Arizona
Arizona judge won’t suspend ruling that halted all abortions
PHOENIX — An Arizona decide on Friday declined to place her order that allowed enforcement of a pre-statehood legislation making it a criminal offense to supply an abortion on maintain, saying abortion proper teams that requested her to dam the order will not be more likely to prevail on enchantment.
The ruling from Pima County Superior Courtroom Decide Kellie Johnson means the state’s abortion suppliers will be unable to restart procedures. Abortions have been halted on Sept. 23 when Johnson dominated {that a} 1973 injunction should be lifted in order that the Civil Battle-era legislation might be enforced.
Republican Legal professional Normal Mark Brnovich sought the order lifting the injunction. Attorneys along with his workplace advised the decide that, because the U.S. Supreme Courtroom’s June 24 determination stated girls should not have a constitutional proper to acquire an abortion, there was no authorized motive to dam the outdated legislation.
Deliberate Parenthood and its Arizona affiliate had urged Johnson to maintain the injunction issued shortly after Roe v. Wade was determined in 1973. They argued that legal guidelines enacted by the state Legislature within the ensuing 50 years ought to take priority.
Deliberate Parenthood’s attorneys on Monday requested Johnson to place her ruling on maintain to permit an enchantment.
Earlier than final Friday’s ruling permitting enforcement of the outdated legislation, abortions have been authorized in Arizona till the fetus was viable, often at about 24 weeks of being pregnant. However on Saturday, a legislation enacted by the state Legislature final spring banning abortion at 15 weeks took impact.
Gov. Doug Ducey has stated that legislation takes priority, however his attorneys didn’t search to argue that place in court docket. Brnovich and a few Republican lawmakers insist the outdated legislation is in drive.
Brittany Fonteno, president and CEO of Deliberate Parenthood of Arizona, stated she was “outraged” by the ruling.
“It’s impermissible that Arizonans are waking up every morning to their elected officers making conflicting statements about which legal guidelines are in impact or claiming that they have no idea, and but the court docket has refused to supply any readability or aid,” Fonteno stated.
Some clinics in Arizona have been referring sufferers to suppliers in California and New Mexico since Johnson lifted the injunction on the outdated legislation, they usually have been ready to restart abortions. The pre-statehood legislation carries a sentence of two to 5 years in jail for medical doctors or anybody else who assists in an abortion. Final yr, the Legislature repealed a legislation permitting expenses in opposition to girls who search abortions
Ashleigh Feiring, a nurse at abortion supplier Camelback Household Planning in Phoenix, stated her workplace will maintain on the lookout for methods to serve sufferers.
“We’re making an attempt to consider all the pieces we are able to to get loopholes within the legislation,” Feiring stated Friday, including that the ability could be prepared to as soon as once more present the process.
Feiring stated her workplace continues to do post-miscarriage care and supply sufferers with ultrasounds so that they know what number of weeks pregnant they might be. That is vital, as a result of abortion capsules can solely be used within the first 10-12 weeks of a being pregnant.
Feiring stated some sufferers are capable of get an abortion tablet prescription from a supplier in Sweden and get it crammed by means of the mail by a pharmacy in India, however that takes about three weeks. Arizona legislation bans supply of the abortion tablet by means of the mail, and U.S. suppliers usually is not going to take that danger.
Since Roe was overturned, Arizona and 13 different states have banned abortions at any stage of being pregnant. About 13,000 folks in Arizona get an abortion annually, in keeping with Arizona Division of Well being Providers stories.
Arizona
Amazon pauses drone deliveries in Arizona after crash at Oregon test site
PHOENIX (AZFamily) — Amazon has paused all drone deliveries in Arizona.
Currently, Amazon’s Tolleson, Arizona, facility and College Station, Texas, facility are the only ones in the country that offer Air Prime.
Air Prime uses autonomous drones to deliver packages weighing up to 5lbs to customers in 30 minutes or less.
Amazon spokesperson Sam Stephenson says that part of the reason why the company decided to pause drone deliveries was an accident at its test site in Pendleton, Oregon, in December.
“Safety underscores everything we do in Prime Air, and our MK30 drone is safe and compliant. It’s designed to safely respond to unknown events in a known way, and the overall architecture of the drone has performed as expected,” he said. “We’re currently in the process of making software changes to the drone and will be voluntarily pausing our commercial operations on Friday, Jan. 17. Our services will resume once these updates are completed and approved by the FAA.”
Stephenson emphasized that the employees at the Tolleson and College Station facilities will remain working and get paid through the pause in service.
He said that although the incident in Oregon was part of the reason for the pause, it was not the main cause.
“The incident that occurred at our Pendleton, Oregon, facility in Dec. 2024 is not the primary reason for our voluntary operational pause. Prime Air continued to deliver to customers safely and within federal compliance until we voluntarily paused the service on Jan. 17,” Stephenson said.
Mike Fraietta, an FAA-certified drone pilot for Gargoyle Systems, said while this appears to be a step back in drone deliveries, he is optimistic about its future.
“Fortunately, it happened in the lab before it happened in public,” said Fraietta. “With any kind of technology, we’re going to have these hiccups. It’s still in its early stages. These challenges highlight that we need to ensure improvement, ensure safety and reliability.”
See a spelling or grammatical error in our story? Please click here to report it.
Do you have a photo or video of a breaking news story? Send it to us here with a brief description.
Copyright 2025 KTVK/KPHO. All rights reserved.
Arizona
Andy Biggs files statement of interest for Arizona governor
PHOENIX — Rep. Andy Biggs filed a statement of interest on Tuesday to run for Arizona governor in 2026, the first Republican politician in office to do so for the next election cycle.
Biggs, who represents the 5th Congressional District spanning most of the East Valley, said in a statement that he’d rely on his previous political experience if he did decide to run for governor.
“Arizona has a bright future but will need strong leadership to reach its full potential,” Biggs said. “I have been honored to serve Arizona at the state and federal levels and will bring my experience home to my native state to help it fulfill its tremendous capacity.”
What would gubernatorial race look like with Andy Biggs?
A statement of interest filed with the Arizona Secretary of State’s Office doesn’t mean a candidate will officially run for a position, but it does signal Biggs’ captivation with being the Republican nominee for governor.
The list of interested politicians will grow as the 2026 primary election moves closer, but it won’t be the only hurdle for Biggs.
President Donald Trump has already endorsed Karrin Taylor Robson for governor in 2026. Taylor Robson lost to Kari Lake in the 2022 Republican gubernatorial primary.
“Are you running for governor? I think so, Karrin. Because if you do, you’re going to have my support,” Trump said after pointing to Robson in the crowd during Turning Point’s AmericaFest event at the Phoenix Convention Center in December.
If Biggs won the primary, he’d likely face off against Democratic Gov. Katie Hobbs in the general election.
Scott Neely, who unsuccessfully ran for governor in 2022 and Mesa mayor in 2024, is one of five other politicians to file a statement of interest for governor in 2026.
“I have a firm understanding of what the state needs to thrive,” Biggs said. “I look forward to conversing with my fellow Arizonans as I consider this weighty decision.”
Arizona
The ESPN BPI Expects West Virginia to Protect Home Floor vs. Arizona State
It’s a rather quick turnaround for the West Virginia Mountaineers, who are coming off yet another massive win, this time over second-ranked Iowa State.
Tonight, Darian DeVries and Co. will welcome the Arizona State Sun Devils to the WVU Coliseum for the first time in what will be the first-ever matchup between the two programs.
According to the ESPN Basketball Power Index (BPI) matchup predictor, West Virginia has a 75.2% chance to improve to 14-4, while Arizona State has a 24.8% chance to pick up their second win in league play.
Given Arizona State’s struggles throughout the first half of the season, this number feels like it’s in the right spot. They have the talent to win some games in the Big 12 and aren’t likely to finish in the bottom three or four, so that’s why it’s hard to justify going much higher than the 75%. Plus, can WVU control its emotions and put the Iowa State win to bed?
For the Mountaineers to remain in the Big 12 title picture, they really needed to go 1-1 at worst last week against a pair of top-10 teams, and they did exactly that. They fought as long as they could on the road at Houston but just wore out at the end of the second half. DeVries’ squad was able to bounce back and protect its home floor on Saturday, knocking off No. 2 Iowa State on the day they honored the legendary Jerry West.
The Sun Devils lost both of their games last week against UCF and Cincinnati by six and seven points, respectively. In their loss to UCF, ASU shot the ball extremely well, going 52% from the floor and 50% (12/24) from three-point range. They accomplished just about everything they wanted to do offensively. The problem is that UCF did as well. The loss to Cincinnati was more of an old-school slugfest where they found themselves trailing by 14 at the half. They outscored the Bearcats in the second half, but it was too little, too late.
MORE STORIES FROM WEST VIRGINIA ON SI
Big 12 Title Race: It’s “Take Care of Business Week” for West Virginia
West Virginia Returns to the AP Top 25
Jahmile Addae is One Game Away from Coaching in the Super Bowl
Big 12 Basketball Power Rankings + Schedule: Week of 1/20
-
Technology1 week ago
L’Oréal’s new skincare gadget told me I should try retinol
-
Technology6 days ago
Super Bowl LIX will stream for free on Tubi
-
Business1 week ago
Why TikTok Users Are Downloading ‘Red Note,’ the Chinese App
-
Technology4 days ago
Nintendo omits original Donkey Kong Country Returns team from the remaster’s credits
-
Culture4 days ago
American men can’t win Olympic cross-country skiing medals — or can they?
-
Technology1 week ago
Meta is already working on Community Notes for Threads
-
Politics5 days ago
U.S. Reveals Once-Secret Support for Ukraine’s Drone Industry
-
Culture2 days ago
Book Review: ‘Somewhere Toward Freedom,’ by Bennett Parten