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This story originally appeared in the Jackson Free Press. It was added to the Mississippi Free Press website in 2025.
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JACKSON, Miss.—U.S. District Court Judge Carlton Reeves did not rule on whether or not he will block Mississippi’s six-week abortion ban in federal court today. He said he will issue a ruling at a later date on whether to block it from taking effect.

The Center for Reproductive Rights filed the lawsuit on behalf of Mississippi’s only abortion clinic, the Jackson Women’s Health Organization, or JWHO. Their attorneys argued that the ban is unconstitutional because it violates the 1973 Roe v. Wade U.S. Supreme Court ruling, which declared abortion a constitutional right and explicitly protected the right to an abortion procedure before the point of viability. At six weeks, or when a fetal heartbeat first becomes detectable, most women do not know they are pregnant.

Last year, Reeves shut down another abortion ban in the state, which banned the procedure after 15 weeks. The State of Mississippi appealed it to the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in New Orleans. Reeves pointed out that a six-week ban would meet a similar fate.

“It sure smacks of defiance to this court,” Reeves said, referring to the Legislature’s decision to pass and Bryant’s decision to sign the “heartbeat bill” into law in March.

Shannon Brewer, the director of the state’s abortion clinic, told the Jackson Free Press after the hearing that she is concerned that anti-abortion groups may use this case or cases in other states to overturn Roe v. Wade.

“We know this is going on in multiple states, so of course we are worried, but of course we are going to fight whatever they try to put out there,” she said.

Mississippi’s law contains no exceptions for rape or incest. The only exception is in cases where a woman’s life is in danger.

In 2011, Mississippi voters decisively defeated a Personhood initiative to ban abortion and several forms of birth control in the state. Gov. Phil Bryant was chairman of that campaign in the state.

This is a developing story; watch for updates.

Follow state reporter Ashton Pittman on Twitter @ashtonpittman. Send tips to ashton@jacksonfreepress.com. Read more about the right over abortion in Mississippi at jacksonfreepress.com/abortion and jacksonfreepress.com/personhood.

Award-winning News Editor Ashton Pittman, a native of the South Mississippi Pine Belt, studied journalism and political science at the University of Southern Mississippi. Previously the state reporter at the Jackson Free Press, he drove national headlines and conversations with award-winning reporting about segregation academies. He has won numerous awards, including Outstanding New Journalist in the South, for his work covering immigration raids, abortion battles and even former Gov. Phil Bryant’s unusual work with “The Bad Boys of Brexit" at the Jackson Free Press. In 2021, as a Mississippi Free Press reporter, he was named the Diamond Journalist of the Year for seven southern U.S. states in the Society of Professional Journalists Diamond Awards. A trained photojournalist, Ashton lives in South Mississippi with his husband, William, and their two pit bulls, Dorothy and Dru.