Georgia’s abortion regulation defined – Axios Atlanta
If the landmark decision on reproductive rights does get struck down, states would decide whether to ban, limit or allow abortions.
- SisterSong v. Kemp, a lawsuit challenging Georgia’s law, is on hold in the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals pending the US Supreme Court’s decision.
What does the law do: HB 481, the 2019 law, bans abortions once cardiac activity has been detected in an embryo — generally at about six weeks.
- Abortion-rights advocates consider it an effective ban on the procedure, as some people do not know they’re pregnant at that point.
- The bill contains exceptions if a doctor deems a pregnancy “medically futile,” and for victims of rape and incest after they’ve filed police reports — only for fetuses younger than 20 weeks old.
- The law does not criminalize miscarriages. It exempts “the naturally occurring death of an unborn child, including a miscarriage or stillbirth” and the removal of an ectopic pregnancy from the definition of “abortion.”
What could be next: Anthony Michael Kreis, a constitutional law professor at Georgia State University, thinks it’s likely the appeals court would decide the law is constitutional, citing the Supreme Court ruling.
- “I think it goes into effect in a matter of hours,” Kreis tells Axios. “I don’t see the federal courts letting it linger terribly long.”
the law‘s nickname, the “fetal heartbeat bill,” is a misnomer. The American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists says at six weeks, a woman is carrying an embryo, not a fetus.
Plus: This law defines an embryo as a person as soon as cardiac activity is detected, which would give embryos new rights.
- Some have argued that could have far-reaching consequences, including a mother claiming child support for an embryo, or being scrutinized and penalized for certain behavior.
Of note: At the time of the bill’s passage, proponents and opponents expected the issue would end up in the Supreme Court in some fashion.
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