Birth control pills, the targeted abortion under the new Texas Law, rejects “pre -emptive obedience” | miscarriage
Greg Abbott, the Republican Governor of Texas, signed on Wednesday to a draft law law that allows people to prosecute anyone suspected of manufacturing, distributing or sending abortion pills to Texas or from Texas. Certainly, the first unique law of its kind is highly escalating with the confrontation, each case separately on the laws of abortion in the post-USA-especially that some abortion offices outside the state have already pledged that they will continue to charge the birth control pills to Texas.
“Our slogan is not as a practice in:” no proactive obedience. “” We will continue to provide care so that we are not able to do this in Massachusetts, “said Dr. Angel Foster, the co -founder of the MAP Massachusetts, a group based in the Boston region, which uses remote medicine.
Under the new law, which will be valid on December 4, abortion providers may face penalties of at least $ 100,000 if they make email to the state, which prohibits almost all abortion. The drug manufacturers who take the medicines that Texas uses for abortion can also be found responsible, but they may be able to defend themselves by proving them in court that they adopted and implementing a “policy of non-distribution, transmission, transfer, delivery, provision or possession of medicines that stimulate abortion”-although the language of the law is somewhat mysterious to that Buran applies to Texas or more. Women who take abortion pills are not qualified to prosecute.
“We want to create a responsibility for manufacturers that use access to access,” said John Sugo, the head of Texas, the right to life and the head of the back for the new legislation. Access to aid is one of the largest distance abortion services in the United States. Recharge nearly 120,000 packages of abortion pills for us the population between 2023 and 2024.
Seago continued: “The best we can do at this stage is to create a higher responsibility and start trying to deter some of these individuals.”
The law represents the vanguard of the Movement for the Control of Movement against Abortion and Health, which has become increasingly popular in the years that has passed on the United States Supreme Court, in 2022. By the end of 2024, one out of four abortion operations in the United States were facilitated. It was found that in December 2024, he used nearly 4,000 Texas a distance to end their cases.
Service providers such as mail pills under legal innovations known as “shield laws”, which were enacted by a handful of blue countries and aims to protect abortion providers from judicial prosecutions outside the country when they send birth control pills to prohibitions. However, the shield laws were not seriously tested in court.
The new Texas Law is the first legislative challenge to protect laws. But the state may have already challenged them in other ways. The Republican Attorney General, Ken Paxon, sent messages to stop and stop the pill service providers and a web site that provides information about the abortion pills. He also filed a lawsuit against a doctor in New York accused of sending mail abortion pills to Texas, as well as an official at the New York Court said that the New York Shield Law prevented him from enforcing the fine of Texas against the doctor. New York Prosecutor, Letitia James, announced that she will interfere in this lawsuit.
Rebouché indicated that many of the ROE pills after ROE have accepted that their work involves a great deal of risk. “But it may calm down, it may hinder or discourage people who do not want to be involved, and who do not want to face the danger of responsibility.”
Dubra Lynch, a nurse working with the group, said in an interview before Abbott signed the law, that the organization that uses the laws of a shield to send abortion pills to people and received one of Pakston’s letters to stop and the Pakston message, has no plans to prevent Texas from its services. In fact, as the Texas Law approaching the state’s legislative council, its safe port began to receive many requests to obtain assistance from patients to the point that it had to double the number of miscarriages, according to Lynch.
Lynch said: “Even if a law is approved that they will come after a criminal, not a civilian – he will not have any impact on the services we provide,” Lynch said. “It is important to know women.”