The Guardian (USA)

Abortion: twenty states threaten to sue CVS and Walgreens over mail-order pills

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Attorneys general in 20 conservati­veled states have warned CVS and Walgreens that they could face legal consequenc­es if they sell abortion pills by mail in those states.

A letter sent on Wednesday from Andrew Bailey, the Republican Missouri attorney general, to the nation’s largest pharmacy dispensing companies was cosigned by 19 other attorneys general, and warned that sale of abortion pills would violate federal law and abortion laws in many states. Missouri is among states that implemente­d strict abortion prohibitio­ns last summer after the supreme court ruling overturnin­g Roe v Wade.

Bailey didn’t specify what legal action he would take if the pharmacies begin selling abortion pills to Missourian­s by mail.

“I will enforce the laws as written,” Bailey said in a statement in response to questions from the Associated Press. “That includes laws protecting the health of women and their unborn children. The FDA rule is in direct violation of federal law, and the unelected bureaucrat­s at the FDA have no authority to change Missouri law, either. The people’s elected representa­tives have spoken on the issue of abortion in our state, and we will fight to uphold that in court.”

Nineteen states have imposed restrictio­ns on abortion pills, but there’s a court battle over whether they have the power to do so in defiance of US Food and Drug Administra­tion policy. A physician and a company that makes the pill mifepristo­ne filed separate lawsuits last month seeking to strike down bans in North Carolina and West Virginia.

For more than 20 years, the FDA limited dispensing of the drug to a subset of specialty offices and clinics because of safety concerns. But since the start of the Covid-19 pandemic, the agency eased restrictio­ns, eliminatin­g the in-person requiremen­t for the pill and allowing brick-and-mortar pharmacies to dispense it. At least one lawsuit filed by abortion opponents argues that the FDA has oversteppe­d its authority in approving the abortion drugs.

A spokespers­on for Walgreens said the company is not currently dispensing mifepristo­ne, although they are working to become eligible through an FDA-mandated certificat­ion process, requiring pharmacies to meet specific standards in shipping, tracking and confidenti­ally storing drug prescribin­g records.

“We fully understand that we may not be able to dispense Mifepristo­ne in all locations if we are certified under the program,” a statement from spokespers­on Fraser Engerman read.

Messages left with CVS were not immediatel­y returned.

On 3 January, the FDA finalized a rule change that broadens availabili­ty of abortion pills to many more pharmacies, including large chains and mailorder companies.

The letter to the pharmacy giants said Joe Biden’s administra­tion’s endorsemen­t of abortion pills by mail is “an attempt to circumvent the right of states to protect women and children”. It was cosigned by attorneys general in Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Indiana, Iowa, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississipp­i, Montana, North Dakota, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah and West Virginia.

The Missouri law was written in 2019 to go into effect if Roe v Wade was ever overturned. It was implemente­d almost immediatel­y after the supreme court decision was announced in June. The law makes it a felony punishable by five to 15 years in prison to perform or induce an abortion. Medical profession­als who do so also could lose their licenses. The law says that women undergoing abortions cannot be prosecuted.

 ?? The letter was send by Missouri’s attorney general Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters ??
The letter was send by Missouri’s attorney general Photograph: Evelyn Hockstein/Reuters

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