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Judge Rules Portions Of Indiana Abortion Law Unconstitutional

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A federal judge Thursday ruled parts of Indiana’s new anti-abortion law unconstitutional, blocking them from taking effect.

INDIANAPOLIS -- A federal judge Thursday ruled parts of Indiana’s new anti-abortion law unconstitutional, blocking them from taking effect. 

Planned Parenthood and the ACLU sued over three parts of the new law, including its two most significant provisions. The first of those bans abortions performed solely because of a fetus’ potential disability, sex or race. The state argues that provision prevents discrimination. But federal judge Tanya Walton Pratt says it clearly violates a right first established by the Supreme Court in 1973 – a woman’s right to terminate a pregnancy before viability.

The judge also blocked language that would have required abortion providers to tell women about that selective abortion ban.

The other major provision requires medical facilities, including abortion clinics, to bury or cremate fetal remains. The state says that’s to ensure the dignity of human life. Pratt says that issue is harder to balance. But she says it will cause harm to Planned Parenthood in the form of increased costs that could be passed on to patients…and that the Supreme Court holds that a fetus is not a person.

Indiana University is suing over a separate part of the law unaffected by Thursday’s ruling. That issue involves buying, selling or receiving fetal tissue.

Brandon Smith has covered the Statehouse for Indiana Public Broadcasting for more than a decade, spanning three governors and a dozen legislative sessions. He's also the host of Indiana Week in Review, a weekly political and policy discussion program seen and heard across the state.
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