Please note that this post contains affiliate links and any sales made through such links will reward MageeNews.com a small commission – at no extra cost to you.
(Jackson, Mississippi) Attorney General Lynn Fitch today filed an amicus brief, along with 21 other Attorneys General, in the Northern District of Texas in the case of Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine v. U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA).
“The FDA’s brazen attempt to not only sidestep, but outright defy federal and state laws threatens both the health of women and democracy,” said Attorney General Lynn Fitch. “In the Dobbs case, the Supreme Court affirmed that states may enact laws that protect unborn life, women’s health, and the integrity of the medical profession, and we will not allow the Biden administration to trample on this fundamental Constitutional building block.”
The brief argues that the Biden FDA’s attempt to roll back safety mechanisms for the abortion-inducing drug mifepristone and to make it widely available through the mail violates both federal law and state laws. Current federal criminal law plainly prohibits the distribution of abortion-inducing drugs through the mail. (18 U.S.C. § § 1461, 1462)
The Attorneys General write, “State laws on chemical abortion … account for the public interests at issue—and they do so with the benefit of democratic legitimacy (and legal authority). The FDA’s actions can make no such claim. By obstructing the judgments of elected representatives, the agency has undermined the public interest.”
They continue, “Even if the FDA’s approval of mifepristone harmonized with the agency’s own regulations and federal criminal law, those actions would not simply displace state laws regulating abortion. The amici States are entitled to enforce their duly enacted laws regulating chemical abortion in the interests of life, health, and safety.”
“[T]he whole point of the Administration’s recent actions is to encourage and achieve evasion of those state laws.…The FDA—and the broader Administration—is encouraging lawbreaking on a mass scale,” the Attorneys General write.
Attorneys General from Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Idaho, Indiana, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Montana, Nebraska, Ohio, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming joined Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch on this brief. Read the brief here.
MageeNews.com is an online news website covering Simpson and surrounding counties as well as the State of Mississippi.