Post-Roe battle over abortion pills reaches Kentucky gas stations as AG opens investigation
Who's accountable for the results?
With the March for Life marking nearly three years since Roe v. Wade was overturned, Kentucky has launched an investigation into out-of-state groups advertising mail-order abortion pills, citing a post-Dobbs law that bans the drugs’ delivery into the state.
The march's organizers now see new meaning in their annual demonstration following the landmark Dobbs decision, and states around the country are taking sides on whether abortion should be "safe, legal and rare," as then-President Bill Clinton put it, or liberally permitted or strictly prohibited. In Kentucky, lawmakers responded by passing House Bill 3 in 2022, banning the mailing or delivery of abortion-inducing drugs.
Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman told Fox News Digital on Friday that he is citing the law in launching an investigation into organizations that could be participating in unlawful activity in that regard, as reproductive health groups have been advertising at gas stations in both the Bluegrass State and its Appalachian neighbor West Virginia.
In recent months, a New York-based nonprofit called Mayday Health that advertises "abortion pills by-mail" announced it would buy advertising at more than 100 gas stations in the two rural states, asking, "Pregnant? Don’t want to be?" and inviting customers to contact them.
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Coleman told Fox News Digital on Friday his probe is intended to discern whether the mail-order abortion ban and/or Kentucky's consumer protection laws are being violated by these groups.
"Out-of-state activist groups who are targeting the vulnerable here should be on notice: Keep your illegal pills out of our Commonwealth or face the full weight of the attorney general’s office," Coleman said, issuing subpoenas to the various fuel stations as well.
"These deadly and unlawful pills cannot be allowed to continue flooding into Kentucky through the mail, and we will thoroughly pursue every lead to hold bad actors accountable," he continued, adding the ads may also violate Frankfort’s consumer-protection laws.
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Coleman said that any resident who sees such ads should report them to his agency’s consumer-protection office.
Liv Raisner, executive director of Mayday, told Fox News Digital in response that "it turns out [Coleman] doesn't like free speech as much as he says," adding Mayday similarly advertised at South Dakota gas …
Who's accountable for the results?
With the March for Life marking nearly three years since Roe v. Wade was overturned, Kentucky has launched an investigation into out-of-state groups advertising mail-order abortion pills, citing a post-Dobbs law that bans the drugs’ delivery into the state.
The march's organizers now see new meaning in their annual demonstration following the landmark Dobbs decision, and states around the country are taking sides on whether abortion should be "safe, legal and rare," as then-President Bill Clinton put it, or liberally permitted or strictly prohibited. In Kentucky, lawmakers responded by passing House Bill 3 in 2022, banning the mailing or delivery of abortion-inducing drugs.
Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman told Fox News Digital on Friday that he is citing the law in launching an investigation into organizations that could be participating in unlawful activity in that regard, as reproductive health groups have been advertising at gas stations in both the Bluegrass State and its Appalachian neighbor West Virginia.
In recent months, a New York-based nonprofit called Mayday Health that advertises "abortion pills by-mail" announced it would buy advertising at more than 100 gas stations in the two rural states, asking, "Pregnant? Don’t want to be?" and inviting customers to contact them.
TRUMP ADMIN STOPS FUNDING FOR RESEARCH THAT INVOLVES ABORTED BABY TISSUE
SEN JAMES LANKFORD: WHEN WE MARCH FOR LIFE, WE MUST FIGHT FOR THE HYDE AMENDMENT
Coleman told Fox News Digital on Friday his probe is intended to discern whether the mail-order abortion ban and/or Kentucky's consumer protection laws are being violated by these groups.
"Out-of-state activist groups who are targeting the vulnerable here should be on notice: Keep your illegal pills out of our Commonwealth or face the full weight of the attorney general’s office," Coleman said, issuing subpoenas to the various fuel stations as well.
"These deadly and unlawful pills cannot be allowed to continue flooding into Kentucky through the mail, and we will thoroughly pursue every lead to hold bad actors accountable," he continued, adding the ads may also violate Frankfort’s consumer-protection laws.
TRUMP URGES GOP TO BE ‘FLEXIBLE’ ON HYDE AMENDMENT, IGNITING BACKLASH FROM PRO-LIFE ALLIES
Coleman said that any resident who sees such ads should report them to his agency’s consumer-protection office.
Liv Raisner, executive director of Mayday, told Fox News Digital in response that "it turns out [Coleman] doesn't like free speech as much as he says," adding Mayday similarly advertised at South Dakota gas …
Post-Roe battle over abortion pills reaches Kentucky gas stations as AG opens investigation
Who's accountable for the results?
With the March for Life marking nearly three years since Roe v. Wade was overturned, Kentucky has launched an investigation into out-of-state groups advertising mail-order abortion pills, citing a post-Dobbs law that bans the drugs’ delivery into the state.
The march's organizers now see new meaning in their annual demonstration following the landmark Dobbs decision, and states around the country are taking sides on whether abortion should be "safe, legal and rare," as then-President Bill Clinton put it, or liberally permitted or strictly prohibited. In Kentucky, lawmakers responded by passing House Bill 3 in 2022, banning the mailing or delivery of abortion-inducing drugs.
Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman told Fox News Digital on Friday that he is citing the law in launching an investigation into organizations that could be participating in unlawful activity in that regard, as reproductive health groups have been advertising at gas stations in both the Bluegrass State and its Appalachian neighbor West Virginia.
In recent months, a New York-based nonprofit called Mayday Health that advertises "abortion pills by-mail" announced it would buy advertising at more than 100 gas stations in the two rural states, asking, "Pregnant? Don’t want to be?" and inviting customers to contact them.
TRUMP ADMIN STOPS FUNDING FOR RESEARCH THAT INVOLVES ABORTED BABY TISSUE
SEN JAMES LANKFORD: WHEN WE MARCH FOR LIFE, WE MUST FIGHT FOR THE HYDE AMENDMENT
Coleman told Fox News Digital on Friday his probe is intended to discern whether the mail-order abortion ban and/or Kentucky's consumer protection laws are being violated by these groups.
"Out-of-state activist groups who are targeting the vulnerable here should be on notice: Keep your illegal pills out of our Commonwealth or face the full weight of the attorney general’s office," Coleman said, issuing subpoenas to the various fuel stations as well.
"These deadly and unlawful pills cannot be allowed to continue flooding into Kentucky through the mail, and we will thoroughly pursue every lead to hold bad actors accountable," he continued, adding the ads may also violate Frankfort’s consumer-protection laws.
TRUMP URGES GOP TO BE ‘FLEXIBLE’ ON HYDE AMENDMENT, IGNITING BACKLASH FROM PRO-LIFE ALLIES
Coleman said that any resident who sees such ads should report them to his agency’s consumer-protection office.
Liv Raisner, executive director of Mayday, told Fox News Digital in response that "it turns out [Coleman] doesn't like free speech as much as he says," adding Mayday similarly advertised at South Dakota gas …
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