
A Texas woman filed a lawsuit against a man saying that her dumping of miscarriages against her will, as well as the provider that says the pill.
On Monday, the woman, Liana Davis, filed a lawsuit against federal miscarriage against access to a remote abortion service, and its founder, Dr. Rebecca Gometerz, as well as a man named Christopher Cobrider, a US Navy soldier said that her legislation and interpretation then inspiring inspiration.
Davis is represented in the lawsuit by Jonathan Mitchell, the lawyer who was paying the ban on Texas for six weeks, and became one of the main architects of the post -abortion strategies in the post -Roe V Wade. Mitchell represented men in lawsuits who filed a lawsuit against abortion offers after their female partners accused of submitting to abortion against their desires, but it is believed that this case is the first of its kind with a claimant.
After Davis revealed her pregnancy to Cooperider, he pressed it again and again to get a miscarriage and went to the point of requesting the abortion pills online from accessing aid, a service that charges abortion pills to all fifty American states, according to the Davis lawsuit, which includes comprehensive shots of texts between CooPrider and Davis.
When Davis refused to take birth control pills, it was claimed that Cooprider calms down and suggested that he be witnessed against Davis in her constant divorce at the front of her ex -husband. Davis told Cooprider that her ex -husband had been physically and emotionally offended by Davis and her three children, as she claims.
After that, in April 2025, CooPrider suggested that he come to Davis’s house for “confidence building night”, according to the lawsuit. While Davis went out to allow her dog to enter, he claimed that Cooprider dissolves at least 10 miscarriages in hot chocolate.
Usually, American miscarriages consist of two properties, Mifibeston and Supostol. While MivePristone is usually swallowed, the mezoprostol aims to slowly solution in the vagina, under the tongue or in someone’s cheeks.
Shortly later, Davis began cramping and bleeding, and claims a lawsuit. Coooprider said he would get Davis’s mother, so that she can see Davis’s children while they are going to the emergency room. However, Coooprider is no longer.
Then it was claimed that Davis discovered the MivePristone Fund, which Cooperider requested to reach aid, which CooPrider left at her home. The box was empty. It was also claimed that Davis had found an orange pill containing mapperstone and Mysoprostol pills.
She rushed to ER, but she finished abortion after eight weeks of her pregnancy. There is no medical test that can determine whether the abortion pills are, if taken orally, caused at the end of pregnancy.
The lawsuit was previously I mentioned the autonomy newsIt now seeks to “nominal, compensatory, and punitive damage.” In addition to accusing Cooperider, Aid Access and GOMIRTS of violating the multiple laws in Texas-almost all abortion operations-claim that the trio also violates the Federal COMSTOCK law, a nineteenth-century law that prohibits sending material-related materials.
Legal experts have long considered the Komstock law as a dead message, as Roe V Wade maintained its ban on articles related to abortion from decades. However, since the United States Supreme Court canceled ROE in 2022, abortion defenders such as Mitchell say it can now be revived. They have repeatedly cited the Komstock Law in the lawsuits, in the hope that the courts will decide that it is valid.
He did not respond to access to aid, GOMIRTS and US Marines to request a comment.
I arrived over the phone, Coooprider said he had no comment on the lawsuit.
Terrible groups are currently, including access to aid, sending mail abortion pills by using “shield laws”, which have been enacted in a handful of blue states since the fall of Ro. These laws, which aim to protect abortion providers from confronting civil and criminal responsibility if sending birth control pills to people who live in states prohibiting abortion, has proven decisive importance to provide abortion after Roy, where abortion pills constitute an increasing share of all abortion in the United States. Between 2023 and 2024, Aid Access has shipped approximately 120,000 packages of abortion pills for the population, according to a new study issued on Monday.
However, the armor laws were not tested in court. Recently, Texas filed a lawsuit against a New York court official for rejecting the abortion provider in New York, where the official said that the New York Shield Law prevented him from imposing a fine.