Plus, how Facebook/Meta plays a role in this

View in Browser 

Estimated reading time: 2m 45s

Forward to a Friend   

Reckon Report

 July 25, 2023

One year and one month after the official release of the Dobbs decision that gutted what remained of a nationwide right to abortion in the US, lawmakers have been using the criminal justice system to punish abortion seekers across the country. Last week, a teenager in Nebraska was sentenced to 90 days in jail and two years of probation for using abortion pills to end her pregnancy last year. Her mother is awaiting sentencing after taking a plea deal for helping her daughter obtain the pills. The police and prosecutors who handled their case were aided by Facebook/Meta, which turned over the women’s chat logs referencing their conversations about terminating the then-17-year-old's pregnancy in April 2022. 

 

In March of this year, a woman in South Carolina was arrested and charged for using medication to terminate a pregnancy in 2021. Under South Carolina law, self-managed abortions are illegal, as are abortions after six weeks. (Note: At the time the woman in question took the pills, South Carolina law banned abortion after 20 weeks (about 4 and a half months). Currently, the 6-week abortion ban is going before the state supreme court.) 

(Image credit: Abbey Crain)

 

A quick look back

The story of “how we got here” is well-trodden territory at this point. Roe was severely weakened long before Dobbs issued the death blow. Even before it became official, states like Texas, Mississippi and Alabama were lining up to win a race to the bottom to see who could gut abortion rights as fast as possible for their respective citizens. Abortion is illegal in all three states, although Texas does have some very narrow exceptions. However, those narrow exceptions haven’t been enough to spare patients from illnesses like sepsis or the torment of carrying a non-viable pregnancy to term. 

(Photo credit: Mark Felix/AFP via Getty Images)

 

Why it matters now

Some states are now going a step further. Not content to punish people within the borders of their states, attorneys general in Texas, Ohio, Alaska and 16 other states are now looking to persecute people who travel across state lines for abortions and gender-affirming care. Several Republican attorneys general signed a letter addressed to the Secretary of Health and Human Services and authored by the AG of Mississippi to argue against a proposed HIPAA rule change that would prevent state authorities from obtaining citizens’ health records for investigations into out-of-state abortion care. Combined with Meta’s willingness to turn over people’s information as the company did in the Nebraska case, our post-Dobbs world is a pretty bleak one. Millions of people live in states where their options for abortion are extremely limited or non-existent, availing themselves of out-of-state options may put them under surveillance and trying to use discreet options like abortion pills could end with their chat logs being read in court. 

 

Go deeper

  • Texas Won’t Stop Torturing Women Denied Abortions — The Cut

  • The end of Roe, one year later  — Vox
  • Human Rights Crisis: Abortion in the United States After Dobbs
    — Human Rights Watch
  • Abortion rights opponents across the country want to charge women with murder — NPR
 

Who we're following

  • Reckon's own Becca Andrews, writer of our reproductive justice newsletter

  • Andrea Grimes, writer of Home with the Armadillo, a weekly newsletter that rounds up the latest in abortion news
 

Got something you want me to dive into next week? Let me know at [email protected].

 

That's all I've got for this week!

 

Thanks for reckoning with me,

Aria

Alternate text
InstagramTwitterFacebook

Reckon Report by Reckon

1143 1st Ave. S. Suite 300, Birmingham, AL 35233

 

Email forwarded to you?  Sign up now!

You received this email because you opted in for email from Reckon.
 
UNSUBSCRIBE  PRIVACY POLICY   CONTACT US

Reckon