NewsLocal

Indiana court blocks abortion law in ACLU religious freedom case

Photo Supplied / Pixabay
A state trial court in Indiana has blocked the enforcement of an abortion law that violates the religious beliefs of a certified class who prioritize a pregnant person’s health over that of a zygote, embryo, or fetus.
The court ruled that the state’s Religious Freedom Restoration Act prohibits laws that interfere with religious beliefs without a compelling interest.
The ruling, a win for reproductive rights advocates, rejected a law based on a concept of personhood not shared by all religions. The plaintiffs, including Hoosier Jews for Choice, argued that the law violated their religious freedom by restricting access to abortions sought as a religious exercise.
The court’s decision permanently blocks the law’s enforcement and affirms the class’s standing to bring the suit.

Related posts

Former DCS contractor facing child sex crime charges

Network Indiana

Greenwood man charged with third OWI in 6 months

Network Indiana

Vince Coglianese joins 95.3 MNC weekend lineup

Jon Zimney

2 comments

Slacker06 March 8, 2026 at 11:15 am

It’s official. Indiana now worships Molech as an officially recognized religion. If yo don;t know about Molech, you can look it up.

The judge that made this ruling should be impeached!

Reply
Charles U Farley March 8, 2026 at 10:10 pm

“including Hoosier Jews for Choice”

Muh greatest ally, indeed.

Reply

Leave a Comment