Current:Home > NewsAlabama's Supreme Court rules frozen embryos are 'children' under state law -WealthSphere Pro
Alabama's Supreme Court rules frozen embryos are 'children' under state law
View
Date:2025-04-27 18:58:41
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – A ruling by the Alabama Supreme Court has given fertilized eggs the same rights as children. The recent ruling has some fertility clinics claiming they will not be able to continue practicing in the state, while couples who need help getting pregnant are left wondering where they will turn for help building a family.
Residents of Alabama and the rest of the country might be shocked by the ruling, but many legal scholars were not.
"I was not surprised," said Jill Lens, a professor of law at the University of Arkansas and an expert in reproductive rights. "Alabama Supreme court has for a long time, enthusiastically applied wrongful death law to pregnancy losses and [if] it's a person the second it's in the womb – if it's a person, it's a person. I'm not sure why the location in a freezer would matter."
In other words, anyone who's been following Alabama's abortion debate should have seen it coming in a state where prosecutors have arrested pregnant women for engaging in behaviors like taking drugs that could be harmful to a fetus. Alabama outlaws all abortions, making no exceptions for cases of rape or incest.
While many other states have passed similar legislation, no other state has defined life as beginning at conception, which is essentially what this court ruling does.
No other state has given personhood rights to all fertilized eggs. And even in states that allow the prosecution of women who put the health of their fetuses at risk, most do not apply that prosecution statute to pregnancies before the 24th week. That is the age at which most doctors consider a fetus to be able to live outside the womb.
This case was brought before the state Supreme Court by three couples in Alabama who had frozen embryos being stored at a facility in Mobile. They had used IVF, or in vitro fertilization, to create embryos that were then frozen for them to be able to use at a later date. That's standard procedure in IVF clinics in the United States, where clinics prefer harvesting as many eggs at a time in order to increase the odds of getting even one egg that is healthy enough to be fertilized and put back into a woman's uterus.
What went wrong in this case pertains to the security of the hospital that was storing the frozen embryos. A random patient somehow gained access to the cryogenics lab, grabbed the embryos and dropped them, thus destroying them.
The three couples sued the hospital and a lower court ruled they were not entitled to damages because the frozen embryos were not people. The Alabama Supreme Court, however, ruled that they are indeed people, going so far as calling them "extrauterine children."
Alabama's Chief Justice, Tom Parker, wrote in the decision that destroying life would "incur the wrath of a holy God." Of nine state Supreme Court Justices, only one disagreed.
This case is not likely to be appealed to the U.S. Supreme Court because this was the state's Supreme Court ruling based on a state law.
Critics have long urged the state legislature to spell out exactly who falls under the state's wrongful death statute. It's clear the state's Supreme Court says life begins at fertilization and that it doesn't matter whether that life is in a woman's uterus or in a freezer in a fertility clinic.
If Alabama lawmakers fail to define at what age a fertilized egg becomes a person, it could become a crime in Alabama to destroy frozen embryos. That could ultimately mean those embryos could be frozen forever, because it's not clear yet if those frozen embryos could be donated to other states or to science, because they have now been given the same protection as children.
The irony, here, is that the very lawsuit filed by the three couples who were upset when their embryos were destroyed may actually end up making it far more difficult for Alabmians who are struggling to conceive naturally.
veryGood! (4)
Related
- California DMV apologizes for license plate that some say mocks Oct. 7 attack on Israel
- Horoscopes Today, January 21, 2024
- South Korea grants extension to truth commission as investigators examine foreign adoption cases
- Texas man pleads guilty to kidnapping girl who was found in California with a Help Me! sign
- NFL Week 15 picks straight up and against spread: Bills, Lions put No. 1 seed hopes on line
- Woman accused of killing pro-war blogger in café bomb attack faces 28 years in Russian prison
- The art of Trump's trials: Courtroom artist turns legal battles into works of art
- Caitlin Clark collides with court-storming fan after Iowa's loss to Ohio State
- Federal appeals court upholds $14.25 million fine against Exxon for pollution in Texas
- A pet cat thrown off a train died in cold weather. Now thousands want the conductor to lose her job
Ranking
- A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
- ‘Burn, beetle, burn': Hundreds of people torch an effigy of destructive bug in South Dakota town
- Republican Presidential Candidate Nikki Haley Says Climate Change is Real. Is She Proposing Anything to Stop It?
- Gaza doctor describes conditions inside his overwhelmed hospital as Israeli forces advance
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Former firefighter accused of planting explosives near California roadways pleads not guilty
- India’s Modi is set to open a controversial temple in Ayodhya in a grand event months before polls
- Missouri teacher accused of trying to poison husband with lily of the valley in smoothie
Recommendation
Google unveils a quantum chip. Could it help unlock the universe's deepest secrets?
Texas prosecutor convenes grand jury to investigate Uvalde school shooting, multiple media outlets report
Not Gonna Miss My … Shot. Samsung's new Galaxy phones make a good picture more of a sure thing
Djokovic reaches the Australian Open quarterfinals, matching Federer's Grand Slam record
Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
Republican Presidential Candidate Nikki Haley Says Climate Change is Real. Is She Proposing Anything to Stop It?
As Israel-Hamas war tension spreads, CBS News meets troops on a U.S. warship bracing for any escalation
Pro-Putin campaign amasses 95 cardboard boxes filled with petitions backing his presidential run