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Puerto Rico enacts law granting unborn children criminal protection, expanding murder charges to include fetal death, while preserving abortion access when the mother’s life or health is at risk.
Puerto Rico has passed Law 18-2026, signed by Governor Jenniffer González-Colón, defining an unborn child as a human being under criminal law, expanding murder charges to include fetal deaths.
Named after Keishla Madlane Rodríguez Ortiz, a pregnant woman killed in 2021, the law aims to treat violence ending a pregnancy as a crime against two victims.
While abortion remains legal when a woman’s life or health is at risk, the new law creates a legal contradiction by granting unborn children criminal protections.
The legislation, part of broader reforms including civil rights recognition, has drawn praise from pro-life advocates and criticism from medical and abortion rights groups concerned about legal risks for patients and providers.
Puerto Rico promulga una ley que otorga protección penal a los niños no nacidos, expandiendo los cargos de asesinato para incluir la muerte fetal, al tiempo que preserva el acceso al aborto cuando la vida o la salud de la madre está en riesgo.