Planned Parenthood Association of Utah filed a lawsuit seeking to block Utah’s new law banning all elective abortions that went into effect late Friday.
The group said it also plans to ask the court for a preliminary as well as permanent court order against the state’s new law banning abortion at any point in pregnancy, according to the suit filed Saturday in Salt Lake City County’s Third Judicial District.
Utah’s trigger ban, passed by the state’s legislature in 2020, took effect late Friday after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade, forcing Planned Parenthood Association of Utah to immediately cease performing abortions, according to the complaint.
“Yesterday, the U.S, Supreme Court eliminated a federal constitutional right,” said Karrie Galloway, president and chief executive officer of Planned Parenthood Association of Utah. “In one terrible moment, Roe v. Wade was overturned, and Utahns’ power to control their own bodies, lives and personal medical decisions was threatened.”
Doctors in Utah who violate the state’s trigger ban now face a second-degree felony charge and prison terms of between one-to-15 years as well as criminal fines and loss of their professional license, the group says.
The plaintiffs allege that the abortion ban violates the Utah Constitution, and if emergency relief isn’t granted, at least 55 Utahans won’t be able to get the abortion care they need in the state this week.
About 2,800 Utahans each year will face carrying a pregnancy to term against their will, remain pregnant until they can afford to travel out of state to get an abortion or attempt to self-manage their abortions out of the medical system, according to Planned Parenthood.
The plaintiffs argue the state’s constitution protects pregnant Utahns’ rights to determine when and whether to have a family and determine what happens with their own bodies and lives.