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Abortion providers are suing over a handful of new and old abortion restrictions they say violate Kansans’ right to abortion. Attorney General Kris Kobach says the rules are necessary.
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Witnesses told the National Transportation Safety Board that Gietzen's was flying low in dark, rainy conditions shortly before it crashed last May.
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The state reported its highest number of abortions in decades last year, after the overturning of Roe sent thousands of out-of-state women to Kansas clinics.
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The anti-abortion movement is contending with a growing faction that calls for abortion patients to be criminally punished.
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The deal means the controversial new law won’t take immediate effect in Kansas.
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Kansas abortion clinics are challenging four state abortion restrictions, including a decades-old 24-hour waiting period and a new “abortion pill reversal” law.
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Gietzen died Tuesday night in Nebraska when his Cessna 172 crashed into a field. He was 69.
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The federal investigation focuses on two hospitals: Freeman Health System in Joplin, Missouri, and University of Kansas Hospital in Kansas City, Kansas.
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Republicans vowed to override Democratic Gov. Laura Kelly's veto when lawmakers return to the Statehouse next week.
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The bill is based on the disputed premise that doctors sometimes leave infants to die if they’re born living as a result of an attempted abortion — something critics say doesn’t happen.