Photo by Megan Jelinger/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images
An Ohio judge temporarily blocked a restrictive abortion measure from taking effect.
The law requiring aborted fetal remains to be cremated or buried was slated to take effect this week.
The judge said the state hadn t created the proper paperwork to execute the law.
A judge in Ohio temporarily blocked a law requiring that medical abortion providers either bury or cremate the fetal tissue extracted during the procedure just before it was set to take effect Tuesday.
Judge Alison Hatheway, a Democrat in Hamilton County, on Monday issued a preliminary injunction against the law just one day before it was scheduled to go into effect, the Cincinnati Enquirer reported.
Executive Director of Alternatives Pregnancy Center Janet Lyons points to a plastic replica of a fetus at twelve weeks which is used to show women who come into the center to find out if they are pregnant and what the stage of growth looks like, in Waterloo, Iowa, July 6, 2011. | REUTERS/Jessica Rinaldi
A judge in Ohio has temporarily blocked the enforcement of a state law requiring abortion clinics to give a proper burial or cremation to aborted fetal remains.
Hamilton County Common Pleas Judge Alison Hatheway issued the preliminary injunction on the Unborn Child Dignity Act on Monday, the day before the law was scheduled to take effect.
Planned Parenthood Sues Ohio Over Telemedicine Abortion Law Patch 1 hr ago
The national and state chapters of Planned Parenthood sued the state of Ohio Thursday over a law set to go into effect in mid-April that prohibits abortion services conducted through telemedicine.
The lawsuit regards Senate Bill 260, signed into law in January and banning an available telehealth option for what’s called a medication abortion. In a medication abortion, a two-pill regimen is given to a patient, as opposed to removing a fetus or fetal tissue surgically.
The telemedicine abortion law prohibits physicians from conducting abortions or providing abortion-inducing drugs to a pregnant person without the physical presence of a physician. Violating the law could result in a fourth-degree felony charge for the physician.
Planned Parenthood sues Ohio over telemedicine abortion law
The lawsuit regards Senate Bill 260, signed into law in January and banning an available telehealth option for what’s called a medication abortion.
Credit: Stock photo Author: Susan Tebben (Ohio Capital Journal) Published: 9:58 AM EDT April 5, 2021 Updated: 9:58 AM EDT April 5, 2021
COLUMBUS, Ohio The national and state chapters of Planned Parenthood sued the state of Ohio Thursday over a law set to go into effect in mid-April that prohibits abortion services conducted through telemedicine.
The lawsuit regards Senate Bill 260, signed into law in January and banning an available telehealth option for what’s called a medication abortion. In a medication abortion, a two-pill regimen is given to a patient, as opposed to removing a fetus or fetal tissue surgically.
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