Texas judge fines New York doctor for prescribing abortion pills to a
woman near Dallas
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[February 14, 2025]
By ANTHONY IZAGUIRRE and JAMIE STENGLE
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — A Texas judge on Thursday ordered a New York doctor
to pay more than $100,000 in penalties for prescribing abortion pills to
a woman near Dallas, a ruling that could test “shield laws” in
Democratic-controlled states where abortion is legal.
The ruling was handed down on the same day New York Gov. Kathy Hochul
rejected a request from Louisiana to extradite the same doctor, Dr.
Maggie Carpenter, who was charged in that state with prescribing
abortion pills to a pregnant minor.
Unlike Louisiana, Texas did not file criminal charges against Carpenter
but accused her in a December lawsuit of violating state law by
prescribing abortion medication via telemedicine. Texas has one of the
most restrictive abortion bans in the nation.
State District Judge Bryan Gantt issued the fine against Carpenter and
ordered her to pay attorney’s fees. He also issued an injunction barring
Carpenter from prescribing abortion medication to Texas residents. Gantt
noted in his order that despite being notified, Carpenter failed to
appear in court.
Earlier Hochul, a Democrat, said she would not honor Louisiana's request
to arrest and send the doctor to Louisiana after she was charged with
violating the southern state's strict anti-abortion law.
“I will not be signing an extradition order that came from the governor
of Louisiana,” Hochul said at a news conference in Manhattan. “Not now,
not ever.”
She also said she sent out a notice to law enforcement in New York that
instructed them to not cooperate with out-of-state warrants for such
charges.
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Carpenter is co-medical director and founder of the Abortion Coalition
for Telemedicine. Julie Kay, the group’s executive director, said the
Texas ruling does not change shield laws and that “patients can access
medication abortion from licensed providers no matter where they live.”
The group also criticized Louisiana’s efforts to extradite Carpenter.
The case against Carpenter in Louisiana appears to be the first instance
of criminal charges against a doctor accused of prescribing abortion
pills to another state.
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New York Gov. Kathy Hochul speaks at a press conference in the
Queens borough of New York, Nov. 26, 2024. (AP Photo/Julia Demaree
Nikhinson, File)
 Pills have become the most common
method of abortion in the U.S. and are at the epicenter of political
and legal fights over abortion access following the U.S. Supreme
Court's overturning of Roe v. Wade.
Both the Texas and Louisiana cases will test New York's so-called
shield law, which gives legal protections to doctors who prescribe
abortion medication to conservative states where abortions are
banned or otherwise limited. Other Democratic-controlled states have
similar “shield laws.”
Prosecutors in West Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana, indicted
Carpenter on charges that she violated the state's near-total
abortion ban, which allows physicians convicted of performing
abortions, including one with pills, to be sentenced up to 15 years
in prison.
Louisiana authorities said the girl who received the pills
experienced a medical emergency and had to be transported to the
hospital. The girl's mother was also charged and has turned herself
in to police.
In a videotaped statement Thursday, Republican Louisiana Gov. Jeff
Landry said “there is only one right answer in this situation, and
it is that that doctor must face extradition to Louisiana where she
can stand trial and justice will be served.”
Landry's office did not immediately return an emailed request for
comment sent after Hochul refused the extradition request.
In the Texas case, the state's Republican Attorney General Ken
Paxton has said that the 20-year-old woman who received the pills
ended up in a hospital with complications. It was only after that,
the state said in its filing, that the man described as “the
biological father of the unborn child” learned of the pregnancy and
the abortion.
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Stengle reported from Dallas.
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