Proponents of the abortion rights feared that the judgment of the U.S. Court of Justice of 2022, which opened the door to state abortion banks, would also lead to pursuing women and accusing women who received abortions with murder.
The states also approved it, but the ideas that once got off the table have attracted attention this month in the legislation.
Oklahoma’s legislators killed a legislative template that would have approved murder accusations after a public hearing, and North Dakota did so after a ground debate. Similar invoices have already been presented, but they have not been granted to negotiations, partly because most major anti-abortion groups oppose them.
A Missouri committee heard statements on a legislative template to create a database with pregnant women who were classified as “endangered” to maintain an abortion and to connect them to potential adoptive parents.
Here is a look at the suggestions:
Missouri’s proposal would make a database of certain pregnant women
According to Missouri’s legislation, the State Department of Social Services would instruct a modern department to be exposed to an abortion with the maintenance of a “central register of any expectant mother that exists to find the risk”.
The department would also have a list of potential adoptive parents and coordinate the adoption process.
The spokesman for the Republican Jonathan Patterson, the spokesman for the Republican, said on Thursday that he wanted to support the adoption, but that the legislative template among the Republicans of the house has no broad support. Two similar bills were lifted this week.
“There is some question about the central registration and databases,” said Patterson. “This really has to be tightened to ensure that people’s privacy is protected.”
The Republicans are also careful with the expansion of the government and are concerned about the estimated costs of $ 30 million a year.
Nevertheless, it gained support.
“Such invoices continue to refute in an explanation that supports the invoice.
The persecution of pregnancies is not a modern concern for lawyers
Planned Parenthood Federation of America says that Missouri’s legislation is the first of its kind Fears before the potential persecution of pregnant women are nothing modern.
Proponents of the abortion rights have long argued that the reproductive health information of the individual is not kept privately, then this is could not only be used in targeted ads, but also for investigations by law enforcement authorities. Some democratic states have taken steps to protect such health data in recent years.
In a call to reporters on Wednesday on Wednesday, Katie Knutter, Managing Director of Wellspring Health Access, said the abortion in Wyoming offers laws on this are not in the books.
“The broader discussion in the media made the patients very consciously and very concerned about these things,” said Knutter.
Take into account legislators, but reject, admit charges against women, receive abortion
On Wednesday, the Justice Committee of the Senate of Oklahoma voted around 6-2 against a proposal to enable murder systems against women that receive abortions, with possible punishments, including the death penalty and life in prison.
A week earlier, the North Dakota house rejected a measure with similar features 77-16.
Groups such as national law on life committee and Susan B. Anthony Pro-Life America have asked legislators not to take these measures into account for years, and argue that women are often forced to abortion and should not be punished.
Some conservative legislators see it differently.
“While the abortion clinics no longer offer or carry out an abortion, there is a massive gap in Oklahomans’ laws,” said Senator Dusty Deevers, who sponsored the measure of Oklahoma, the Justice Committee during a hearing on Wednesday. “They don’t apply to the mothers themselves.”
For the sponsor, the influx of abortion pills is the growing problem
Deevers said his approach was the only way to stop the flow of Abortion pills prescribed by Doctors in other countries About Telemealth and shipped. A survey for the Society for Family Planning, which advocates access to abortions, showed that in the second half 2023 there were almost 1,000 abortions on telemedicine in Oklahoma. The Guttmacher InstituteAnother research organization that supports abortion rights has found that by 2023 more than 6 out of 10 abortions in the National Pills formal health system have been involved.
Democrats and some Republicans of the Committee had concerns, including the law that the law could lead to criminal investigations by women with miscarriages, that such an extreme approach would be hard for a state constitutional amendment to permission or enforcement.
Similar measures in Idaho and Indiana probably do not seem to be coming. Invoices were also introduced in South Carolina and Texas.

