Supreme Court Upholds Ban on Late Term Abortion

Partial-Birth Abortions Banned by Supreme Court

By Allen Bell, published Apr 26, 2007
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On Wednesday April 18, 2007, The United States Supreme Court upheld a law that banned the type of late-term abortion. The ruling, which was divided 5 to 4, could prove to be a historic decision. This could be a signal that the Supreme Court's willingness to revisit the basic right to abortion established in the 1973 Roe v. Wade case.

Roe v. Wade was the Supreme Court case that resulted in a landmark judicial opinion concerning privacy and abortion in the United States. According to the decision, most laws against abortion violated a constitutional right to privacy under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. This states that the government must normally respect all of a person's legal right.

The exact point when a pregnancy becomes late-term is not clearly defined. Some believe it is after sixteen weeks of pregnancy. However, a late-term abortion often refers to an induced abortion procedure that occurs after 20th weeks of gestation.

Reasons commonly given for having late-term abortions include:
  • A deteriorating financial situation
  • A change in relationship with the father
  • A lack of awareness of the pregnancy until its later stages
  • Inability to have a abortion earlier in the pregnancy (possibly due to lack of funds, lack of transportation, or legal restriction)
  • Discovery of a fetal abnormality undetectable earlier in the pregnancy.
  • The pregnancy becomes a risk to the mothers life or health
As of April 2006, thirty-six states had bans against late-term abortions that were not facially unconstitutional (banning all abortions) or preceded by a court order. Thirteen of the states define viability as a certain number of weeks gestation, this is in contrast to the Supreme Court ruling that the attending physician be allowed to determine viability in each specific case. Ten states required a second physician to approve of the reason for the abortion, a practice specifically prohibited in court rulings.

Supreme Court Upholds Ban on Late Term Abortion

Late-term abortions banned by Supreme Court

Credit: http://www.openphoto.net/

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Takeaways
  • The exact point when a pregnancy becomes late-term is not clearly defined.
  • This is the first time the Supreme Court has heard a major abortion case in six years.
Did You Know?
As of April 2006, thirty-six states had bans against late-term abortions that were not facially unconstitutional (banning all abortions) or preceded by a court order.
Comments
Showing Comments 1 - 4 of 4
 
 
yo tiz site iz shit lame........i have 2 do thiz shit anyway

Posted on 03/31/2008 at 12:03:01 PM

 
I'm with Jeanne here. With all the things on the market to protect women and the morning after pill, I just don't get why these things are not used instead of the abortion card. Even then, I understand abortion up to a certain point, but partial birth abortion just seems wrong (unless there is a viable health risk for the woman).

Posted on 05/10/2007 at 7:05:00 AM

 
I think that women should have the choice to have an abortion, but before 10 weeks... Anything after that or months later is just disgusting..

Posted on 05/02/2007 at 5:05:00 PM

 
"We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal. That we have been endowed by our Creator with certain unalienable rights. That among these rights are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." - The Declaration of Independance

Posted on 04/29/2007 at 3:04:00 PM

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