HR4964-119

In Committee

Child Interstate Abortion Notification Act

119th Congress Introduced Aug 12, 2025

Summary

What This Bill Does

The Child Interstate Abortion Notification Act creates new federal offenses and notification rules around minors, abortion, and state parental involvement laws. A person who knowingly transports a minor across state lines intending that the minor obtain an abortion, and thereby abridges a parental notification, consent, or court-proceeding requirement in the minor's home state, can be fined or imprisoned for up to one year. The bill exempts abortions necessary to save the minor's life, protects the transported minor and the minor's parent from prosecution or suit for the transportation offense, creates affirmative defenses based on reasonable parental-consent information or court documentation, and gives harmed parents a civil action unless the parent committed incest. It separately makes a physician who performs or induces an abortion on an out-of-state minor provide at least 24 hours actual or constructive notice to a parent unless exceptions apply, including compliance with the abortion state's parental-involvement law, court waiver documentation, abuse reporting, life endangerment with later written parent notice, or physical accompaniment by a documented parent.

Who Benefits and How

Parental rights organizations benefit because the bill creates criminal penalties and civil remedies when out-of-state transport bypasses parental involvement laws. State law enforcement agencies benefit from a federal rule extending home-state parental-involvement policies across state lines. Family law attorneys benefit from a civil action for harmed parents unless the parent committed incest with the minor. Prosecutor offices benefit from new federal offenses and definitions covering transportation and physician notice violations.

Who Bears the Burden and How

People transporting minors for abortions face fines or up to one year imprisonment when the transport circumvents parental involvement laws. Physicians performing abortions on out-of-state minors must provide 24 hours actual or constructive parent notice unless an exception applies. Minor abortion patients face reduced confidential access to out-of-state abortion care even though the bill bars prosecuting or suing the minor for the transportation offense. Abortion providers must evaluate parental involvement laws, court waivers, abuse declarations, life-endangerment exceptions, and documentation rules.

Key Provisions

  • Creates a federal offense for transporting a minor across state lines to circumvent parental involvement abortion laws.
  • Provides life-saving, court-waiver, parental-information, and abuse-reporting exceptions or defenses.
  • Creates civil relief for harmed parents while barring suits against transported minors and certain parents.
  • Requires physicians performing abortions on out-of-state minors to give at least 24 hours parent notice unless an exception applies.
  • Defines abortion, minor, parent, actual notice, constructive notice, and covered parental involvement laws.

Evidence Chain:

This summary is generated from the full bill text using AI analysis. Expand "Detailed Analysis" below for identified beneficiaries/burden bearers with clause-level evidence links.

At a Glance

What This Bill Does

Creates federal criminal, notice, exception, affirmative-defense, and civil-remedy rules for transporting minors across state lines for abortions and performing abortions on out-of-state minors.

Key Policy Areas

Abortion, Criminal Law, Parental Rights

Primary Purpose

Creates federal criminal, notice, exception, affirmative-defense, and civil-remedy rules for transporting minors across state lines for abortions and performing abortions on out-of-state minors.

Policy Domains

Abortion Criminal Law Parental Rights

Resolution provisions

Identified Gains
  • Parental rights organizations
  • State law enforcement agencies
  • Family law attorneys
  • Prosecutor offices
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: ih
Prosecutor offices: , , , ,
Family law attorneys: , , , ,
Parental rights organizations: , , , ,
State law enforcement agencies: , , , ,
Identified Costs
  • People transporting minors for abortions
  • Abortion clinic providers
  • Minor abortion patients
  • Abortion providers
Model: codex-gpt-5 | Version: bill_summary_v2 | Source: ih
Abortion providers: , , , ,
Minor abortion patients: , , , ,
Abortion clinic providers: , , , ,
People transporting minors for abortions: , , , ,

Legislative Progress

In Committee
Introduced Committee Passed
Aug 12, 2025

Mr. Taylor (for himself, Mr. Onder, Mr. Harris of North …

Aug 12, 2025

Referred to the House Committee on the Judiciary.

Aug 12, 2025

Introduced in House

Stakeholder Effects

cui bono?

How this legislation distributes effects. Mention counts reflect frequency, not effect magnitude.

Nonprofits
5 mentions across 5 clauses
+5 positive

Parental rights organizations

Professional Services
5 mentions across 5 clauses
+5 positive

Family law attorneys

Law Enforcement
5 mentions across 5 clauses
+5 positive

Prosecutor offices

Advocacy Groups
5 mentions across 5 clauses
-5 negative

People transporting minors for abortions

Health Care Providers
5 mentions across 5 clauses
-5 negative

Abortion clinic providers

Healthcare
5 mentions across 5 clauses
-5 negative

Minor abortion patients

5/8
sections analyzed
Full impact breakdown

Bill Structure & Actor Mappings

Who is "The Secretary" in each section?

Domains
Abortion Criminal Law Parental Rights

We use a combination of our own taxonomy and classification in addition to large language models to assess meaning and potential beneficiaries. High confidence means strong textual evidence. Always verify with the original bill text.

Learn more about our methodology