Current:Home > FinanceTexas judge grants abortion exemption to women with pregnancy complications; state AG's office to appeal ruling -Core Financial Strategies
Texas judge grants abortion exemption to women with pregnancy complications; state AG's office to appeal ruling
View
Date:2025-04-26 02:53:00
A judge in Texas ruled late Friday that women who experience pregnancy complications are exempt from the state's abortion bans after more than a dozen women and two doctors had sued to clarify the laws.
"Defendants are temporarily enjoined from enforcing Texas's abortion bans in connection with any abortion care provided by the Physician Plaintiffs and physicians throughout Texas to a pregnant person where, in a physician's good faith judgment and in consultation with the pregnant person, the pregnant person has an emergent medical condition requiring abortion care," Travis County Judge Jessica Mangrum wrote.
However, the state attorney general's office filed an "accelerated interlocutory appeal" late Friday to the Texas Supreme Court. In a news release Saturday, the state attorney general's office said its appeal puts a hold on Mangrum's ruling "pending a decision" by the state Supreme Court.
Thirteen women and two doctors filed a lawsuit earlier this year in Travis County, which includes Austin, to clarify the exemptions in Texas' abortion law. Mangrum's ruling comes two weeks after four of the plaintiffs testified about what happened after they were denied abortion care despite their fetuses suffering from serious complications with no chance of survival.
Magnum wrote that the plaintiffs faced "an imminent threat of irreparable harm under Texas's abortion bans. This injunction is necessary to preserve Plaintiffs' legal right to obtain or provide abortion care in Texas in connection with emergent medical conditions under the medical exception and the Texas Constitution."
The lawsuit, which was brought by the Center for Reproductive Rights, is believed to be the first to be brought by women who were denied abortions after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade last year.
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton's office, which defended the law, had argued the women lacked the jurisdiction to sue. The attorney general's office had asked the state to dismiss the lawsuit because "none of the patients' alleged injuries are traceable to defendants."
Paxton is currently suspended while he awaits a trial by the state Senate after he was impeached.
Samantha Casiano, who was forced to carry a pregnancy to term, even though her baby suffered from a condition doctors told her was 100% fatal, testified in July that her doctor told her that she did not have any options beyond continuing her pregnancy because of Texas' abortion laws.
"I felt like I was abandoned," she said. "I felt like I didn't know how to deal with the situation."
Casiano, who has four children, had to carry the baby to term, and her baby daughter died four hours after birth. In describing how she couldn't go to work because she couldn't bear the questions about her baby and visible pregnancy, Casiano became so emotional that she threw up in the courtroom. The court recessed immediately afterward.
The lawsuit had argued that the laws' vague wording made doctors unwilling to provide abortions despite the fetuses having no chance of survival.
Mangrum wrote in her ruling that "emergent medical conditions that a physician has determined, in their good faith judgment and in consultation with the patient, pose a risk to a patient's life and/or health (including their fertility) permit physicians to provide abortion care to pregnant persons in Texas under the medical exception to Texas's abortion bans."
Texas has some of the strictest abortion bans in the country. SB8 bans abortions in all cases after about six weeks of pregnancy "unless the mother 's life is in danger." House Bill 1280, a "trigger law," went into effect after Roe v. Wade was overturned last year, making it a felony for anyone to perform an abortion.
- In:
- Texas
- Abortion
veryGood! (27697)
Related
- 'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
- This Is Prince Louis' World and the Royals Are Just Living In It
- Dianna Agron Addresses Rumor She Was Barred From Cory Monteith's Glee Tribute Episode
- Schools are closed and games are postponed. Here's what's affected by the wildfire smoke – and when they may resume
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- How this Brazilian doc got nearly every person in her city to take a COVID vaccine
- Climate Change Is Transforming the Great Barrier Reef, Likely Forever
- Offset and Princesses Kulture and Kalea Have Daddy-Daughter Date at The Little Mermaid Premiere
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Today’s Climate: July 14, 2010
Ranking
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- How does air quality affect our health? Doctors explain the potential impacts
- Too Hot to Handle's Francesca Farago Flashes Her Massive 2-Stone Engagement Ring
- How Queen Charlotte’s Corey Mylchreest Prepared for Becoming the Next Bridgerton Heartthrob
- Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
- Researchers Find No Shortcuts for Spotting Wells That Leak the Most Methane
- What it's like being an abortion doula in a state with restrictive laws
- Endangered baby pygmy hippo finds new home at Pittsburgh Zoo
Recommendation
Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
8 Answers to the Judge’s Climate Change Questions in Cities vs. Fossil Fuels Case
Allergic To Cats? There's Hope Yet!
Dearest Readers, Let's Fact-Check Queen Charlotte: A Bridgerton Story, Shall We?
$73.5M beach replenishment project starts in January at Jersey Shore
Climate Activists Disrupt Gulf Oil and Gas Auction in New Orleans
Colonoscopies save lives. Doctors push back against European study that casts doubt
Tupac Shakur posthumously receives star on Hollywood Walk of Fame