Liana Davis, a Texas woman who was eight weeks pregnant, has filed a wrongful death lawsuit against Christopher Cooprider, a U.S. Marine and her former sexual partner, as well as Aid Access, a major supplier of abortion pills by mail, and its founder. Davis alleges that Cooprider secretly drugged her by dissolving abortion pills in her hot chocolate, resulting in the termination of her pregnancy. The lawsuit claims that Aid Access and Cooprider violated Texas law by facilitating an illegal abortion. Separately, Davis is also seeking a trial against county officials who arrested and charged her with murder for self-inducing an abortion. This case follows a recent legal development where a state was granted a permanent injunction to continue abortion-pill-reversal work.
Liana Davis filed a wrongful death lawsuit against U.S. Marine Christopher Cooprider, Aid Access and its founder on Monday, arguing they broke Texas law by assisting in an illegal abortion. https://t.co/JC7HRNKmmO
A Texas woman is urging a judge to hold a trial in her suit against county officials who arrested and charged her with murder for self-inducing an abortion. https://t.co/XUP4SumBcd
First lawsuit in catastrophic Texas flooding filed https://t.co/rGdz22ULyR https://t.co/QNCMYaBVsz