Federal court cases The
American Civil Liberties Union,
Planned Parenthood and the
Center for Reproductive Rights sued the state in June 2019 and sought an injunction against enforcement of the ban before it would go into effect in January 2020. The case was heard in the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Georgia under Judge
Steve C. Jones. Jones ruled in favor of the injunction to block enforcement in his decision in October 2019, stating "By banning pre-viability abortions, H.B. 481 violates the constitutional right to privacy, which, in turn, inflicts per se irreparable harm on Plaintiffs." In July 2020, the bill was ruled unconstitutional by Judge Jones. The state appealed to the
Eleventh Circuit. With the Supreme Court scheduled to hear arguments on ''
Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization'' in December 2021, a case involving Mississippi's abortion law that banned abortions after 15 weeks and asking questions related to the general provisions set by
Roe v. Wade, the Eleventh Circuit put a stay on review of the Georgia case until after the Supreme Court decided
Dobbs. Following the Supreme Court's decision overturning
Roe, the Eleventh Circuit lifted the stay and permitted the law to enter into force.
State court cases The ACLU,
SisterSong, Planned Parenthood and other groups sued the state in July 2022 following the federal case's conclusion. The parties sought an injunction against enforcement of the ban under the Constitution of Georgia. The case was filed in the
Superior Court of Fulton County and will be heard by Judge Robert McBurney. On September 30, 2024, the Judge struck down the law. The state appealed the decision shortly after and was successful in reinstating the law at the Supreme Court of Georgia. == See also ==