IE 11 is not supported. For an optimal experience visit our site on another browser.

Federal judge rules against abortion law

U.S. District Judge Richard C. Casey in Manhattan ruled Thursday that the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act is unconstitutional because it does not include a health exception
/ Source: The Associated Press

In a highly anticipated ruling, a federal judge found the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act unconstitutional Thursday because it does not include a health exception.

U.S. District Judge Richard C. Casey in Manhattan said the Supreme Court has made it clear that a law that prohibits the performance of a particular abortion procedure must include an exception to preserve a woman’s life and health.

Casey issued the ruling two months after hearing closing arguments in the case.

A San Francisco judge has already declared the 2003 law unconstitutional, and a judge in Lincoln, Neb., is still considering the question. The three judges suspended the ban while they held the trials.

The law is aimed at stopping a procedure, usually performed during the second trimester of pregnancy, in which a fetus is partly delivered, its skull punctured and its brain removed, often by suction.

Opponents, including Republicans in Congress who pushed for the ban, call the procedure “partial-birth abortion,” but abortion rights groups and many doctors refer to it as “intact dilation and evacuation.”