Texas suits the naval, claiming that her drink has risen of miscarriages

A woman from Texas is sued the US Marine Corps, claiming that her drink has risen by about ten miscarriages, killing her child who was not born yet, after she rejected his repeated requests to “get rid of him”, according to the illegal death claim submitted in the Federal Court on Monday.

The lawsuit says that Liana Davis claims that Christopher Coperider has secretly resolved at least 10 miscarriages in a cup of hot chocolate that he prepared for her on April 5, then left the house and stopped responding to heavily.

CoopRider, 34, refused to comment on Monday.

The lawsuit, which was filed in the American boycott court of the southern region of Texas, contains many alleged text messages that the husband exchanged for weeks, starting from January 31, when Davis Coooprider asked his inputs in the event of confirmation of pregnancy.

Coooprider said he “wants to get rid of it,” as the texts show, saying that the two are “not in love” or together and that he will be “messing around to bring a child to the world without raising both parents.”

When Cooperider repeated his desire to “get rid of it” after the pregnancy test returned after a positive days, she asked him to use a different phrase.

“Every time she says” get rid of her “it is like an electric shock,” according to the lawsuit. “I literally feel that I go down the hill on the rotating ship when I read it.”

It is claimed that the following text messages show Cooperider telling Davis, without agreeing that he will request abortion pills online. Aid Access, an online service, has been purchased online that ships abortion pills for Americans from abroad, according to the lawsuit.

Aid Access, Dr. Rebecca Gommersz, who is running her, is also included as a defendant in the lawsuit. They immediately did not return the suspension requests.

During the next few weeks, Cooperider was unable to persuade Davis to get a miscarriage, and the text messages have grown more controversial.

On March 6, Coooprider described the child as a “thing” and blamed Davis for the “psychological mentality” that he said caused her continuous divorce. The lawsuit says that Cooprider also threatened to testify against Davis in a divorce and present her to her three children’s custody.

At the end of March, Coooprider wrote that he wanted to “thwart this monster of the situation” and said he felt “detained” because of the situation.

But on April 2, Coooprider looked to change his dialect in text messages to Davis. He suggested making them “some warm comfortable tea” as they could call “the night of confidence building”, according to the joint screenshots of the case.

Davis, who was eight years old, before. When the two met at Davis Christie’s residence on the night of April 5, Cobrider handed it a cup of hot chocolate shortly before midnight, according to the lawsuit. Within 30 minutes of drinking it, the lawsuit says, Davis began bleeding and cramping.

The lawsuit said that Davis knew that she had to go to the emergency room, but she knew that she could not leave her three children who were sleeping on the upper floor. They reached a plan for Coooprider to capture Davis’s mother, who was living near, so that she could see children while Cooperider Davis was taken to the hospital.

But as soon as Cooperider left the house, it has become unknown, according to the case.

“I am flowing on the blood. Please faster,” Davis sent it at about 12:30 am

The lawsuit said that Davis’s mother rushed Uber to her daughter’s home at about one in the morning at the time, Cooperider apologized and said he had to journey the next day.

She led a neighbor Davis to the hospital, where her unborn child, who was called Joy, has not survived.

At home, Davis said that she had found an open abortion pill and a bottle of birth control pills, which was handed over to the Corpus Christie police, according to the case. The lawsuit claims that Coooprider Mix 10 Mysoprostol pills in hot chocolate.

The Corpus Christi Police Administration said that there are no active investigations related to Coooprider.

The Marine Corps Corps did not immediately respond to the comment.

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