| Texas woman charged with murder: Near the border, a Texas woman, Lizelle Gonzalez, faced a murder charge (and two nights in jail) for self-inducing an abortion in 2022. The charges were dropped. Now Gonzalez is suing the prosecutors in federal court, seeking $1 million in damages due to the harm she suffered from both the initial arrest and the media coverage of the matter.
“Under the abortion restrictions in Texas and other states, women who seek abortion are exempt from criminal charges,” reports the Associated Press. The State Bar of Texas already disciplined the Starr County district attorney, Gocha Ramirez, who brought the charges in 2022, but “the fallout from Defendants’ illegal and unconstitutional actions has forever changed the Plaintiff’s life,” argues the suit.
IVF restrictions? Conservative groups, including the Heritage Foundation, are reportedly not advocating an in vitro fertilization ban “but want new restrictions that would significantly curtail access to the procedure, such as imposing more regulations on fertility clinics, limiting the number of embryos that can be created or transferred to the uterus at one time, and banning pre-implantation genetic testing, which they argue allows parents to discriminate against their embryos on the basis of sex, disabilities like Down Syndrome or other factors.” |