Current:Home > Finance20 women are now suing Texas, saying state abortion laws endangered them -LegacyBuild Academy
20 women are now suing Texas, saying state abortion laws endangered them
View
Date:2025-04-27 09:28:22
Cristina Nuñez's doctors had always advised her not to get pregnant. She has diabetes, end-stage renal disease and other health conditions, and when she unexpectedly did become pregnant, it made her extremely sick. Now she is suing her home state of Texas, arguing that the abortion laws in the state delayed her care and endangered her life.
Nuñez and six other women joined an ongoing lawsuit over Texas's abortion laws. The plaintiffs allege the exception for when a patient's life is in danger is too narrow and vague, and endangered them during complicated pregnancies.
The case was originally filed in March with five patient plaintiffs, but more and more patients have joined the suit. The total number of patients suing Texas in this case is now 20 (two OB-GYN doctors are also part of the lawsuit). After a dramatic hearing in July, a district court judge agreed with the plaintiffs that the law needed to change, but the state immediately appealed her ruling directly to the Texas Supreme Court. That move allows Texas' three overlapping abortion bans to stand.
In the July hearing, lawyers for the Texas Attorney General's office argued that women had not been harmed by the state's laws and suggested that their doctors were responsible for any harms they claimed.
For Cristina Nuñez, after she learned she was pregnant in May 2023, her health quickly worsened, according to an amended complaint filed by the Center for Reproductive Rights, the organization bringing the case. Nuñez had to increase the amount of time she spent in dialysis, and suffered from painful blood clots. She told an OB-GYN that she wanted an abortion, but was told that was not possible in Texas. She called a clinic that provides abortion in New Mexico, but was told she could not have a medication abortion because of her other health conditions.
Her health continued to deteriorate as the weeks went on and her pregnancy progressed. In June, when one of her arms turned black from blood clots, she went to a Texas emergency room. She was diagnosed with a deep vein thrombosis, eclampsia and an embolism, but the hospital would not provide an abortion. She worried she would die, the complaint says.
She finally received an abortion 11 days after going to the E.R., only after finding a pro-bono attorney that contacted the hospital on her behalf.
Also joining the lawsuit is Kristen Anaya, whose water broke too early. She became septic, shaking and vomiting uncontrollably, while waiting for an abortion in a Texas hospital. The other new plaintiffs are Kaitlyn Kash, D. Aylen, Kimberly Manzano, Dr. Danielle Mathisen, and Amy Coronado, all of whom received serious and likely fatal fetal diagnoses and traveled out of state for abortions.
The Texas Supreme Court is set to consider the Center's request for a temporary injunction that
would allow abortions in a wider range of medical situations. That hearing is scheduled for Nov. 28.
veryGood! (5582)
Related
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- DoorDash, Uber Eats to move tipping prompt to after food is delivered in New York City
- Milestone in recovery from historic Maui wildfire
- U.N. says Israel-Hamas war causing unmatched suffering in Gaza, pleads for new cease-fire, more aid
- DoorDash steps up driver ID checks after traffic safety complaints
- One year after death, Mike Leach remembered as coach who loved Mississippi State back
- Patrick Mahomes, Chiefs are wildly off mark in blaming NFL refs for Kadarius Toney penalty
- Online sports betting to start in Vermont in January
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- Can you guess the Dictionary.com 2023 word of the year? Hint: AI might get it wrong
Ranking
- Head of the Federal Aviation Administration to resign, allowing Trump to pick his successor
- George Santos attorney expresses optimism about plea talks as expelled congressman appears in court
- UAW accuses Honda, Hyundai and VW of union-busting
- How much for the two turtle doves, please? Unpacking the real cost of 12 Days of Christmas
- Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
- Kentucky woman seeking court approval for abortion learned her embryo no longer has cardiac activity
- No victims found after seven-story building partially collapses in Bronx
- Sophia Bush Shares Insight Into Grant Hughes Divorce Journey
Recommendation
Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
No victims found after seven-story building partially collapses in Bronx
U.S. F-16 fighter jet crashes off South Korea; pilot ejects and is rescued
Sydney Sweeney and Glen Powell Reveal What It Was Really Like Filming Steamy Shower Scene
A South Texas lawmaker’s 15
What does it mean to be Black enough? Cord Jefferson explores this 'American Fiction'
Passengers lodge in military barracks after Amsterdam to Detroit flight is forced to land in Canada
China’s homegrown C919 aircraft arrives in Hong Kong in maiden flight outside the mainland