Alabama wants to reinstate hearings for pregnant girls
MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Alabama’s top prosecutor said the state is going to appeal a federal judge’s ruling that struck down a one-of-a-kind law in which minors seeking court permission for an abortion could be put through a hearing where the fetus could get a lawyer and a district attorney could question the pregnant girl’s maturity.
The state filed the notice of appeal on Tuesday with the 11th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta. Alabama legislators in 2014 changed the state’s process for girls who seek a judge’s permission for an abortion instead of their parents’. The new law empowered the judge to appoint a representative “for the interests of the unborn child” and allowed the local district attorney to call witnesses and question the girl to determine whether she’s mature enough to decide.
The state has argued that the process allowed for a more robust inquiry to help a judge make a decision about the girl’s maturity level.
“Alabama’s parental consent law strikes a balance between protecting the privacy rights of a pregnant minor and the obligation of a bypass court to render a decision in the best interest of the minor’s well-being,” Alabama Attorney General Steve Marshall said in a statement Wednesday.


