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NY Rejects Extradition Request For LA Doctor Sending Abortion Pills

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New York Gov. Kathy Hochul rejected Louisiana’s request to extradite a doctor from her state accused of prescribing and mailing abortion drugs to a woman in West Baton Rouge Parish.  Both were indicted on felony charges last month for violating a Louisiana law  prohibiting the sale, prescription, delivery, dispensing and distribution of abortion-inducing medication, the Louisiana Illuminator reports. According to  Gov. Jeff Landry and Attorney General Liz Murrill,, the West Baton Rouge woman forced her pregnant minor daughter to take the pills, though the woman hasn’t been charged with the crime of coerced abortion. Landry signed an extradition request Wednesday from Murrill, who said she intends to prosecute Dr. Margaret Carpenter and the West Baton Rouge woman, who is not being identified to protect her daughter’s identity.  At a Thursday news conference, Hochul, referenced New York’s shield laws that protect reproductive health care providers from criminal prosecution in other states. Louisiana banned abortion almost entirely in 2022 after the U.S. Supreme Court’s decision to reverse Roe v. Wade. The procedure remains legal in New York.


“Louisiana has changed their laws, but that has no bearing on the laws here in the state of New York,” Hochul said. “Doctors take an oath to protect their patients. I took an oath of office to protect all New Yorkers, and I will uphold not only our constitution, but also the laws of our land. And I will not be signing an extradition order that came from the governor of Louisiana. Not now, not ever.” Landry criticized his New York counterpart after a video of Hochul’s announcement was posted to the social media platform X.  “So you’re telling me @GovKathyHochul is protecting criminals over victims?!” Landry wrote. “And they wonder why people and businesses are fleeing the state.” U.S. Census Bureau estimates show more than 19.8 million people in the state of New York as of midyear 2024, down from 20.2 million in the 2020 count. Total employer establishments, the census term for businesses, actually increased in New York over the same period – from roughly 535,000 to more than 540,000.  

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