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UPDATED: Trial Ends In Kentucky Abortion Clinic Case

EMW Women's Surgical Center has resumed abortions up to 21 weeks and six days, following clarification from a federal judge.
EMW Women's Surgical Center has resumed abortions up to 21 weeks and six days, following clarification from a federal judge.

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Testimony has ended in a federal trial that could decide whether Kentucky becomes the nation's first state without an abortion facility.

The three-day trial ended Friday in federal court in Louisville. Attorneys will have 60 days to present post-trial briefs to U.S. District Judge Greg Stivers. Stivers heard the case without a jury.

The case revolves around a licensing fight between the state and EMW Women's Surgical Center in Louisville. The clinic is challenging a Kentucky law requiring abortion facilities to have transfer agreements with a hospital and transportation agreements with an ambulance service.

ACLU attorney Brigitte Amiri says the state failed to offer a "shred of evidence" that transfer agreements protect patient safety.

The state's lead attorney, Steve Pitt, says the clinic didn't "come close" to meeting its burden of proof and is asking that the law be struck down.

This story has been updated. 

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