The three free-standing abortion facilities in South Carolina, Planned Parenthood in Charleston and Columbia, and the Greenville Women’s Clinic in Greenville (a private facility) perform the majority of abortions occurring in South Carolina. All three currently are open and performing abortions on
women whose unborn children do not have a detectable heartbeat, or until about six weeks gestation.
According to the DHEC Abortion Report for 2022,
chemical abortions, also known as the Abortion Pill, killed most of the unborn children in the state’s licensed facilities that at that time could do abortions up to 20 weeks post fertilization. (See Table 3).
Planned Parenthood Complains Business Down 75%
In its most recent lawsuit again challenging the Fetal Heartbeat Act, the state’s largest abortion business, Planned Parenthood, complained that business is down by 75 percent in its facilities in Columbia and Charleston. The lawsuit claims that as a result of the Fetal Heartbeat Act, Planned Parenthood “has been forced to turn away the vast majority of patients seeking abortion.”
From August 23, 2023, to January 31, 2024, the lawsuit alleges, Planned Parenthood “has been able to provide only 303 abortions in South Carolina, out of 1,209 patients who have made abortion appointments at its South Carolina health centers.”
The legal action seeking to once again to enjoin – meaning stop enforcement of – the Fetal Heartbeat Act is scheduled to be heard on May 2, 2024, at 9:30 a.m. before 5th Circuit Judge Daniel Coble whose father, Bob Coble was the long-term mayor of Columbia and whose grandfather, the late Daniel R. McLeod, served as the South Carolina Attorney General from 1959 to 1983.
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