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Planned Parenthood South Atlantic v. Wilson

Location: South Carolina
Court Type: South Carolina Supreme Court
Last Update: November 6, 2024

What's at Stake

This case in the South Carolina Supreme Court involves the question whether a ban on abortion, the “2023 Fetal Heartbeat Act,” forbids abortion starting after approximately nine weeks of pregnancy or, as the state contends, earlier at six weeks of pregnancy, before many people even know they are pregnant. This case is the third state supreme court proceeding in South Carolina involving a post-Dobbs challenge to an abortion ban. The outcome will substantially affect access to reproductive care in the state.

In 2023, South Carolina adopted an abortion ban that applies upon the detection of a “fetal heartbeat." Within the Act, “fetal heartbeat” is defined to mean “cardiac activity, or the steady and repetitive rhythmic contraction of the fetal heart, within the gestational sac.” S.C. Code § 44-41-610(6). The ban imposes felony criminal penalties on healthcare providers who “perform or induce” abortions that are prohibited by the Act.
After losing an earlier constitutional challenge to the 2023 Act, Planned Parenthood initiated this case, arguing, as a matter of statutory interpretation, that the Act's prohibition cannot be applied until a pregnancy involves a fetus (and a “fetal heart”), rather than an embryo, a transition that occurs after approximately nine weeks of pregnancy, as dated from a patient's last menstrual period (LMP). The state argued that the ban applies starting at approximately six weeks of pregnancy LMP, urging the Court to abandon the plain text of the statute and interpret the statute according to the purported intent of the General Assembly. The Circuit Court agreed with the state.
In a Supreme Court appeal, the ACLU, alongside the ACLU of South Carolina, filed an amicus brief arguing that the court should reject the state's position as to the timing of the ban's application and apply the plain meaning of the Act, which would allow abortions in South Carolina through approximately nine weeks of pregnancy.
Our brief argues that the state’s position is at odds with clear statutory text and improperly rests on extratextual evidence to expand criminal liability, thus implicating due process concerns. Additionally, we explain why the state wrongly invokes the arguments of Planned Parenthood’s counsel in earlier proceedings as evidence that the Act imposes a six-week ban.

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