
A Texas woman is suing a U.S. Marine, alleging he spiked her drink with nearly a dozen abortion pills, killing their unborn child, after she rebuffed his repeated requests to “get rid of it,” according to a wrongful death lawsuit filed in federal court Monday. Limited time: Save 25% on NBC News subscription Get exclusive reporting, live Q&As and ad-free reading.
Main Idea: A Texas woman says a Marine secretly gave her abortion pills in a drink, causing the loss of her pregnancy, and she is now suing him and an abortion-pill provider.
Key Points:
The case could deepen fear and conflict around abortion access, privacy, and safety for patients, families, and workers.
The lawsuit may push clearer rules and more scrutiny for online pill sellers like Aid Access, which could help some consumers avoid abuse.
Rate how each entity in this article affected the American people.
Named Marine accused of secretly giving Davis abortion pills and central to the alleged conduct.
Plaintiff at the center of the lawsuit and the article’s main subject.
Online abortion-pill service named as a defendant and part of the alleged pill procurement.
Named defendant associated with Aid Access and directly tied to the alleged supply of abortion pills.
Federal court where the wrongful death lawsuit was filed and which gives the story its legal setting.
Military body connected to the accused service member and asked for comment on the allegations.
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