
Earlier this month, Family Council joined a coalition of 57 pro-life organizations in an amicus brief asking a federal court to block mail-order abortion drugs in America.
Arkansas law generally prohibits abortion except to save the life of the mother, and it is a crime for an abortionist to mail abortion drugs like RU-486 into the state.
But under President Biden, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration loosened its safety protocols to allow mail-order abortion drugs. Pro-abortion states have also enacted “shield laws” for abortionists who mail abortion drugs into states like Arkansas.
All of that has created a dangerous industry of abortion-by-mail in Arkansas and across the nation.
The State of Louisiana has filed a lawsuit challenging the U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s mail-order abortion rules, and that legal challenge is currently before the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals. On June 18, Family Council joined an amicus brief arguing the court should block abortion drugs from being delivered by mail.
The amicus brief argues that states have the authority to restrict or prohibit abortion, and that the FDA’s abortion drug rules run afoul of state and federal laws.
New evidence shows that abortion drugs are much more harmful than the FDA previously thought.
A recent study by the experts at the Ethics and Public Policy Center found abortion drugs are at least 22 times more dangerous than the drugs’ labeling indicates. Nearly 11% of women experience serious health complications from abortion pills — including sepsis, infection, and life-threatening hemorrhage.
Abortion drugs hurt women and kill unborn children. These drugs should not be available at all — much less through the mail. We believe our federal courts ultimately will recognize that fact and make it possible for states like Arkansas to enforce their laws against mail-order abortion.
Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.



