Last week the Associated Press reported how pro-abortion “shield laws” help abortionists in other states violate pro-life laws in states like Arkansas.
In 2022 the U.S. Supreme Court reversed Roe v. Wade — effectively letting Arkansas prohibit abortion except to save the life of the mother. State law prohibits abortion drugs from being mailed or delivered into Arkansas. However, some states — like New York and Massachusetts — have enacted “shield laws” that protect abortionists who send abortion drugs across state lines. If an abortionist in one of these states mails abortion drugs to Arkansas, the state’s “shield law” prevents the abortionist from being prosecuted.
The A.P. writes,
Dr. Margaret Carpenter faces a felony charge in Louisiana for supplying abortion medication through the mail to a pregnant teen in that state. The patient’s mother also faces criminal charges. A Texas judge fined the same physician $100,000 after the state accused her of prescribing abortion medication for a woman near Dallas.
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So far, the prosecution hasn’t progressed thanks to New York’s shield law, which has protected Carpenter from extradition to Louisiana. But other telehealth centers operating in states with similar legal protections for abortion providers are watching closely.
Abortion drugs don’t just kill unborn children. They also harm women.
A recent study by the experts at the Ethics and Public Policy Center shows abortion drugs are at least 22 times more dangerous than the U.S. Food and Drug Administration labeling indicates.
The study — which relied on all-payer insurance claims data from 2017 to 2023 — found nearly one in nine women suffered serious health complications like sepsis, infection, and hemorrhaging as a direct result of the abortion drugs.
Abortion drugs simply should not be for sale in America — and abortionists certainly should not be free to mail them across state lines.
Last year Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin issued cease-and-desist letters to New York companies advertising abortion pills in Arkansas in violation of Arkansas law. The A.G.’s office later reported that the advertisements for abortion pills stopped as a result of their cease-and-desist. As we said at the time, that is good news — but it is clear that more work needs to be done to stop these dangerous drugs.
LifeNews Note: Jerry Cox is the president of the Arkansas Family Council.
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Author: Jerry Cox
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