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Louisiana mother, New York doctor indicted for allegedly giving minor abortion pills • Tennessee Lookout

A big ju judge in the Baton Rouge area charged a New York doctor and Louisiana mother on Friday with a felony charge that allegedly provided. Illegal abortion Drugs obtained by mail.

It is the first criminal case of its kind since the US Supreme Court was overturned. Roev. Wade In 2022, it caused strict abortion bans in Louisiana.

Her company, Nightingale Medical, Dr. Margaret Carpenter, and the mother of the minor in question, were all charged in the 18th Judicial District Court. Illuminator The mother has not been identified to protect the identity of the minor. News was first reported WAFB-TV.

District Attorney Tony Clayton said his mother was in custody. Her bond amount was not available immediately.

Prosecutors allegedly claimed that her mother ordered abortion pills from the carpenter, and the carpenter reportedly sent it to her by mail, and the mother reportedly gave it to her pregnant child.

“The minor child was home alone and felt that he had to take the pill for what his mother told her,” Clayton said in an interview with I’ll talk about Louisiana.

In an interview with IlluminatorClayton said he would personally try the case with Louisiana Attorney General Liz Maryll. Their prosecution includes a Law Approved in 2022, Sen. Sharon Hewitt, a Slidell Republican, wrote a proposal to make it a crime to intentionally cause abortion through drugs. A pregnant person cannot be charged with a crime under this law.

The prison is fined between 1-5 years and fines between $5,000 and $50,000. The same measure has made it illegal to obtain such medicines through out-of-state mail.

Murril put pressure on the charges through Social Media Friday.

“It is illegal to send abortion pills to this condition, and it is illegal for others to force an abortion,” she said. “I’ve said it before, and I’ll say it again: we hold individuals accountable for breaking the law.”

The “forced abortion” crime was not cited in the prosecution, but the law that includes the crime was noted in Louisiana. The initial state of reclassifying mifepristone and misoprostol As a controlled, dangerous substance. Typically, designations apply to highly addictive drugs. Mifepristone and Misoprostol are non-addictive, both have multiple uses beyond abortion and are listed on the World Health Organization’s Essential Drug List.

In an interview with Tokulisiana, Clayton called the drugs “venom” and compared them to fentanyl, saying doctors could not ship the drugs to Louisiana “hiding behind the New York border.” [Mifepristone and misoprostol are not related to fentanyl.]

“To put it in commerce at the end [goes] In the mouth and stomach of a child, I believe some people have to answer that,” Clayton said. “If it’s legal in New York, just keep it there. Don’t do that here.”

New York has a Shield Act aimed at protecting telehealth providers.

Carpenter is also allegedly sending pills to the state by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton, but the charges are not a crime.

Carpenter is one of the founders of the Abortion Coalition for Telemedicine (ACT). In a statement of Illuminatorthe law said it is behind the New York Shield Act.

“The Louisiana incident against licensed New York doctors is the latest in a series of threats that put women’s access to reproductive care across the country,” the statement reads. “Don’t make a mistake since then Roev. Wade They overthrew themselves and witnessed an unsettling pattern of interfering with women’s rights. It is no secret that the United States has a history of violence and harassment against abortion providers. The country’s sponsored efforts to prosecute doctors who provide safe and effective care must be on guard for everyone. ”

This is a developing story. It was recently updated at 4:45pm on Fridays.

(Louisiana lighting equipment) It is a nonprofit news network that is part of the state newsroom and supports a coalition of grants and donors as a public charity of 501C(3). Louisiana Illuminator maintains editorial independence. Please contact editor Greg Larose for any questions. [email protected]. )