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A new ruling from the Arizona Supreme Court means that abortion will soon be mostly banned in Arizona as a result of a 19th century law. Here's what to know about the ruling, and what could happen ...
The Arizona Supreme Court says the state can enforce its long-dormant law criminalizing all abortions except when a woman's life is at stake. Abortion law: Arizona Supreme Court allows near-total ...
The Arizona Supreme Court on Tuesday upheld a law dating to 1864 that effectively bans abortions under most circumstances and punishes doctors who provide them. After the U.S. Supreme Court ...
The Arizona law threatens abortion providers with between two and five years in prison. It originated from a 1864 law and has no exception for victims of rape or incest.
The case, which is likely to see an appeal whichever way the ruling goes, gets to the issue of how restrictive abortion law should be in Arizona, a swing state that President Joe Biden carried by ...
Arizona's abortion law is no coincidence. Stripping women of the constitutional right they’ve enjoyed nationwide for more than a half a century has medical and political consequences.
Arizona Senate votes to repeal 1864 abortion law, leaving state with 15-week ban Abortion rights demonstrators protest last month against the 1864 law banning abortion. (Rebecca Noble / Getty Images) ...
Washington — Former President Donald Trump said Wednesday that he believes an Arizona law from 1864 that outlaws nearly all abortions goes too far, but continued to laud the Supreme Court ...
Arizona’s Supreme Court ruled on Tuesday that a near-total ban on abortions tied to a Civil War-era law in the state is enforceable. Under that 1864 law, anyone who performs an abortion or helps ...
Abortion providers could be sentenced to prison. The Arizona court ruling on Friday upholding the state's 1901 law banning abortions is rattling voters and elected officials. The law provides no ...
Arizona reinstates near-total abortion ban from 1864. Women must now fight for our lives. Arizonans must decide whether they want a law crafted during the Civil War era or live in the 21st century ...