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    Medicaid, housing, energy, I-69 are some of the topics discussed Monday at chamber’s Legislative Preview

    Mills hopes SB 9 spurs construction across state

    Kentucky community colleges working to meet students’ ‘severe’ need for mental health support

    KY Supreme Court unanimously strikes down Republican lawmakers’ 2022 charter school law

    BRIEFS: Lotter volunteer of the year; Rotary scholarships; DAR awards; Sentencings

    Terror on the Trail can remain open if the haunted trail meets certain conditions

    Terror on the Trail can remain open if the haunted trail meets certain conditions

    Kentucky House committee approves changes to assessments that measure student growth

    Crafting HB 500 is just beginning, state legislators say

    Candidate intro: Shelia Patterson, running for Henderson County Coroner

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    Trending Tags

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    Blazing-fast broadband services now available to the majority of homes in the city and county

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

    HMP&L signs initial agreement to build a battery energy storage system on South Green Street

    In some parts of the U.S., the grid of the future might be closer than you think

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    Big February releases come mid-month

    Big February releases come mid-month

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    Bicultural wedding celebrations span continents

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Judge rules against Jewish women challenging Kentucky’s abortion ban

Sarah Ladd by Sarah Ladd
June 29, 2024
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Courtesy of Kentucky Lantern

Jefferson Circuit Court Judge Brian Edwards has ruled against a motion made by three Jewish women seeking to challenge Kentucky’s abortion ban on religious grounds. 

In a 9-page Friday night opinion, Edwards wrote the women do not have standing and that their concerns are “hypothetical.”

Citing several precedential cases, the judge said the issue was not yet a concrete problem and lacked “ripeness.” 

“Individuals cannot manufacture standing merely by inflicting harm on themselves based on their fears of hypothetical future harm that is not certainly impending,” Edwards wrote.

Therefore, he wrote, “plaintiffs have failed to demonstrate the existence of a justiciable controversy as defined by generations of case law.” 

This comes more than a month after the judge heard oral arguments, which heavily focused on in vitro fertilization and the extent to which it overlaps with the state’s abortion ban. 

One of the plaintiffs has nine frozen embryos that she’s paying thousands of dollars annually to preserve, just as Kentucky lawmakers are split on what protections exist for IVF in the state. 

The women’s lawyers—Benjamin Potash and Aaron Kemper—argued that by banning most abortions, Kentucky had imposed and codified a religious viewpoint that conflicts with the Jewish belief that birth, not conception, is the beginning of life. 

They also said their plaintiffs—Lisa Sobel, Jessica Kalb and Sarah Baron—feel Kentucky’s current laws around abortion inhibit their ability to grow their families. 

Benjamin Potash, one of the lawyers for the plaintiffs, told the Lantern in a text that the decision “makes numerous obvious errors,” such as basing part of the ruling on a reading of Roe V. Wade, which had established the constitutional right to abortion but was overturned in 2022 by the United States Supreme Court. 

Assistant Attorney General Lindsey Keiser defended the law on May 13 for the state attorney general, who praised Friday’s decision “to uphold Kentucky law.” 

“Most importantly, the Court eliminates any notion that access to IVF services in our Commonwealth is at risk,” Attorney General Russell Coleman said in a statement. “Today’s opinion is a welcome reassurance to the many Kentuckians seeking to become parents.”

Potash said the judge’s decision is “disappointing” and said “we look forward to review by higher courts.”  

“After 13 months of waiting, we received a nine-page decision that we feel fails to comport with the law,” he said. “Our nation is waiting for a judiciary brave enough to do what the law and our traditions require.” 

Kentucky Lantern is part of States Newsroom, the nation’s largest state-focused nonprofit news organization.

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