The case against Dr. Margaret Carpenter appears to be the first instance of criminal charges against a doctor accused of ...
Margaret Carpenter, based in New Paltz, New York, has been indicted for prescribing abortion pills to a person in Louisiana — where nearly all abortions are illegal, even in cases of rape or incest.
A red state has taken direct aim at a New York law that protects residents who help abortion seekers elsewhere in the country ...
Louisiana grand jury indicted Dr. Margaret Carpenter, her practice ... against the mother of the girl who allegedly obtained abortion pills by mail. The district attorney, Tony Clayton, alleged ...
A first-of-its-kind criminal case against a New York abortion pill provider is likely to make its way through the legal ...
Carpenter was previously sued by the attorney general of Texas for allegations of sending abortion pills there, though that case did not involve criminal charges. After the indictment, Hochul ...
Jeff Landry announced the extradition warrant for New Paltz-based Dr. Margaret Carpenter ... which accuse Carpenter of prescribing abortion medication to a minor, who took the pill and ended ...
Kathy Hochul is doubling down on her refusal to extradite a Hudson Valley doctor charged with violating Louisiana’s abortion laws ... an extradition order for Ulster County-based Dr. Margaret ...
Colorado employee health insurance plans will cover abortion care and require the Department of Health Care Policy and ...
So what are shield laws exactly, and what does the future hold for them? TIME spoke to experts to find out.
Gov. Kathy Hochul (D) approved the law on Monday, after New York doctor Margaret Carpenter was charged with prescribing abortion pills to a girl in Louisiana.
Margaret Carpenter, or “Dr. Maggie” as her friends ... is at the heart of a nationwide controversy for providing abortion care to women in states where access is restricted or outlawed.