BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Louisiana is pursuing a criminal case against another out-of-state doctor accused of mailing abortion pills to a state resident, court documents filed this month revealed.
A warrant for the arrest of a California doctor is a rare charge of violating one of the state abortion bans that have taken effect since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022 and allowed enforcement.
It represents another front in a growing legal battle between liberal and conservative states over prescribing abortion drugs via telehealth and mailing them to those who request them.
Pills are the most common way abortion is accessed in the U.S. and are a major reason that, despite the bans, abortion numbers rose last year, according to a report.
Louisiana said in a court case filed Sept. 19 that it had issued a warrant for a California doctor who it says provided pills to a Louisiana woman in 2023.
Both the woman, Rosalie Markezich, and the state attorney general want to join a lawsuit that seeks to order drug regulators to bar telehealth prescriptions for mifepristone, one of the two drugs usually used in combination for medication abortions.
In court filings, Markezich says her boyfriend at the time used her email address to order drugs from Dr. Remy Coeytaux, a California physician, and sent her $150, which she forwarded to Coeytaux.
She said she had no other contact with the doctor.
She said she did not want to take the pills but felt forced to, adding in the filing that "the trauma of my chemical abortion still haunts me" and that it would not have happened if telehealth prescriptions to the drug were off-limits.
The accusation builds on a position taken by anti-abortion groups: Allowing abortion pills to be prescribed by phone or video call and filled by mail opens the door to women and girls being coerced to take them.
"Rosalie is bravely representing many women who are victimized by the illegal, immoral, and unethical conduct of these drug dealers," Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said in a statement.
Murrill's office did not immediately answer questions about what charges Coeytaux faces, or when the warrant was issued. But under the state's ban on abortions at all stages of pregnancy, physicians convicted of providing abortion face up to 15 years in prison and $200,000 in fines.
Coeytaux is also the target of a lawsuit filed in July in federal court by a Texas man who says the doctor illegally provided his girlfriend with abortion pills.
An email and a telephone message seeking comment were left for Coeytaux.
The combination of a Louisiana criminal case and a Texas civil case over abortion pills is also playing out surrounding a New York doctor, Margaret Carpenter.
New York authorities are refusing to extradite Carpenter to Louisiana or to enforce the $100,000 civil judgment against her obtained by Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.
In the Louisiana case, officials said a pregnant girl's mother requested the abortion medication online and directed her daughter to take them. The mother was arrested; she has pleaded not guilty and was released on bail.
New York officials cite a law there that seeks to protect medical providers who prescribe abortion drugs to patients in states with abortion bans — or where such prescriptions by telehealth violate the law.
New York and California are among the eight states that have shield laws with such provisions, according to a tally by the Guttmacher Institute, a research organization that supports abortion access.
The Abortion Coalition of Telemedicine said they "fully expect" California Gov. Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, to uphold his state's shield law in the new case.
The legal filings that revealed the Louisiana charge against Coeytaux are part of an effort for Louisiana, along with Florida and Texas, to join a lawsuit filed last year by the Republican attorneys general of Idaho, Kansas, and Missouri to roll back federal approvals for mifepristone.
This year, Louisiana and Texas have adopted laws to target out-of-state providers of abortion pills.
The Louisiana law lets patients who receive abortions sue providers and others. The Texas law goes further and allows anyone to sue those who prescribe such pills in the state.
Both Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Marty Makary have said they are conducting a full review of mifepristone's safety and effectiveness.
Medication abortion has been available in the U.S. since 2000, when the Food and Drug Administration approved the use of mifepristone.
A group of 19 Democratic state attorneys general on Monday issued a statement saying that mifepristone is safe and expressing concern over an FDA review that some Republican attorneys general had called for.
The Abortion Coalition of Telemedicine reiterated in a statement to The Associated Press that the medication is safe and an "essential part of women's healthcare."
The nationwide organization, co-founded by Carpenter, described Louisiana's legal actions against Coeytaux as "extreme" and said it is an attempt to "intimidate healthcare providers."
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Mulvihill reported from Cherry Hill, New Jersey.