OPINION
Wayne Coleman appeals the district court’s denial of his petition for habeas corpus. In May 1997, Coleman was convicted by an Ohio state court of involuntary manslaughter and felonious assault, pursuant to a
nolo contendere
plea. Coleman had kicked Olivia Williams in the abdomen and otherwise had battered her. As a result of Coleman’s violent actions, Williams suffered a miscarriage, leading to his conviction for involuntary manslaughter. Coleman argues that the manslaughter conviction violated his Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process rights under
Roe v. Wade,
I
In the fall of 1996, Coleman was romantically involved with Olivia Williams. On October 4, 1996, Coleman, while physically abusing Williams, kicked her in the abdomen. At the time of the assault, Williams was pregnant, and Coleman’s blow to Williams’s abdomen caused her to miscarry.
Coleman was arrested five days later. On October 25,1996, Coleman was indicted for felonious assault and involuntary manslaughter, pursuant to Ohio Rev. Code § 2903.04. The indictment alleged that *911 Coleman committed involuntary manslaughter by “unlawfully terminating] Olivia Williams’ pregnancy, as a proximate result of ... committing a felony.”
Coleman pled no contest to the involuntary manslaughter and felonious assault counts. Pursuant to his plea, the Ohio trial court sentenced him to nine years of imprisonment for involuntary manslaughter, to run concurrently with a seven-year sentence for felonious assault.
Coleman appealed his conviction to the Ohio Court of Appeals, arguing that Ohio Rev.Code § 2903.04, the basis for his involuntary manslaughter conviction, was unconstitutional because it did not require proof of the terminated fetus’s viability. The Ohio Court of Appeals affirmed his conviction, upholding the statute’s constitutionality. Coleman then appealed to the Ohio Supreme Court, which summarily affirmed the Court of Appeals.
Coleman then filed a petition for habeas corpus in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio. There, Coleman argued that his conviction and sentence for involuntary manslaughter violated both his Fourteenth Amendment substantive due process rights and his Eighth Amendment right to be free from cruel and unusual punishment. The district court found both arguments without merit and denied Coleman’s petition for habeas corpus.
Coleman now appeals the district court’s denial of his petition.
II
In this case, our consideration of Coleman’s petition for habeas corpus is limited by the Anti-Terrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996. The Act prohibits federal courts from issuing a writ of habeas corpus with respect to any claim that was “adjudicated on the merits in the state court unless the adjudication of the claim resulted in a decision that was contrary to, or involved an unreasonable application of, clearly established Federal law, as determined by the Supreme Court of the United States.” 28 U.S.C. § 2254(d)(1). The Ohio courts, in this case, decided against Coleman all the issues that he currently raises. Thus, Section 2254(d)(1) applies.
Coleman argues that the state may not prohibit the termination of a pregnancy before the viability of the fetus because of the Supreme Court’s interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment in
Roe v. Wade,
A. Coleman’s Substantive Due Process Claim
Coleman argues that his conviction for involuntary manslaughter pursuant to Ohio Rev.Code § 2903.04 is unconstitutional because it violated the substantive due process rights announced in Roe v. Wade and its progeny. The relevant section of the Ohio code provides as follows: “No person shall cause the death of another or the unlawful termination of another’s pregnancy as a proximate result of the offender’s committing or attempting to commit a misdemeanor of any degree.” Ohio Rev.Code § 2903.04. Because the statute does not require the state to allege or to prove the viability of the terminated fetus, Coleman contends that the statute is beyond the state’s prescriptive power under Roe and is therefore unconstitutional.
*912
Coleman’s argument misconceives the nature of the right established in
Roe.
Coleman sees
Roe
as an absolute prohibition on state regulation or protection of fetal health before viability. In
Roe,
the Supreme Court held that a woman’s right to privacy, derived from the substantive components of the Fourteenth Amendment’s Due Process Clause, includes a woman’s right to decide whether or not to terminate her own pregnancy. Although the precise justification for the right has never been fully articulated, the right appears to rest, at least in part, on a pregnant woman’s interest in self-determination and the profound effect that pregnancy has upon the woman.
See Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v. Casey,
The Court’s creation of this right under the Fourteenth Amendment was not, however, a determination that the state has no prescriptive interest in matters involving the unborn. Quite to the contrary, the Court in
Roe
recognized that the state had important interests in protecting fetal life.
Roe,
In
Roe,
strict scrutiny was triggered by the woman’s substantive due process right to decide the outcome of her pregnancy, an interest directly regulated by the Texas statute forbidding women from procuring abortions. While the woman’s liberty interest in the abortion decision remains constant, the state’s regulatory interest grows over the term of the pregnancy. At least according to the Court in
Roe,
the state’s interest in protecting fetal life becomes “compelling,” and thereby capable of surviving strict scrutiny, when the fetus becomes viable.
Id.
at 163,
*913 Ohio’s interest in the protection of fetal life need not be compelling, however, to justify the application of the Ohio involuntary manslaughter statute to Coleman’s actions. 2 Punishing Coleman’s actions in no way implicates a ivoman’s right to determine the disposition of her pregnancy recognized in Roe and its progeny. Coleman’s violent assault was without the consent of his helpless girlfriend, Olivia Williams. It is Williams, the pregnant woman, who holds the limited right to terminate her pregnancy before viability, and Coleman may not invoke it on her behalf. The right recognized in Roe not being implicated, the state’s interest in protecting the life of the unborn need not be “compelling” to sustain the regulation of Coleman’s actions.
If we know anything from
Roe,
it is that the state has a legitimate and important interest in protecting fetal life throughout the pregnancy, even before viability.
Roe,
In light of the true meaning of Roe, Coleman’s argument is fraught with irony. The Ohio involuntary manslaughter statute as applied to actions, like Coleman’s, protects a woman’s right to determine the fate of her pregnancy. The substantive due process right in Roe is a decisional right against governmental interference, which is meaningless when a private party terminates a woman’s pregnancy without her consent. Protecting the ability to exercise a fundamental right is a compelling state interest that would survive strict scrutiny even if it were required.
Coleman also haltingly argues that the statute is unconstitutionally overbroad in that it may, in addition to Coleman’s conduct, also proscribe constitutionally protected conduct. Here, Coleman seeks to invalidate the manslaughter statute by in- *914 yoking the rights of the woman whom he abused. There are two problems with Coleman’s overbreadth argument, each independently fatal to his claim.
First, in the overbreadth doctrine, Coleman is trying to assert a feature of our First Amendment jurisprudence that is inapplicable to Coleman’s Fourteenth Amendment argument. The over-breadth doctrine is an exception to the traditional rules of standing by allowing litigants to assert the rights of pax-ties not before the court.
Triplett Grille, Inc. v. City of Akron,
Neither the Supreme Court nor this court has applied the overbreadth doctrine when the First Amendment was not implicated.
See United States v. Salerno,
Second, even if we were inclined to engage in an overbreadth analysis, the statute does not appear to reach any protected conduct. The statute prohibits the “unlawful termination of another’s pregnancy as a proximate result of the offender’s committing ... a misdemeanor.” To prevail, the state appears x-equired to establish at least two elements under the statute: (1) that the termination of the pregnancy was “unlawful,” and (2) that it was caused by the defendant’s commission of a misdemeanor. We are not aware of any Ohio law that makes a woman’s procuring of a consensual abortion a “misdemeanor,” triggering the involuntary manslaughter statute. More *915 over, such a consensual abortion very likely would not be “unlawful” as interpreted by Ohio courts. In this sense, the statute seems well-tailored to target activity, like Coleman’s, that interferes with the woman’s right to continue, or under certain limited circumstances to terminate, her pregnancy.
Because Coleman’s conviction does not transgress any reasonable interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment, much less one clearly established by the Supreme Court of the United States, we affirm the district court’s judgment finding Coleman’s substantive due process argument without merit.
B. Coleman’s Cruel and Unusual Punishment Claim
Coleman also argues that his sentence of nine years for involuntary manslaughter violates his Eighth Amendment right against cruel and unusual punishment.
The Eighth Amendment does forbid extreme sentences that are “grossly disproportionate to the crime.”
See Harmelin v. Michigan,
Coleman’s sentence of nine years for involuntary manslaughter is far from the “gross disproportionality” required to offend the Eighth Amendment. Coleman’s actions were violent and deprived Williams of her child, or at least the ability to exercise her rights over her pregnancy. At least as important as a woman’s right to terminate her pregnancy is her right to choose to carry her child to term. In a jurisprudence that finds mandatory life sentences for the non-violent possession of cocaine constitutionally permissible,
see Harmelin,
Ill
We therefore AFFIRM the judgment of the district court, denying Coleman’s petition for a writ of habeas corpus.
Notes
. The protection of fetal life is not the only legitimate state interest in the regulation of abortion. The Court also recognized that the state has a legitimate interest in protecting the health of the mother, which becomes compelling after the first trimester of pregnancy. This interest would justify a variety of regulations on the manner in which abortions are performed. The combination of these two interests underlay the Court’s trimester framework in
Roe.
Under the trimester framework, the state was allowed to adopt regulations narrowly tailored to protect the health of the mother after the first trimester, and regulations narrowly tailored to protect fetal health, including a complete proscription of abortions, except when necessary to preserve the life or health of the mother, after the second (rimester.
See Roe,
. Of course, not every state regulation is subject to strict scrutiny. Instead, a state prescription is required to survive strict scrutiny only when the regulated activity is protected by “certain fundamental rights.”
Id.
at 155,
. Indeed, this is why facial constitutional challenges are universally unsuccessful as defenses to criminal prosecutions for non-expressive conduct. If the statute is constitutional as applied to the defendant's activities, it a fortiorari fails the Salerno standard.
