Missouri judge halts nearly all abortion restrictions | Live Action

A Missouri judge has sided with the abortion industry and issued a ruling overturning nearly all of the state's protections for preborn children. The ruling will allow distribution of the abortion pill for the first time since 2018.
Key Takeaways:Jackson County Circuit Judge Jerri Zhang overturned numerous Missouri laws protecting preborn children.
Overturned laws include restrictions on the abortion pill, requirements for abortion facilities and abortionists, and a waiting period along with informed-consent information.
Planned Parenthood facilities in the state have announced plans to begin abortion pill distribution this week.
According to The Hill, Planned Parenthood filed a lawsuit challenging 30 of the state's laws restricting abortion and protecting preborn children following the state's passage of Amendment 3 in 2024, which affirmed abortion as a constitutional "right."
On Thursday, Jackson County Circuit Judge Jerri Zhang sided with the abortion giant in halting those statutes.
Never miss the latest news in the fight for life.Your email addressAs a result of Zhang's ruling, chemical abortions via the abortion pill will be available in the state for the first time since 2018. Additional laws Zhang declared unconstitutional include:
A requirement that abortion facilities meet special licensing requirements
A 72-hour waiting period for abortion-minded women
Hospital admitting privileges for abortionists
A requirement that abortionists have a state-approved complication plan
A requirement that a physician is present when a woman takes the abortion pill
A requirement that women receive an educational pamphlet with informed-consent information, including information that says, “The life of each human being begins at conception. Abortion will terminate the life of a separate, unique, living human being.”
A requirement that the preborn child's remains be sent to a pathologist after a surgical abortion
The only laws Zhang upheld are:
Her ruling did acknowledge that she expects the abortion fight to continue to the state's Supreme Court.
“The court has given this matter much thought and has tried to decide this matter as expeditiously as possible so the parties may continue their litigation journey to the Missouri Supreme Court,” she wrote.
Representatives for Planned Parenthood said the organization will begin offering the abortion pill at facilities in Kansas City and St. Louis on Monday and in Columbia on Wednesday.
What We're HearingEmily Wales, president and CEO of Planned Parenthood Great Plains, celebrated that abortion will now be more widely available.
“This decision brings compassion and common sense back to Missouri health care,” she said in a statement. “For too long, politicians forced patients to leave the state for an evidence-based and trusted form of abortion care. Now, that care is coming home and with it, we move closer to fulfilling the promise of reproductive freedom Missourians demanded.”
Missouri Attorney General Catherine Hanaway lamented the ruling in a social media post on Thursday:
My heart is broken by today’s ruling. This is exactly the Pandora’s box we warned of, and the women of Missouri will pay the price. This radical decision gives abortion providers a free pass to police themselves. Women are no longer entitled to the same level of care in an Show more
The Bottom Line:My heart is broken by today’s ruling. This is exactly the Pandora’s box we warned of, and the women of Missouri will pay the price.
This radical decision gives abortion providers a free pass to police themselves.
Women are no longer entitled to the same level of care in an abortion clinic that they would receive in other healthcare settings: providers are no longer required to maintain complication plans or insurance, and the state cannot even conduct basic health and safety inspections to ensure patient safety.
Hanaway said her office will "expeditiously appeal this dangerous decision to the Missouri Supreme Court."
"I will never stop fighting for the safety of women and children," she said.
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