Current:Home > MarketsWhat defines a heartbeat? Judge hears arguments in South Carolina abortion case -Ascend Finance Compass
What defines a heartbeat? Judge hears arguments in South Carolina abortion case
View
Date:2025-04-11 20:57:41
COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina’s ban on abortions after roughly six weeks, before many women know they are pregnant, returned to court Thursday with Planned Parenthood and the state arguing over what could be two different ways to define a heartbeat in the law.
Even the state Supreme Court justices who upheld the new law in August noted there appeared to be two definitions of “fetal heartbeat” ending the window in which someone could seek an abortion. They wrote that question would be “for another day.”
That day arrived Thursday, as Circuit Judge Daniel Coble considered Planned Parenthood’s request to block the new law until courts could decide in their suit over the definitions and the state’s request to throw out the lawsuit. He said he will try to rule in a few weeks. No matter what Coble decides, his ruling will face months, if not years, of appeals.
Planned Parenthood said in court papers that in the first five months of the new law, three-quarters of women seeking abortions were turned away because their pregnancies were too far along, and 86% of those three-quarters could have had the procedure if the law allowed abortions up to nine weeks.
The state contends fetal heartbeat is the moment when an ultrasound detects cardiac activity, usually around six weeks after conception. But the law also mentions when the major parts of the heart come together and “repetitive rhythmic contraction” begins, which is often around nine weeks.
Lawyers for the state are turning Planned Parenthood’s argument on its head by arguing that the organization said over 300 times that the law bans abortions after six weeks, during a successful challenge that caused the General Assembly to alter the law and led to the second unsuccessful challenge. They said the group changed its thoughts only after losing the second time.
Grayson Lambert, a lawyer for South Carolina’s governor, said established law in the state has long said if there are disagreements with interpreting the law, judges need to give the most weight to the intent of lawmakers. All that was discussed during the General Assembly’s abortion debate, he said, was six weeks.
“The electrical impulses that make that familiar whoosh sound on the ultrasound — that’s what the General Assembly is talking about,” Lambert said.
But Planned Parenthood lawyer Kyla Eastling said criminal penalties meant the organization had to interpret the new law as conservatively as possible to protect doctors from criminal penalties.
“Doctors aren’t the ones making the law,” Eastling said. “They are just trying to understand it.”
South Carolina’s law is written slightly differently from any other state’s with a similarly timed ban, and minor differences in punctuation are what means the ban doesn’t kick in until the chambers and valves of the heart come together, Eastling argued.
“To put it simply, you can’t have a heartbeat before you have a heart,” Eastling said.
Since the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022, ending a nationwide right to abortion, most Republican-controlled states have started enforcing new bans or restrictions, and most Democrat-dominated ones have sought to protect abortion access.
Currently, 14 states are enforcing bans on abortion at all stages of pregnancy, with limited exceptions, and South Carolina and two others have bans that kick in at or about six weeks into pregnancy. This week, Arizona put into law a bill repealing a Civil War-era ban of nearly all abortions.
In the South Carolina courtroom Thursday was Taylor Shelton, the woman who filed the lawsuit along with Planned Parenthood. She said her gynecologist responded dismissively when she first approached the office about options to end her unplanned pregnancy in September. Facing as much as two years’ imprisonment for violating the ban, health care providers were treading carefully.
Shelton’s body had bent her intrauterine device, causing pain, and she was stunned to find out two days after missing her period, which she tracked regularly, that she was pregnant.
Because doctors in South Carolina were unsure how to define a heartbeat, she ended up in North Carolina, driving for hours to two appointments to get an abortion.
“The lack of clarity in this law leaves people like me scrambling to navigate a convoluted system that fails to prioritize our well-being and autonomy,” Shelton said, reading a statement outside of court as her hands slightly trembled.
Shelton said she had only about 12 days or so to meet the deadline in the South Carolina law, even though she almost immediately realized she might be pregnant. She also had the means and time to seek out help out of the state.
“Today I stand before you angry — angry at a system that seeks to control our bodies and dictate our choices,” Shelton said. “But I also stand determined, fueled by the conviction that no one should endure what I went through. We deserve better. We deserve clear, unequivocal laws.”
veryGood! (167)
Related
- Where will Elmo go? HBO moves away from 'Sesame Street'
- At a Trump rally, shocking images fill TV screens. Then reporters rush to find out what it means
- Legacy of USWNT '99ers is so much more than iconic World Cup title
- Biden tries to balance his condemnation of the attack on Trump with the ongoing 2024 campaign
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Where was Trump rally? Butler County, PA appearance was site of shooting Saturday
- Acclaimed video artist Bill Viola dies at 73, created landmark `Tristan und Isolde’ production
- Finnish lawmakers approve controversial law to turn away migrants at border with Russia
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- Carlos Alcaraz's Wimbledon rout of Novak Djokovic exposes tennis' talent gap at the top
Ranking
- Bill Belichick's salary at North Carolina: School releases football coach's contract details
- Barbora Krejčíková survives fierce comeback attempt to win 2024 Wimbledon championship
- Car runs off the road and into thermal geyser at Yellowstone National Park
- Fears grow about election deniers' influence after bizarre decision in Nevada race
- Charges tied to China weigh on GM in Q4, but profit and revenue top expectations
- Allyson Felix, Pampers to launch first-ever nursery at Paris Olympics
- Man accused of holding girlfriend captive in Minnesota college dorm room reaches plea deal
- Copa America final between Argentina and Colombia delayed after crowd issues
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Smoke in cabin after American Airlines flight lands in San Francisco; plane evacuated
'Flight 1989': Southwest Airlines adds US flights for fans to see Taylor Swift's Eras Tour
Delta apologizes after reacting to post calling employees' Palestinian flag pins Hamas badges
Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
SpaceX Falcon 9 rockets grounded pending FAA investigation into Starlink launch failure
Jacoby Jones, a star of Baltimore’s most recent Super Bowl title run, has died at age 40
Man accused of holding girlfriend captive in Minnesota college dorm room reaches plea deal