September 20, 2022

Pro-Life Legislators Introduce Federal 15-Week Abortion Ban

National Right to Life President Carol Tobias speaking alongside
other pro-life leaders at Sen. Lindsey Graham's press conference
On Sept. 13, US Sen. Lindsey Graham and Rep. Chris Smith introduced legislation that would ban abortion after 15 weeks with exceptions for rape, incest, and when the mother's life is in danger.

At a press conference, Sen. Graham spoke about the Protecting Pain-Capable Unborn Children from Late-Term Abortions Act alongside leaders from several national pro-life groups. Graham emphasized that this legislation would “get America in a position at the federal level that’s fairly consistent with the rest of the world.”


Abortionists who violate the bill could receive fines and/or up to 5 years in prison. The bill expressly forbids the prosecution of the mother whose child is aborted.

Graham argued that a 15-week limit is reasonable because unborn children can feel pain at that stage. Much of the text in the bill's introduction outlines its scientific reasoning. For example:
"In considering the use of anesthesia for invasive medical procedures performed on the fetus, doctors have concluded, based on the evidence, that from as early as 12 weeks gestational age, and certainly by 15 weeks gestational age, the fetus is extremely sensitive to painful stimuli, making it necessary to apply adequate analgesia and anesthesia to prevent fetal suffering."
The bill later goes on to say,
"The assertion of some medical experts that an unborn child remains in a coma-like sleep state that precludes an unborn child from experiencing pain is inconsistent with the documented reaction of unborn children to painful stimuli and with the experience of fetal surgeons who have found it necessary to sedate an unborn child with anesthesia and provide analgesia to prevent an unborn child from engaging in vigorous movement in reaction to invasive surgery."

While this legislation is unlikely to pass given the current makeup of the US Congress, it will likely motivate voters and reignite national discussions about abortion and the right to life.

Click here to read more.

September 19, 2022

Ohio Heartbeat Law Temporarily Blocked

On Sept. 14, a judge in Hamilton County, Ohio issued a 14-day temporary restraining order blocking Ohio from enforcing its law banning abortion after the unborn child's heartbeat is detectable (six weeks).

When issuing the order, Hamilton County Pleas Court Judge Christian Jenkins suggested that he might interpret the state constitution as creating a right to abortion. "No great stretch is required to find that Ohio law recognizes a fundamental right to privacy, procreation, bodily integrity and freedom of choice in health care decision making," Jenkins wrote.

While the restraining order remains in effect, abortion will become legal until 20 weeks gestation. Women's Med, the only abortion business in the Dayton area, has paused its plans to close due to Jenkins's ruling. It now plans to return to business-as-usual while the law is blocked.

The heartbeat law took effect almost immediately after Roe v. Wade was overturned in June and has been enforced for two months. Abortion businesses in Ohio sued, but courts did not immediately block the law. 

Ohio Right to Life President Mike Gonidakis accused abortion businesses of shopping for a friendly judge to get the decision they wanted. He also told the Cincinnati Enquirer, "We are more than confident that the heartbeat law will go back into effect relatively soon. Further, we can assure pro-life Ohio that in the near future Ohio will become abortion-free, regardless what this local judge ruled today. We will prevail."

September 16, 2022

New Planned Parenthood Fiscal Report Shows More Abortions, Fewer Clients

Planned Parenthood's new 2020-2021 report shows that the abortion business committed nearly 30,000 more abortions than its 2019 fiscal year. At the same time, the number of prenatal services it offered remained stagnant.

Interestingly, Planned Parenthood's total number of clients dropped by 10%, while abortions increased by over 8%.

The report shows that Planned Parenthood committed an all-time-high 383,460 abortions in its 2020 fiscal year. That is up from its previous record of 354,871 in its 2019 fiscal year.

Planned Parenthood no commits over 41% of the world's abortions.

By comparison, Planned Parenthood only offered 8,775 prenatal services in the 2020 fiscal year. That is up slightly from 8,626 in 2019, but generally trending downward from its 2010 peak of 31,098. On a similar note, Planned Parenthood aborts 200 children for every adoption referral.

The number of abortions Planned Parenthood commits each year is about the same as the number of prenatal services the corporation has provided in the last 20 years combined.

September 15, 2022

Chicago High School Dean Charged for Raping Student and Forcing her to Have Abortions

Former Chicago Public School Dean Brian Crowder
Photo credit: Cook County Sheriff's Office
Chicago prosecutors charged Brian Crowder, the former dean at Greater Lawndale High School for Social Justice, with raping a female student and then forcing her to get at least two abortions. At each abortion, Crowder posed as the student's stepfather to sign consent forms.

Court documents state that Crowder began messaging a 15-year-old student over Snapchat in 2013. Prosecutors say that Crowder soon afterward raped the student five to six times per month. Documents allege that this continued for two years. On at least one occasion, Crowder gave the student alcohol. They conceived two children, which were aborted in 2014 and 2015. 

Prosecutors allege that the relationship ended in 2015 when the student was in high school. She reported the abuse to a teacher. The teacher recommended that the student report her abuse to the police, but the teacher, who is required by law to report them, did not do so. In 2019, the student filed a police report after Crowder tried to contact her at her workplace.

Crowder was finally fired from Greater Lawndale High School for Social Justice in November of 2021 after the school was made aware of the charges.

Crowder was arrested on Wednesday, August 31 on a $75,000 bond. He is due back in court for a hearing on September 20.

September 14, 2022

ACLU Lawsuit Argues Indiana Pro-Life Law Violates Religious Freedom

The ACLU of Indiana filed a lawsuit against Indiana's new law protecting unborn children from abortion. In this case, the group uses a notably odd argument. On behalf of the Hoosier Jews for Choice and five anonymous residents, the ACLU will argue that the law violates their religious freedom.

The lawsuit argues that the pro-life law violates Indiana's 2015 Religious Freedom Restoration Act. According to the IndyStar, this law "prevents the government from impeding someone's religious exercise unless there's a strong argument in favor of the state's interest."

The ACLU goes on to say that the pro-life law violates the religious freedom of those who don't believe life begins at fertilization. "For example, under Jewish law, a fetus attains the status of a living person only at birth," the lawsuit states. "Jewish law recognizes that abortions may occur, and should occur as a religious matter, under circumstances not allowed by (the near-total abortion ban) or existing Indiana law."

Not only do many Jews believe life begins and conception and consider abortion to be murder, but the text of this lawsuit implies that abortion is a religious rite. The Satanic Temple tried and failed to make this argument in an attempt to block Texas's Heartbeat Act last year.

Furthermore, it is a matter of scientific fact that a unique living human being is created at fertilization. From that moment, the child has unique DNA separate from both the mother and father.

The new Indiana law bans abortion except to protect the health of the mother, when the child is diagnosed with a lethal anomaly, or in cases of rape or incest. In the latter case, there is still a ten-week limit.

September 13, 2022

Fairview Heights Planned Parenthood Hospitalizes Three Women in Four Days

A patient being loaded into an ambulance outside the
Fairview Heights Planned Parenthood Clinic on Aug. 9, 2022.
Photo by pro-life onlookers and provided to Operation Rescue
Photos and 911 records obtained by Operation Rescue reveal that the Planned Parenthood "mega-clinic" in Fairview Heights hospitalized three women within a four-day timespan last month. The incidents occurred between August 6 and August 9, 2022.

Pro-life onlookers took photos of incidents on August 6 and August 9. When Operation Rescue requested 911 records for incidents at the Fairview Heights Clinic between those dates, the records revealed that another separate emergency occurred on August 6.

At 12:40pm on August 6, 2022, Medstar Emergency Medical Services arrived to transport a 26-year-old woman suffering from a "sharp stabbing pain." No other information is available about this incident.

911 call recordings are available for the other two incidents.


At 9:10 pm on August 6, a Planned Parenthood employee called to request an ambulance for a 36-year-old woman who had just had a "procedure." She was suffering from low blood pressure and repeatedly passing out. The employee specifically requested that the patient be transported to Belleville Memorial Hospital, but emergency personnel instead transported her to St. Elizabeth Hospital. It would have taken about twice as long for an ambulance to drive to Belleview Memorial.

The third call took place at 3:49 pm on August 9. A woman in her early twenties had severe cervical bleeding and required hospitalization. This time, the Planned Parenthood employee requested that the patient be transferred to Barnes Jewish Hospital in St. Louis Missouri rather than St. Elizabeth Hospital (which is only eight minutes away). 911 records show that the patient was transported to Belleview memorial Hospital instead.

Operation Rescue hypothesizes that the clinic rotates hospitals to try and conceal the number of emergencies it causes.

September 12, 2022

Constitutional Amendment to Legalize Abortion Placed on Michigan Ballot

Following a directive from the Michigan Supreme Court, the state's Board of State Canvassers placed a constitutional amendment that would legalize abortion through all nine months of pregnancy on Michigan's fall ballot.

The amendment would also allow anyone, including those who don't have any medical training, to "assist" with abortions.

Michigan's Supreme Court voted 5-2 to override the deadlocked party-line vote by the Board of State Canvassers. The proposed amendment gathered far more than the 425,000 signatures required to place it on the ballot. Republicans on the board argued that formatting errors made the language of the petition unreadable. They argued that the signees could not have known what they were signing, and the petition was therefore invalid. The Michigan Supreme Court overrode them.

Just days before, Court Claims Judge Elizabeth Gleicher ruled that Michigan's 1931 law banning abortion violated the state Constitution. Gleicher notably argued against this law as a lawyer for Planned Parenthood in 1997. The Court of Appeals denied her request to create a state right to abortion at the time, but now she has the power to make the ruling herself (despite her conflict of interest as a Planned Parenthood contributor).

September 9, 2022

California Judge Rules Doctors Cannot be Compelled to Document Assisted Suicide Requests

On Sept. 2, US District Judge Fernando Aenlle-Rocha ruled that California cannot compel doctors to participate in assisted suicide by requiring them to document requests for assisted suicide. The ruling granted a preliminary injunction blocking the state from requiring doctors to participate in this way.

A 2021 amendment to California's 2015 assisted suicide law made it easier for patients to have doctors kill them. The original law required that two doctors verify that the patient had less than six months to live and is mentally competent to make the decision. It further required the patient to verbally request the drugs on two occasions at least 15 days apart, provide a written request, and sign a form 48 hours beforehand.

The 2021 amendment allows assisted suicide if the patient makes two verbal requests at least 48 hours apart. There are no further requirements. Therefore, a pro-life doctor who documents one of these two requests is participating in the patient's death in a significant way.

Judge Aenlle-Rocha said as much in his ruling, "The ultimate outcome of this requirement is that non-participating providers are compelled to participate in the Act through this documentation requirement, despite their objections to assisted suicide." He later continued that doctors who oppose assisted suicide "are likely to succeed on their Free Speech claim" on the basis that California's law "exceeds merely managing medical records—it imposes an affirmative documentation requirement."

September 8, 2022

Sept. 10 is the National Day of Remembrance for Aborted Children

The second Saturday in September (September 10 this year) marks the National Day of Remembrance for Aborted Children.

Every year on this day, pro-life advocates visit burial places and memorial sites for victims of abortion to hold funeral-like services in remembrance and respect for their lives. Doing so helps pro-lifers remember that aborted children are real human lives that have been ended. They are not simply pictures or sub-human "pregnancies" without value. Abortion victims can be respected and remembered like any other life can.

Memorials will be held at places across the country, but three are scheduled to take place in Illinois. Click on the name to read more information about parking, speakers, and locations.

Chicago Police Investigating After Dead Infant Found on Sidewalk

Chicago police are investigating the death of a baby that was discovered on a neighborhood sidewalk.

Police were called to the 6400 block of West Bloomingdale Ave in Chicago at around 1:35 p.m. on Sept. 3, where the body was found. While police have said that they are investigating the incident, no further information is available at the time of writing.

It should be noted that Illinois's Safe Haven Law allows parents to surrender babies up to 30 days post-birth at hospitals, emergency care facilities, police stations, and staffed fire stations. Women in difficult situations who don't feel like they can provide for their newborn children can ensure their safety by surrendering them at these designated locations.

California Legislators Pass Block of Pro-Abortion Bills

photo credit: Wayne Hsieh / Flickr
Legislators in California passed a group of over a dozen bills last week as part of a "Reproductive Justice Policy Package" aiming to make the state an abortion sanctuary.

Among other things, the legislation:

  • prevents California law enforcement from cooperating with abortion investigations from other states
  • blocks abortion-related medical information from being shared with other states
  • prohibits a coroner's statements from being used to convict a mother of infanticide
  • allows non-doctors to commit abortions without oversight
  • creates a $20 million fund to pay the abortion costs of women who come to California from other states
Pro-abortion California Gov. Gavin Newsom (D) has until Sept. 30 to sign the bills.

September 7, 2022

Appeals Court Ends Injunction Against Florida's 15-Week Abortion Law

On August 24, the First District Court of Appeal in Florida ruled to throw out the injunction blocking the state from enforcing its 15-week abortion limit.

The law was set to take effect on July 1, but Leon County Circuit Judge John C. Cooper issued a temporary injunction blocking Florida from enforcing the law while a challenge was considered. It then advanced to the First District Court of Appeal, where that injunction was overturned in a 2-1 ruling.

This ruling allows Florida to enforce the 15-week abortion limit as the legal challenge progresses.

Click here to read more.

Court Rules California Cannot Force Church Health Plans to Cover Abortion

A group of churches in California won a legal challenge against the State of California last month. In 2014, the state mandated that all employers include abortion coverage in their health plans. The group of churches objects to abortion due to their religious beliefs, but California would not honor that objection. Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) filed a lawsuit on their behalf in 2015, and they finally won their challenge seven years later.

US District Chief Judge Kimberly Mueller wrote in his ruling that California violated the churches' First Amendment rights. California said that it only considered exemptions that came directly from health plans, not individual employers. It argued that it would be impossible to consider exemption requests from so many employers, so it had a compelling interest to ignore them.

Mueller disagreed, writing that the “denial of the Churches’ request for exceptions to accommodate their religious beliefs, based solely on the fact that those requests did not originate with a plan, was not narrowly tailored to serve a compelling interest.” She later continued, “Even assuming similar religious challenges materialized in California in large numbers, [California] has not offered evidence showing that entertaining these religious objections would be so difficult and time-consuming that ‘DMHC’s operations would grind to a halt.'”

September 6, 2022

Veterans Affairs Announces Legally Dubious Plan to Offer Abortions

On Sept. 2, the Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) announced plans to offer abortion counseling and abortions to pregnant veterans and eligible dependents. According to the VA, these abortions may be offered regardless of state laws prohibiting them.

According to the interim final rule published by the VA, these abortions would be offered in cases of rape, incest, or when “the life or the health of the pregnant veteran would be endangered if the pregnancy were carried to term.” There is no police report requirement for cases of rape or incest.

Pro-abortion legislators pushed for the change in letters to the VA. In the past, they argued that the VA would legally be allowed to offer abortion because the Hyde Amendment does not apply to the VA.

Sen. James Lankford (R-OK) argued in August and reiterated on Sept. 2 that abortion coverage is explicitly excluded from reproductive healthcare services the VA can provide.

The Epoch Times writes, "Section 106 of the Veterans Health Care Act of 1992 says that the VA may provide women with 'general reproductive healthcare, including the management of menopause, but not including under this section infertility services, abortions, or pregnancy care,' except relating to a pregnancy 'that is complicated or in which the risks of complications are increased by a service-connected condition.'"

The Biden VA argues that the new rule is legal under 38 U.S.C. 1710, which provides limited authority for the VA secretary to provide medical services "which the Secretary determines to be needed."

The interim rule will take effect when it is published in the federal register. After that, there will be a 30-day period for public comments. The VA plans to prepare abortion services immediately after the rule is published.

September 2, 2022

Nurse Sues after Being Fired By CVS for Refusal to Prescribe Abortion Drugs

Paige Casey
photo credit: Alliance Defending Freedom
Paige Casey, a nurse practitioner who was fired by MinuteClinic (a division of CVS) for refusing to provide abortion-inducing drugs, filed a lawsuit against her former employer on August 31.

Casey is a Catholic whose faith prohibits her from facilitating abortions. She worked at MinuteClinic for three and a half years, but she was informed January of 2022 that CVS would no longer honor her religious objection to abortion. She was fired just a few months later. Ironically, she was given a merit-based pay increase just two days before she was fired.

Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) is representing Casey in her case against CVS.

“Corporations like CVS cannot defy the law by firing professionals who want to work consistently with their faith,” said ADF Senior Counsel Denise Harle, director of the ADF Center for Life. “Paige had a spotless record of caring for patients, yet CVS decided to abruptly fire her solely because of her religious belief that life begins at conception. Virginia law protects the freedom of everyone to work without fear of being fired for their religious beliefs prohibiting participation in abortion.”

ADF's press release notes that Virginia's Conscience Clause prohibits employers from discriminating against employees to refuse to participate in abortion due to their pro-life beliefs. The organization hopes to prevent CVS from forcing other pro-life employees to either participate in abortion or lose their jobs.

September 1, 2022

Planned Parenthood Sues to Block Indiana Abortion Ban

Planned Parenthood and other abortion businesses sued the state of Indiana in an attempt to block a new law that would ban most elective abortions. The law will go into effect on Sept 15 unless it is blocked by a judge.

Indiana Senate Bill 1 was the first pro-life law passed by a state legislature after the repeal of Roe v. Wade. The law bans abortion except in cases of rape, incest, when the mother's life is at risk, or fatal fetal anomalies. Furthermore, the law states that abortions can only be performed in hospitals or outpatient facilities owned by hospitals.

The abortion industry lawsuit argues that the new law “strips away the fundamental rights of people seeking abortion care in violation of the Indiana Constitution.” The abortion businesses say that the law violates Hoosiers' right to privacy, violate's their right to equal protection, and uses unconstitutionally vague language.

Indiana Right to Life CEO Mike Fichter responded, “Not only is there no right to an abortion in the Indiana Constitution, it actually states life is one of our inalienable rights. We are confident the state will prevail and pray the new law is not blocked from going into effect on September 15, knowing that any delay will mean the indiscriminate killing of unborn children will continue at abortion clinics across Indiana.”

Planned Parenthood Lawsuit Challenging Indiana Abortion Complications Law Dismissed

Indiana Attorney General
Todd Rokita
On August 29, a 2018 Indiana law requiring abortion businesses to report abortion complications to the Indiana Department of Health was upheld by a US District Court, and Planned Parenthood's challenge was dismissed.

“The legislature had a legitimate concern that researchers have insufficient data available to study the safety of abortion,” Attorney General Rokita said. “This law advances the causes of compassion, common sense, medical science and public health.”

Potential complications from first-trimester abortions include infection, excessive vaginal bleeding, uterine perforation, and more.

Notably, the dismissal of this case represents Indiana's fifth legal victory on behalf of pro-life laws since Roe v. Wade was overturned.

August 31, 2022

Fifth Circuit Rules Government Cannot Force Christian Hospitals to Commit Abortions

On October 26, the Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the federal government could not use the Affordable Care Act to force Christian medical groups to commit abortions or perform gender transition surgeries.

In Franciscan Alliance v Becerra the Fifth Circuit unanimously affirmed a lower court's permanent injunction against an Obama-era HHS rule. The rule would abuse the Affordable Care Act to force health care providers to offer abortion and gender reassignment surgery if the provider receives federal funding or participates in ACA exchanges. The HHS appealed this injunction, which led to the fifth circuit's ruling last Friday.

"In its brief on appeal, HHS simply says it ‘has not to date evaluated’ whether it will enforce Section 1557 against Franciscan Alliance – in other words, it concedes that it may," Circuit Judge Don Willett wrote in the Fifth Circuit's decision. The Trump administration had rescinded the rule, but there was concern that the Biden administration would consider enforcing the rule again. "We have repeatedly held that plaintiffs have standing in the face of similar prosecutorial indecision." 

Joseph Davis, who worked with the Becket Fund for Religious Liberty as counsel for the Christian medical groups, said, “This ruling is a major victory for conscience rights and compassionate medical care in America. Doctors cannot do their jobs and comply with the Hippocratic Oath if the government requires them to perform harmful, irreversible procedures against their conscience and medical expertise.”

August 30, 2022

Oklahoma's Abortion Trigger Law Takes Effect

On Friday, August 26, Oklahoma's trigger law banning abortion went into effect. The law bans all abortions except to save the life of the mother.

Abortionists found guilty of violating the abortion ban could face up to 10 years in prison and a $100,000 fine. The mother cannot be found guilty of a crime.

Oklahoma State Sen. Nathan Dahm, who authored the trigger law, celebrated that it finally took effect. “Today (Friday), after almost two years of work, Senate Bill 612 is in effect,” Dahm said. “I am proud that our state did not wait for the Supreme Court but led the way and passed this law to successfully eliminate abortion in Oklahoma before Roe v. Wade was overturned.”

White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre released a statement criticizing Oklahoma along with several other states that passed pro-life laws.
“Today marks the latest attack against the fundamental rights of Americans as new abortion bans go into effect in Idaho, Oklahoma, Tennessee, and Texas. These extreme bans will criminalize abortion, in some cases without exceptions for rape or incest. These near-total abortion bans are part of a growing effort by Republican legislators to roll back the freedoms Americans have relied on for nearly half a century. Today’s radical steps take away women’s reproductive rights and put personal health care decisions in the hands of politicians instead of women and their doctors, threatening women’s health and lives.”

Abortion threatens and ends millions of lives every year. Oklahoma's citizens elected pro-life legislators with the intent to save lives from the deadly practice of abortion. The trigger law is not a tyrannical piece of legislation drafted by misogynistic politicians without their consituents' consent. It is a manifestation of democracy taking effect after being stifled by 50 years of Roe v. Wade.

Click here to read more.

August 29, 2022

Idaho Trigger Law Partially Blocked by Federal Judge

US District Judge B. Lunn Winmill issued a ruling on August 24 to block Idaho from enforcing part of its trigger law banning most abortions.

The ruling blocks Idaho from using the trigger law to prosecute anyone who performs what the law defines as "abortion" if the mother was experiencing an emergency medical situation. Enforcement will be paused until the lawsuit from the US Department of Justice (DOJ) is resolved.

Idaho's trigger law makes it a felony for a physician to commit an abortion. This would be punishable by up to five years in prison. The law includes exceptions for rape, incest, and saving the mother's life. To defend themselves from prosecution in cases of rape and incest, physicians can use a police report provided by the mother or a guardian.

The DOJ filed a lawsuit challenging Idaho's law under the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (EMTALA). That law requires physicians to provide life-saving care in emergency circumstances, and the Biden administration argues that this can include abortion. Pro-life advocates and physicians often argue that pre-term delivery is safer and faster than abortion in emergency circumstances, even if it still results in the child's death. The issue in this lawsuit stems from the trigger law's definition of abortion, which might include that method of ending a pregnancy.

Idaho defines abortion as “the use of any means to intentionally terminate the clinically diagnosable pregnancy of a woman with knowledge that the termination by those means will, with reasonable likelihood, cause the death of the unborn child.” Some treatments that other states don't consider to be abortions, such as emergency preterm delivery and the removal of ectopic pregnancies, could be defined as abortion under this definition. While physicians could still defend themselves if they argue that the action was required to save the mother's life, the DOJ could argue that the law's unclear definition of abortion conflicts with that defense.