The North Dakota supreme court revived the state’s abortion ban on Friday, once again making it a felony for doctors to perform the procedure except in medical emergencies or in some cases of rape or incest.
The supreme court’s decision reverses a lower-court ruling from last fall that had frozen the ban, in part on the grounds that its exceptions were unconstitutionally vague. Although three of the court’s five justices agreed with the lower court, they fell short of the supermajority needed under state law to declare laws unconstitutional.
“This decision is a devastating loss for pregnant North Dakotans,” Meetra Mehdizadeh, senior attorney at the Center for Reproductive Rights, said in a statement. The center represented the plaintiffs in the case, which included multiple doctors and an abortion clinic that has moved out of North Dakota and into neighboring Minnesota.
Under the ban, abortion is only permitted if the pregnancy poses a serious physical health threat under “reasonable medical judgment” – a standard that, abortion rights advocates say, is too ambiguously worded to be workable in practice. Doctors across the country have said that they have struggled to interpret the exceptions outlined in abortion bans, while dozens of women have come forward to say that they were denied medically necessary abortions. Six women have reportedly died after being unable to access abortions.
“The vagueness in the law relates to when an abortion can be performed to preserve the life and health of the mother. After striking this invalid provision, the remaining portions of the law would be inoperable,” Justice Daniel Crothers wrote in the majority opinion, which supported overturning the ban but lacked the votes to come into force. “Just as a vague protest regulation could chill or deter constitutionally protected speech, a vague abortion regulation has the potential to restrict the provision of constitutionally protected medical care.”
North Dakota’s ban also allows abortions in cases of rape or incest if a woman has been pregnant for less than six weeks. Many women do not even realize they are pregnant by that point.
Doctors who violate the ban may be imprisoned for up to five years, face fines of $10,000 or both.
“As a majority of the court found, this cruel and confusing ban is incomprehensible to physicians,” Mehdizadeh continued. “The ban forces doctors to choose between providing care and going to prison.”
With the reinstatement of North Dakota’s ban, 13 states prohibit all or most abortions.