Most states had completely banned or restricted abortion practices when Roe was decided. The feminist movements and sexual revolution of the 1960s fought against these restrictions. Linda Coffee and Sarah Weddington were recent graduates of the University of Texas Law School. In 1970, these two women took on a law suit for a pregnant woman Norma L. McCorvey “Jane Roe.” The women claimed that Texas law violated Roe’s constitutional rights when it criminalized abortions that were not used to save the life of the mother. Roe’s life was not endangered, but she could …show more content…
The baby is seen to be alive at this point and the states may say it is illegal to abort it then. States may also regulate second and third trimester abortions because they tend to cause more health risks for the mother after the first three months. The states cannot find an important enough reason to regulate first trimester abortions though. Those abortions are strictly between the patients and their doctors. Roe v. Wade was in 1973 a controversial case and still is today. The case deals with many different ethical, biological, and religious disputes and arguments that the court had to look at and rule over. Some accuse the court of okaying murder, while others say it is a good decision that has helped many struggling