Nearly three months after Oklahoma County District Judge Cindy Truong first upheld the state’s Unborn Child Protection from Dismemberment Abortion Act, and nearly two months after Judge Truong denied a motion for a temporary injunction that would keep the law from taking effect while the case continues, the Center for Reproductive Rights (CRR) filed an appeal with the Oklahoma Supreme Court, asking the state’s highest court to block the law and another law that allows women to reflect on her decision for 72 hours after receiving s counseling before they can have an abortion.
“Oklahoma has agreed not to enforce the ban until the state Supreme Court considers an emergency motion from the plaintiffs,” according to Kaylee Douglas. “The 72-hours law has been in effect since 2015.”
“These two laws will devastate abortion access in Oklahoma,” claimed Julie Rikelman, Senior Litigation Director at the New York-based CRR.
Oklahoma was the second state to pass a ban on the dismemberment of living unborn children. Kansas was the first. Ten other states also forbid this hideous dismemberment technique.
In a dismemberment abortion, the abortionist continually reaches into the mother’s womb with a variety of sharp-edged metal clamps and tools, yanking off parts of the living unborn child and pulling them out, piece by piece, and placed in a tray.
In 2015, the bill passed the state House of Representatives, 84-2 and the state Senate 37-4 and was signed into law by pro-life Gov. Gov. Mary Fallin.
At the time, Oklahomans For Life State Chairman Tony Lauinger commended Gov. Fallin “for her quick action in signing into law the Unborn Child Protection from Dismemberment Abortion Act, which will prohibit this barbaric inhumanity in our state.” Lauinger, who is NRLC’s executive vice president, added, “We appreciate, also, the exceptional leadership of Representatives Pam Peterson and Senator Josh Brecheen for spearheading the enactment of this landmark lifesaving legislation.”
However a lawsuit, brought by the CRR on behalf of the Tulsa Women’s Clinic, meant that the law, scheduled to go into effect in November 2015, has been on hold.
On July 12, when Judge Truong upheld the Unborn Child Protection from Dismemberment Abortion Act, Oklahoma Attorney General Mike Hunter celebrated the victory.
“Dismemberment abortions are barbaric, brutal and subject unborn children to more cruelty that we allow for death row inmates,” he said. “It is unconscionable to think that we would allow this practice to continue. Judge Truong is to be commended for declaring this legislation constitutional. Today is a major victory for basic human decency in Oklahoma.”
No wonder former Supreme Court Justice Anthony Kennedy found dismemberment abortions so abhorrent.
In his dissent to the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2000 Stenberg v. Carhart decision, Justice Kennedy observed that in dismemberment abortions, “The fetus, in many cases, dies just as a human adult or child would: It bleeds to death as it is torn limb from limb. The fetus can be alive at the beginning of the dismemberment process and can survive for a time while its limbs are being torn off.”
Seven years later Justice Kennedy added in the Court’s 2007, Gonzales v. Carhart, which upheld the federal ban on partial-birth abortion, that D&E (dismemberment) abortions are “laden with the power to devalue human life…”
Daniel Miller is responsible for nearly all of National Right to Life News' political writing.
With the election of Donald Trump to the U.S. presidency, Daniel Miller developed a deep obsession with U.S. politics that has never let go of the political scientist. Whether it's the election of Joe Biden, the midterm elections in Congress, the abortion rights debate in the Supreme Court or the mudslinging in the primaries - Daniel Miller is happy to stay up late for you.
Daniel was born and raised in New York. After living in China, working for a news agency and another stint at a major news network, he now lives in Arizona with his two daughters.