12/16/04 - Statement by Nancy Northup, President, Center for Reproductive Rights
Center Joins Couples’ Legal Battle Against Costa Rica’s IVF Ban: Case Before Inter-American Commission Could Have Repercussions in U.S.
Center for Reproductive Rights Asks Tenth Circuit to Rehear Oklahoma Abortion Law Case
11/16/2004 - Discriminatory Oklahoma Law Put on Hold: State Agrees Not to Distribute "Choose Life" License Plate Proceeds
11/4/04 - More Harm than Good: Florida’s Constitutional Amendment
11/3/04 - Bush Administration's War on Women: Responding to the Challenge of Four More Years
10/25/04 - Fourth Circuit to Review Injunction on Virginia’s So-called "Partial Birth Infanticide" Act
10/13/04 - Florida Court Strikes Down Law Forcing Abortion Providers To Give Patients Harmful Information
10/5/04 - Abortion Rights in Trouble New Study Shows
10/1/04 - New Abortion Study Finds: If Roe were Overturned Today, Over 70 Million Women in More than Half the Country Could Lose Access to Abortion
9/23/04 - Report Exposes Failure of Law to Address Reproductive Health Problems in India
9/17/04 - For the First Time, Indiana Court of Appeals Recognizes the Rights to Abortion is Protected Under State Constitution
9/8/04 - Federal Abortion Ban Struck Down in Nebraska Case
9/2/04 - Judge in Nebraska to Rule on Final Federal Abortion Ban Trial on Wednesday, September 8
8/3/04 - Court Shuts Down Man Who Fakes Abortion Services in Louisiana
8/3/04 - Nepalese Legal Experts Seek to Remedy Reproductive Health Violations
8/2/04 - Man Who Fakes Abortion Services to Appear in Hearing Wednesday
7/26/04 - Judge Blocks Enforcement of Kansas "Kiss and Tell" Law
7/23/04 - Court Enjoins New Abortion Law, Protecting Rights of Nearly 400 Mississippi Women
7/8/04 - Court Rejects Use of European Human Rights Law to Establish Fetal Rights
7/2/04 - Center Temporarily Blocks Mississippi Abortion Law
6/18/04 - Center Wins Appeal Against Arizona Abortion Regulation and Day in Court
6/10/04 - Court Orders Preliminary Injunction Against Utah Abortion Ban
6/10/04 - In Vitro Twins Ruled as Deceased Father’s Legitimate Children
6/7/04 - Louisiana Man Sued for Faking Abortion Services
6/2/04 - Closing Arguments Presented in Nebraska Federal Abortion Ban Trial
6/2/04 - Statement of Nancy Northup, President, Center for Reproductive Rights on S. 851 "The Child Custody Protection Act"
6/1/04 - Reproductive Rights Groups Hail First Ruling to Permanently Block Federal Abortion Ban
5/27/04 - Closing Arguments Begin in Carhart v. Ashcroft Federal Abortion Ban Trial in Nebraska
5/13/04 - South Asia Report Draws Attention to Reproductive Rights Violations
5/7/04 - Statement on the FDA's Refusal to Approve Emergency Contraception
5/6/04 - State of Utah Agrees to Order Temporarily Blocking Abortion Ban
4/9/04 - Notable Quotes from Nebraska Federal Abortion Ban Trial
3/31/04 - Update: Carhart v. Ashcroft Federal Abortion Ban Trial in Nebraska
3/29/-4 - Carhart V. Ashcroft Federal Abortion Trial Begins In Nebraska
3/26/04 - Federal Abortion Trial to Begin in Nebraska
3/22/04 - Carhart v. Ashcroft Federal Abortion Ban Trial to Begin in Nebraska
2/2/04 - Virginia’s Abortion Ban Struck Down by Federal Court
1/22/04 - January 22nd Marks 31 Years of Legal Abortion in the United States
1/14/04 - Lawsuit Filed Challenging Oklahoma's "Choose Life" License Plate Legislation
1/9/04 - Florida Court Refuses to Appoint Guardian for a Fetus
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For the First Time, Indiana Court of Appeals Recognizes the Right to Abortion is Protected Under State Constitution
Court Clears Way for Challenge Against Indiana's "Two-Trip" Law
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Today, the Indiana Court of Appeals cleared the way for the Center for Reproductive Rights and Indiana Civil Liberties Union (ICLU) to further challenge Indiana's mandatory delay abortion law in trial court, by reversing a trial court's dismissal of an earlier challenge. The judges also recognized explicitly, for the first time, that the Indiana Constitution protects privacy "as a core constitutional value." The court noted that this right of privacy extends to women seeking an abortion.

The "two-trip law" requires women to receive state-mandated information in person 18 hours before an abortion. This means women must make two separate trips to their physician's office. In December 2003, the Center and ICLU appealed a trial court's decision to dismiss the case, arguing that the law violates a woman's basic right to an abortion, by placing burdensome obstacles in her path.

The appellate court held that the plaintiffs "should be allowed an opportunity to present evidence on the nature and severity of the burden imposed by the statute's waiting period and in-person counseling requirements."

In sending the case back to the trial court for presentation of more evidence, the court also noted, "Evidence presented in cases in which waiting periods are struck down reveals that there are myriad practical difficulties and health risks associated with mandatory delays; conversely, there appears to be scant evidence that an externally-imposed waiting period actually leads to further reflection or soul-searching on the part of the woman seeking to obtain an abortion."

The two-trip requirement is particularly burdensome for women seeking second-trimester abortions. There is only one clinic in Indiana, located in Indianapolis, which performs abortions after the first trimester. As a result, many women living outside of Indianapolis would have been forced to travel great distances, take off from work and make arrangements for their children - all on two separate occasions - in order to comply with the law.

"The court has now recognized that the Indiana Constitution protects women's right to an abortion. Now, there should be no question that the two-trip requirement is harmful to women and a violation of their rights," said Simon Heller, an attorney at the Center for Reproductive Rights. "Medical experts have testified that these laws serve no actual health purpose. They only serve to prevent women from obtaining abortions altogether."

"The Court has explicitly recognized what was previously implicit in Indiana decisions, that the right to privacy is a core constitutional value and that it extends to all citizens, including women seeking an abortion," said Ken Falk, attorney at the Indiana Civil Liberties Union, who argued the case before the appellate court.

The law was passed in 1995. The Center for Reproductive Rights filed suit against the law that same year through the federal court system. In 2002, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit found that the law did not place an undue burden on a woman's right to choose, reversing a U.S. District Court ruling. Shortly thereafter, the Supreme Court refused to hear the case. Last year, the Center and the ICLU filed a suit challenging the law in state court on the grounds that it violates the Indiana state constitution.

Mandatory delay laws are part of a trend by the anti-choice movement to further limit women's access to abortion and strong-arm women into carrying their pregnancies to term.

Plaintiffs in this case include Clinic for Women, Inc., Women's Medical Professional Corporation - both in Indianapolis; the Fort Wayne Women's Health Organization, Inc.; Women's Pavilion, Inc. in South Bend, Planned Parenthood of Central and Southern Indiana, Inc.; Friendship Family Planning Clinic of Indiana in Gary, and Dr. Ulrich G. Klopfer. They are represented by Simon Heller and Janet Crepps from the Center for Reproductive Rights, and Ken Falk of the Indiana Civil Liberties Union.