KANSAS CITY, Mo. — Planned Parenthood wanted to resume offering abortions in several Missouri clinics on Friday, immediately after a newly passed constitutional amendment rolling back the state's near-total ban took effect, but they remain on hold as a complicated court battle drags on.
The issue is that the amendment does not specifically override any state laws. And even before the end of Roe v. Wade enabled Missouri's Republican-led legislature to approve a near-total ban, the state's numerous restrictions left it with just one abortion clinic, in St. Louis.
Missouri's Republican attorney general says many of those old laws — like a 72-hour waiting period — should still be enforced despite the amendment; Planned Parenthood says they shouldn't.
Prosecutors are caught in the middle. They want a preliminary injunction halting enforcement of the old laws while attorneys argue about what to do.
But so far, Jackson County Circuit Judge Jerri Zhang hasn't acted on that request.
''As of today, Missourians have an unrealized constitutional right,'' said Emily Wales, president and CEO of the Planned Parenthood Great Plains in a written statement. "They are entitled to access abortion under the state's constitution, and every day they cannot get that care here at home, their rights are being violated.''
Here is what to know about the complicated legal battle and the state of abortion access:
Missouri was one of several states that moved to expand access