The Supreme Court's decision is already having tragic consequences.

A 10-year-old girl, pregnant after a rape, had to leave her state of Ohio to have an abortion after the Supreme Court's about-face, a police officer quoted by American media confirmed on Wednesday.

Her story, originally reported by an Indiana gynecologist, was cited by President Joe Biden on Friday to decry the high court's decision on June 24 to no longer guarantee the right to abortion.

Ohio Attorney General Dave Yost, whose state immediately banned abortions after six weeks of pregnancy, had expressed doubts about its veracity.

"It looks like an invention," said the elected Republican.

Columbus police, however, arrested a suspect on Tuesday, and during his appearance before a judge on Wednesday, an investigator confirmed details of the tragedy, the

Columbus Dispatch

daily reported .

Abortion banned in ten states

The agent, Jeffrey Huhn, explained to the magistrate that the victim's mother had informed the local child protection services of her daughter's pregnancy on June 22 and that the latter had then seized the police.

The girl had an abortion on June 30 in the neighboring state of Indiana, where abortions remain legal and the remains of the embryo are subject to genetic testing to confirm links with the suspect, the policeman said.

According to court documents seen by AFP, Gerson Fuentes, 27, was charged with "rape of a minor under 13" following an assault on May 12.

He was taken into custody in a Franklin County jail.

Contacted by AFP, the Columbus police did not respond.

Since the Supreme Court ruling, a dozen conservative states have banned abortions on their soil.

Most provide an exception to protect the life of the pregnant woman, but not always in cases of rape or incest.

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