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The Indiana Supreme Court was established in 1816 when Indiana was granted statehood. The new Court replaced the General Court of the Indiana Territory, which consisted of a three-member panel. Housed in a three-room building it shared with the Indiana legislature, the Court held its first session in Corydon on May 5, 1817.
In the late 1960s, Indiana saw various reforms to the anti-abortion laws of the 1950s, which previously made it “a crime at common law to wilfully solicit and/or procure a miscarriage” or to “wilfully terminate a pregnancy except by the operation of nature.” [11] By 1967, no state had fully legalized abortion, but many states had begun the process of reforming laws in favor of ...
[citation needed] Indiana laws were revised many times over the years, but the current approach to updating the code in a regular manner began in 1971. A special agency was established to reorganize the entire body of law for the State of Indiana, leading to the development of 36 distinct Titles that correspond to subject categories.
The Indiana Supreme Court will decide the fate of the state’s new abortion law.
The Supreme Court issued an order allowing Indiana to begin enforcing a state law requiring parental consent for a minor to get an abortion.
The Indiana Supreme Court on Thursday released documents showing Attorney General Todd Rokita agreed he violated certain attorney misconduct rules when he appeared on a Fox News program in 2022 ...
Robinson (1855), another famous case from the 1850s, the state supreme court ruled in favor of Freeman, a free black man, by recognizing his "right to sue a federal marshal in a state court for assault and battery that occurred after his arrest, as well as extortion." [113] [114] In the Indiana Supreme Court case of Smith v.
Indiana asked the Supreme Court on Thursday to let it enforce a law requiring parental consent in order for a minor to get an abortion.