Current:Home > FinanceState asks judge to pause ruling that struck down North Dakota’s abortion ban -Ascend Finance Compass
State asks judge to pause ruling that struck down North Dakota’s abortion ban
View
Date:2025-04-13 10:32:32
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — The state of North Dakota is asking a judge to pause his ruling from last week that struck down the state’s abortion ban until the state Supreme Court rules on a planned appeal.
The state’s motion to stay a pending appeal was filed Wednesday. State District Judge Bruce Romanick ruled last week that North Dakota’s abortion ban “is unconstitutionally void for vagueness,” and that pregnant women in the state have a fundamental right to abortion before viability under the state constitution.
Attorneys for the state said “a stay is warranted until a decision and mandate has been issued by the North Dakota Supreme Court from the appeal that the State will be promptly pursuing. Simply, this case presents serious, difficult and new legal issues.”
In 2022, the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, which established a constitutional right to an abortion. Soon afterward, the only abortion clinic in North Dakota moved from Fargo to neighboring Moorhead, Minnesota, and challenged North Dakota’s since-repealed trigger ban outlawing most abortions.
In 2023, North Dakota’s Republican-controlled Legislature revised the state’s abortion laws amid the ongoing lawsuit. The amended ban outlawed performance of all abortions as a felony crime but for procedures to prevent a pregnant woman’s death or a “serious health risk” to her, and in cases of rape or incest but only up to six weeks. The law took effect in April 2023.
The Red River Women’s Clinic, joined by several doctors, then challenged that law as unconstitutionally vague for doctors and its health exception as too narrow. In court in July, about a month before a scheduled trial, the state asked the judge to throw out the lawsuit, while the plaintiffs asked him to let the August trial proceed. He canceled the trial and later found the law unconstitutional, but has yet to issue a final judgment.
In an interview Tuesday, Center for Reproductive Rights Senior Counsel Marc Hearron said the plaintiffs would oppose any stay.
“Look, they don’t have to appeal, and they also don’t have to seek a stay because, like I said, this decision is not leading any time soon to clinics reopening across the state,” he said. “We’re talking about standard-of-care, necessary, time-sensitive health care, abortion care generally provided in hospitals or by maternal-fetal medicine specialists, and for the state to seek a stay or to appeal a ruling that allows those physicians just to practice medicine I think is shameful.”
Republican state Sen. Janne Myrdal, who introduced the 2023 bill, said she’s confident the state Supreme Court will overturn the judge’s ruling. She called the decision one of the poorest legal decisions she has read.
“I challenge anybody to go through his opinion and find anything but ‘personal opinions,’” she said Monday.
In his ruling, Romanick said, “The Court is left to craft findings and conclusions on an issue of vital public importance when the longstanding precedent on that issue no longer exists federally, and much of the North Dakota precedent on that issue relied on the federal precedent now upended — with relatively no idea how the appellate court in this state will address the issue.”
veryGood! (284)
Related
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- Adam Sandler Has Plenty of NSFW Jokes While Accepting People's Icon Award at 2024 People's Choice Awards
- Chris Brown says he was disinvited from NBA All-Star Celebrity Game due to controversies
- Virginia house explosion kills 1 firefighter, injures over a dozen other people
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- Arrests made after girl’s body found encased in concrete and boy’s remains in a suitcase
- How Ziggy Marley helped bring the authenticity to ‘Bob Marley: One Love’
- Flood watches issued as another round of wet winter storms hits California
- Mets have visions of grandeur, and a dynasty, with Juan Soto as major catalyst
- People's Choice Awards 2024 Winners: See the Complete List
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- Premier Lacrosse League Championship Series offers glimpse at Olympic lacrosse format
- What does 'oomf' mean? Add the indirect term to your digital vocab.
- Men's college basketball bubble winners and losers: TCU gets big win, Wake Forest falls short
- EU countries double down on a halt to Syrian asylum claims but will not yet send people back
- A Florida woman is missing in Spain after bizarre occurrences. Her loved ones want answers
- What happened to Floridalma Roque? She went to Guatemala for plastic surgery and never returned.
- 'Sounded like a bomb': Ann Arbor house explosion injures 1, blast plume seen for miles
Recommendation
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Hundreds of officers tried to protect the Super Bowl parade. Here's why it wasn't enough.
1 dead, 5 others injured in early morning shooting at Indianapolis Waffle House
Jaromir Jagr’s return to Pittsburgh ends with Penguins' jersey retirement — and catharsis
Former Danish minister for Greenland discusses Trump's push to acquire island
Former YouTube CEO Susan Wojcicki's Son Found Dead at 19 at UC Berkeley
Child wounded at Kansas City Chiefs parade shooting says incident has left him traumatized
Sacramento State's Matt Masciangelo was hit an astounding 8 times in 9 at-bats