By the end of August, nearly all of the abortion trigger bans in the country will have taken effect.
Thirteen states have legislation that was designed to automatically outlaw abortions once the U.S. Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade.
In some states, the trigger law is written so that abortions are immediately prohibited without needing further action. In others, the policy requires 30 days to go into effect or certification from the state's attorney general. Meanwhile, in
Utah
A number of states have codified abortion bans without the use of a trigger law. So far, a total of 14 states have near-total abortion bans or bans after six weeks of pregnancy.
Three of those states are expected to implement even more draconian laws starting Aug. 25.
Tennessee
Since Roe was struck down in June, Tennessee has banned abortions once cardiac activity is detected, which is about six weeks of pregnancy. But on the 25th, nearly all abortions will be
outlawed
Idaho
Similar to Tennessee, Idaho has already banned abortions beyond six weeks of pregnancy in a law that
took effect on Friday
Barring court intervention, later this week, the state will impose a near-total abortion ban, with the exception of rape, incest or medical emergency. Physicians who perform abortions outside of these circumstances will be at risk of
up to five years in prison
Yet another law already in effect allows potential relatives of an embryo or fetus to sue abortion providers for up to
$20,000
Texas
Abortion has already been outlawed in Texas because of a law from before Roe v. Wade that is now being enforced. The current ban makes
no exceptions
The state's trigger law on Aug. 25 will toughen the punishment for those involved in an illegal abortion — putting physicians who perform the procedure at risk of facing life in prison and fines
no less than $100,000
States with abortion bans taking effect in September
Indiana became the first state to pass
new legislation
Similar to other states, Indiana will ban abortions except in the case of rape, incest or a medical emergency. Even then, the law imposes a complicated process for those abortions to be performed.
Arizona's abortion ban, which would criminalize providing abortions after 15 weeks of pregnancy, is scheduled to go
into effect on Sept. 24
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