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A new Texas law, in effect on Dec. 2, imposes new criminal penalties on prescribing the pills used in medication abortions via telehealth, and sending them to patients through the mail.
With lawsuits and legislation, Texas Republicans take aim at abortion pills Over 2,800 Texans are getting abortion pills through the mail from out-of-state every month, prompting a lawsuit ...
In fact, it remains legal in Texas for pregnant women to use abortion pills to end their pregnancies, however they received them. SB 4 exempts these users from criminal punishment. The law’s ...
Since Texas passed its anti-abortion law, more and more women have been getting abortion pills at unregulated pharmacies in Mexican border towns — where they are freely sold without a ...
In recent years, universal injunctions have shifted from the margins of the U.S. judicial system to become a much more common strategy to approach high-profile issues—such as abortion medication.
In 2021, when Texas passed an abortion ban enforced through private lawsuits, U.S. Supreme Court Justice Elena Kagan sarcastically derided the architects of the law as “some geniuses” who’d ...
That the Texas Senate passed a bill to crack down on abortion pills isn’t surprising. But the protections written into this bill, which says the law cannot be challenged as unconstitutional in ...
Lindsay London holds protest sign in front of federal court building in support of access to abortion medication outside the Federal Courthouse on Wednesday, March 15, 2023 in Amarillo, Texas.
A new Texas law, in effect on Dec. 2, imposes new criminal penalties on prescribing the pills used in medication abortions via telehealth, and sending them to patients through the mail.