabama paused services in the wake of the 
			ruling. Facing a public backlash to the decision, Alabama lawmakers 
			approved immunity legislation to shield doctors from lawsuits and 
			get IVF services restarted in the state. 
			 
			The couple, who had turned to IVF to have children, said in their 
			2021 lawsuit that the accident destroyed their final frozen embryo, 
			which was being stored at the facility. Even though they had chosen 
			not to implant it, “they considered this embryo a human being or 
			life,” their lawyer wrote in the lawsuit. 
			
			
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