
North Dakota's only abortion clinic fights to halt "trigger" ban
The Red River Women's Clinic argues that the ban violates the rights to life, safety and happiness guaranteed by the state constitution.
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The Red River Women's Clinic argues that the ban violates the rights to life, safety and happiness guaranteed by the state constitution.
Anti-abortion centers mislead patients seeking abortions by offering "counseling" and dressing staff like doctors, AG warns.
The performer defended herself and denied any intent to spread transphobia in a series of tweets.
Civilians killed in Odesa attack; Fourth of July holiday travel underway.
Most big companies offering an abortion travel benefit will likely add it to existing health care plans, says expert.
Donations are pouring in to nonprofit groups in what experts call an example of "rage giving."
Years before Roe v. Wade protected a woman's right to choose, an Arizona mother of four faced giving birth to a child with a congenital disorder after having taken thalidomide. With abortion unavailable to her, Sherri Chessen traveled to Sweden for the procedure, her every move followed by a breathless media. Now 89, Chessen talks with CBS News chief White House correspondent Major Garrett about her choice (which she said "any mother would do to save her own child from suffering"), and her belief that the Supreme Court's ruling to overturn Roe is awakening "a great dose of anger" among women.
60 years ago an Arizona mother of four, who faced giving birth to a child with a congenital disorder after having taken thalidomide, traveled to Sweden for an abortion. Today she says the end of Roe is awakening "a great dose of anger" among women.
48M Americans expected to hit the roads this weekend; “Car boot sales” growing popular in the U.K amid rising prices
The Texas Supreme Court has temporarily blocked a lower court order that allowed some abortions to resume.
The Texas Supreme Court has blocked a lower court order that gave some abortion clinics confidence to resume performing abortions.
Visits to counseling centers, fertility centers, addiction treatment facilities, weight loss clinics and cosmetic surgery clinics will also be erased from users' location histories.
Bellwethers from finance, technology and retail industries are bankrolling workers who need to access reproductive services.
President Biden declared Friday that the fight over abortion rights "is not over" as he met with Democratic governors from states where abortion is still legal. Meanwhile, patients and doctors are struggling to navigate the evolving legal landscape around abortion restrictions. Adriana Diaz has the latest.
Pregnancy can come with dangerous complications, and doctors say without access to safe, legal abortion "many, many people will die." Here's why.
"That was a threat to our institutions of government," Hutchinson said about Jan. 6.
Nearly all abortions were immediately banned in Arkansas last week immediately after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade. Governor Asa Hutchinson joins "CBS Mornings" to discuss the state’s legislation.
The overturning of Roe v. Wade "is going to make pregnancy more dangerous," one doctor said. Another put it bluntly: "Many, many people will die."
Democrats on the left want their party to take action to ensure women have access to abortions.
President Joe Biden called on the Senate to eliminate its filibuster rules to allow Congress to codify abortion protections and privacy rights. CBS News congressional correspondent Scott MacFarlane reports.
Tech companies are facing numerous questions on whether they will cooperate with law enforcement officials who may seek to prosecute abortions where the procedure is now banned. CBS News tech reporter Dan Patterson has more on the pressures these companies are facing, including from their own employees.
In a historic day, Supreme Court Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson was sworn in as the 116th justice and first Black woman on the nation's highest court. It follows a divisive term during which the court overturned Roe v. Wade. Jan Crawford has more.
In the wake of the Supreme Court decision overturning Roe v. Wade, major corporations such as Target and Google are adding abortion travel costs to their employee benefits. The goal is to ensure their employees can seek abortion care if they live in states where the procedure is now or will soon be illegal.
The Alabama attorney general's office argued that gender transition treatments are not "deeply rooted in our history or traditions."
The law would prohibit abortions after 15 weeks and will most likely be fought for by the state.
The Justice Dept. released transcripts of Deputy AG Todd Blanche's two-day interview with convicted sex trafficker and Jeffrey Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell.
The Trump administration may try to deport Kilmar Abrego Garcia to Uganda days after he was released from pre-trial detention, according to a DHS official.
The mid-decade map redraw adds five Republican-leaning districts and sets up a legal showdown over minority representation.
California prison officials have denied parole for Erik and Lyle Menendez.
President Trump also said he's willing to bring in the "regular military," not just the National Guard.
A tour bus with more than 50 passengers lost control and rolled over on the New York State Thruway near Pembroke, killing five people, police said.
Speaking with reporters on Friday, President Trump said the deal came out of a meeting last week with Intel CEO Lip Bu Tan.
Lt. General Jeffrey Kruse is no longer Defense Intelligence Agency director, a senior defense official confirmed Friday.
The FBI confirmed it that it searched former national security adviser John Bolton's house early Friday morning.