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Sunday, October 13, 2024

'This affects reproductive health care across the board': Lawsuit challenges state's Heartbeat Law

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Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp | Facebook.com/GovKemp

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp | Facebook.com/GovKemp

A Fulton County judge is now hearing arguments in a lawsuit filed by a woman's reproductive health group that challenges the state's Heartbeat Law, according to a recent report by FOX 5 Atlanta.

The law, put into effect this summer, bans most abortions after a heartbeat is detected, usually around six weeks of pregnancy—before many women even know that they are pregnant.

Though the Heartbeat Law was initially signed by Gov. Brain Kemp (R-GA) in 2019, a series of lawsuits challenging its validity have caused the state to not enact it yet. When the U.S. Supreme Court made the decision to overturn the landmark Roe v. Wade abortion rights ruling earlier this summer, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 11th Circuit allowed the ban to take effect, FOX 5 reports.

"This affects reproductive health care across the board. It has overturned 50 years of practice," Andrea Young, executive director of ACLU of Georgia, told FOX 5 Atlanta.

The lawsuit—filed shortly after the new law took effect—asks a Fulton County judge to issue a temporary injunction to halt the state’s Heartbeat Law, the report states. It also argues that the current ban is a violation of Georgia’s Constitution, claiming it contains “strong privacy protections.”

"Georgia has a right to privacy that right to privacy extends to a person's body and health and that's what is being infringed on today," Susan Lambiase, a senior counsel for Planned Parenthood, told FOX 5 Atlanta.

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