Los Angeles Times

Abortion murder charge to be dropped

The indicted woman ‘did not commit a criminal act,’ a Texas district attorney says.

- Associated press

RIO GRANDE CITY, Texas — A Texas district attorney said Sunday that he would ask a judge to dismiss a murder charge against a woman over a “self-induced abortion.”

Lizelle Herrera was arrested Thursday in Rio Grande City, a community of about 14,000 people along the Mexico border, after a Starr County grand jury indicted her on March 30 on murder charges for allegedly causing “the death of an individual ... by self-induced abortion.”

Dist. Atty. Gocha Allen Ramirez said Sunday that his office would move to dismiss the charge on Monday.

“In reviewing this case, it is clear that Ms. Herrera cannot and should not be prosecuted for the allegation against her,” Ramirez

said in a statement.

Ramirez went on to say, “It is my hope that with the dismissal of this case it is made clear that Ms. Herrera did not commit a criminal act under the laws of the state of Texas.”

Authoritie­s haven’t released details about what Herrera purportedl­y did, and Ramirez didn’t immediatel­y respond to an email Sunday seeking further informatio­n about the case.

From his statement Sunday and a previous statement put out by a Starr County Sheriff’s Office official, it wasn’t clear whether Herrera was accused of giving herself an abortion or assisting in someone else’s self-induced abortion.

In a Twitter post on Sunday, Planned Parenthood called the decision “such

NEEDED news.”

“While the charges against Lizelle have been dismissed, we know the fight against the criminaliz­ation of pregnancy outcomes has only just begun,” said Alexis McGill Johnson, Planned Parenthood’s president and chief executive.

A leading Texas antiaborti­on group said it understood the decision, saying that state law provided only civil remedies, not criminal ones.

“The Texas Heartbeat Act and other pro-life policies in the state clearly prohibit criminal charges for pregnant women. Texas Right to Life opposes public prosecutor­s going outside of the bounds of Texas’ prudent and carefully crafted policies,” said Texas Right to Life spokeswoma­n Kimberlyn

Schwartz.

Herrera was released Saturday from the Starr County Jail after posting a $500,000 bond.

The indictment alleged that Herrera, on Jan. 7, “did then and there intentiona­lly and knowingly cause the death of an individual ... by self-induced abortion.”

In confirming the indictment Saturday, sheriff’s Maj. Carlos Delgado said no further informatio­n would be released until Monday because the case was still under investigat­ion.

Texas law would exempt Herrera from a criminal homicide charge for aborting her own pregnancy, University of Texas law professor Stephen Vladeck said.

Homicide “doesn’t apply to the murder of an unborn child if the conduct charged is ‘conduct committed by the mother of the unborn child,’ ” Vladeck said.

A 2021 state law that bans abortions in Texas for women who are as early as six weeks pregnant has sharply curtailed the number of abortions in the state.

The law leaves enforcemen­t to private citizens who can sue doctors or anyone who helps someone get an abortion.

The person receiving the abortion is exempted from the law.

Another Texas law prohibits doctors and clinics from prescribin­g abortionin­ducing medication­s after the seventh week of pregnancy and prohibits the delivery of the pills by mail.

Medication abortions are not considered self-induced under federal Food and Drug Administra­tion regulation­s, Vladeck said.

“You can only receive the medication under medical supervisio­n,” according to Vladeck. “I realize this sounds weird because you are taking the pill yourself, but it is under a provider’s at least theoretica­l care.”

 ?? Stephen Spillman Associated Press ?? A WOMEN’S march in Austin, Texas, in 2021. Planned Parenthood, among others, praised a Texas district attorney’s decision to ask a judge to dismiss a murder charge against a woman over a “self-induced abortion.”
Stephen Spillman Associated Press A WOMEN’S march in Austin, Texas, in 2021. Planned Parenthood, among others, praised a Texas district attorney’s decision to ask a judge to dismiss a murder charge against a woman over a “self-induced abortion.”

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