US Arizona Supreme Court rules a near-total abortion ban from 1864 is enforceable

Arizona Supreme Court rules a near-total abortion ban from 1864 is enforceable




PHOENIX — The Arizona Supreme Court ruled Tuesday that a 160-year-old near-total abortion ban still on the books in the state is enforceable, a bombshell decision that adds the state to the growing lists of places where abortion care is effectively banned.

The ruling allows an 1864 law in Arizona to stand that made abortion a a felony punishable by two to five years in prison for anyone who performs or helps a woman obtain one.

The law — which was codified again in 1901, and once again in 1913, after Arizona became a state — included an exception to save the woman’s life.

That Civil War-era law — enacted a half-century before Arizona even gained statehood — was never repealed and an appellate court ruled last year that it could remain on the books as long as it was “harmonized” with the 2022 law, leading to substantial confusion in Arizona regarding exactly when during a pregnancy abortion was outlawed.

The decision — which could shutter abortion clinics in the state — effectively undoes a lower court’s ruling that stated that a more recent 15-week ban from March 2022 superseded the 1864 law.

In a 4-2 ruling, the court’s majority concluded that the 15-week ban “does not create a right to, or otherwise provide independent statutory authority for, an abortion that repeals or restricts” the Civil War-era ban “but rather is predicated entirely on the existence of a federal constitutional right to an abortion since disclaimed” by the 2022 Dobbs decision that overturned Roe v. Wade.

“Absent the federal constitutional abortion right, and because” the 2022 law does not independently authorize abortion, there is no provision in federal or state law prohibiting” the 1864 ban.

They added, that the ban “is now enforceable.”

Tuesday’s ruling marks the latest chapter in a decades-long saga of litigation in the battleground state over abortion rights.

Reproductive rights groups had sued to overturn the 19th century law in 1971.

But when the Roe decision came down in 1973, state court ruled against those groups and placed an injunction on the 1864 ban that remained in effect until the Dobbs decision.

In March 2022, Republican lawmakers in the state enacted the 15-week trigger ban, which, months later — after the Dobbs decision — snapped into effect. The law makes exceptions for medical emergencies but not for rape or incest.

Litigation resumed after that decision as lawmakers on both sides of the issues sought clarity on whether to enforce the 1864 near-total ban or the 2022 15-week ban.

A state appellate initially court ruled that both the 1864 and 2022 laws could eventually be “harmonized,” but also said that the 15-week ban superseded the near-total abortion ban and put on hold large parts of the older law.

But the issue could soon be in the hands of voters. Abortion rights groups in the state are likely to succeed in their goal of putting a proposed constitutional amendment on the November 2024 ballot that would create a “fundamental right” to receive abortion care up until fetal viability, or about the 24th week of pregnancy.

If voters approved the ballot measure, it would effectively undo the 1864 ban that now remains law in the state. it would bar the state from restricting abortion care in situations where the health or life of the pregnant person is at risk after the point of viability, according to the treating health care professional.

The ballot effort is one of at least 11 across the country that seek to put the issue directly in the hands of voters — a move that has the potential to significantly boost turnout for Democratic candidates emphasizing the issue.

In 2024, that could factor heavily into the outcome of both the presidential and U.S. Senate races in Arizona. President Joe Biden, whose campaign is leaning heavily into reproductive rights, won the state by just over 10,000 votes four years ago. And the Senate race features a tough battle to fill the seat held by the retiring independent Sen. Krysten Sinema, I-Ariz., between Democrat Ruben Gallego and Republican Kari Lake.

During her unsuccessful 2022 run for governor in Arizona, Lake said she supported the 1864 law, calling it “a great law that’s already on the books.” But Lake now says she opposes the 1864 law, as well as a federal abortion ban, while also acknowledging that her own views regarding state policy conflict with some voters’ preferences.

Gallego, who is backed by several reproductive rights groups, has said he supports the ballot measure. As a member of the U.S. House, he is among the co-sponsors of the Women’s Health Protection Act, which would create federal abortion protections.

The ruling Tuesday — the second in a swing state on the issue in as many weeks — further highlights the already prominent role abortion rights will play in Arizona and across the country.

Last week, the Florida Supreme Court upheld a 15-week ban on abortion in the state, which effectively meant that a six-week abortion ban, with exceptions for rape, incest and the life of the woman, that Gov. Ron DeSantis signed into law last year will take effect. The state's high court also allowed a proposed amendment that would enshrine abortion protections in the state constitution to appear on the November ballot.

Tuesday’s decision sent shockwaves through the reproductive rights community in Arizona and nationally, though the decision wasn’t entirely unexpected. All seven justices on the Arizona Supreme Court were appointed by Republican governors, and during opening arguments in December, they aggressively, but civilly, quizzed attorneys on both sides about the fact that the 15-week ban enacted last year did not feature any language making clear whether it was designed to repeal or replace the 1864 ban.

Only six justices participated in Tuesday’s decision, however, after Justice Bill Montgomery — who previously accused Planned Parenthood of practicing “generational genocide” — recused himself. (The court’s chief justice did not appoint another judge to take the spot, which is an option under Arizona law).

The abortion landscape in Arizona has been uniquely confusing since Roe v. Wade was overturned.

While the 1864 law had been on hold after the Supreme Court’s 1973 Roe decision, then-Arizona Attorney General Mark Brnovich, a Republican, successfully sued to have that injunction lifted following the overturning of Roe, putting the ban back into effect — though a higher court put that ruling on hold.

But after Democrat Kris Mayes succeeded Brnovich as attorney general, she announced that she would not enforce the 1864 ban.

That led to suits from anti-abortion groups seeking enforcement of the ban, which ultimately led to the case making its way up to the state Supreme Court.
 
Last edited:
Illegals don't have a monopoly on child rape and girls can get pregnant as soon as they start menstruating (which for some girls is even younger than 10).
Illegals are doing a majority of the child-rape to pregnancy cases, including the one you are most likely referencing that came out right after the SCOTUS decision on Roe v. Wade
 
Illegals are doing a majority of the child-rape to pregnancy cases, including the one you are most likely referencing that came out right after the SCOTUS decision on Roe v. Wade
I didn't know white youth pastors were illegal

Didn't know those Amish brothers that raped their little sister and got her pregnant some years back were illegal either.
 
It's incredible to me that people sat on their asses for 50 years post-Roe and never once passed any kind of legislation to address these old laws. Even when the decision happened it was noted there would be a chance it could be overturned in the future.
It was too useful a political football to make a decision on. Do you fucking know how much money the politicians made lol???
 
i think everyone except in this thread except android raptor should be raped by a pack of feral niggers
You are extremely angry over killing babies, why is killing babies so important to you that everyone against it should die? Or get raped by feral niggers - is that a fetish of yours? Like killing babies is?
 
It was too useful a political football to make a decision on. Do you fucking know how much money the politicians made lol???
Oh yeah, that was the big one during the 90s especially. Still blows my mind nobody even looked at a statute from almost 60 years before the territory became a state.
 
Oh yeah, that was the big one during the 90s especially. Still blows my mind nobody even looked at a statute from almost 60 years before the territory became a state.
Well when you assume the status quo is forever, and that's your logic, you wouldn't think to look because you're raking in donor money hand over fist
 
It's incredible to me that people sat on their asses for 50 years post-Roe and never once passed any kind of legislation to address these old laws
Abortion is a power generating idea, which democracy naturally selects for. Actually solving the abortion question shuts off the power generator. The left uses power to buy more power, not to solve problems.
Either way if you think little girls should get forced to give birth, you belong in the nearest woodchipper.
You're doing that disingenuous thing again.
 
Well when you assume the status quo is forever, and that's your logic, you wouldn't think to look because you're raking in donor money hand over fist
True, it was a lot easier getting money to fight pointless battles over things that didn't matter...until the decision was overturned.
 
i think all the users in this thread who are anti-abortion should be chained to a radiator in a house and said house be set on fire. I will be sitting out front watching with glee on my face listening to the screams of you pathetic beta males. i will smear myself in the blood of freshly aborted fetuses as a celebration of eradicating you parasites from Mother Earth.

Hail Gaia!!

since i can’t get the message across to you faggot kike mayomonkeys i wrote some haiku’s for you all

You are all retards
I worship Planned Parenthood
You should kill yourself.

You are all incels
I hope you all die of AIDS
You are all so fat

Fucking sausage fucks

Who love to enslave women
You are pathetic.

I love Democrats
I want them to kill babies
Death to the babies
Honest to Pete this kind of shit is what got me reconsidering my skeptical attitude and wondering if demons really do play a role in the awful things human beings do.

It's one thing to have a strong opinion. Lots of people have strong opinions about lots of things. But the way women- almost always women who are sexually deranged in some other way that means they are unlikely to experience an unplanned pregnancy themselves, ie lesbians, femcels, spinster weirdos nearing menopause- become bloodthirsty and deranged around this topic is something else entirely.

Look at this sheer emotional incontinence. And this poster isn't another Android Raptor. I've seen her post and behave quite normally in other threads. She's not typically pink triangle caliber. And yet...just look at this! She's probably posted four more deranged death rhapsodies while I was writing these few short lines.
 
Back