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STATE OF ALABAMA

OFFICE OF THE ATTORNEY GENERAL


STEVE MARSHALL 501 WASHINGTON AVENUE
ATTORNEY GENERAL MONTGOMERY, AL 36130
(334) 242-7300
ALABAMAAG.GOV
January 13, 2023

Dr. Robert Califf, Commissioner


Food and Drug Administration
10903 New Hampshire Ave.
Silver Spring, MD 20993-002

Dear Commissioner Califf:

The Food and Drug Administration’s decision to abandon commonsense


restrictions on remotely prescribing and administering abortion-inducing drugs is
both illegal and dangerous. In direct contravention of longstanding FDA practice
and congressional mandate, the FDA’s rollback of important safety restrictions
ignores both women’s health and straightforward federal statutes. We urge you to
reverse your decision.
The authority to regulate abortion lies with the people and their elected
representatives. In our states, we prioritize the health and safety of women and
children and our laws reflect this. And in many states, including Alabama, elective
abortion is illegal. For example, in Alabama, abortion is permitted only when a
pregnancy poses a “serious health risk” to a woman, Ala. Code § 26-23H-4. In the
rare and unfortunate circumstance in which abortion could occur legally, it must
be under the close supervision of a qualified physician, Ala. Code § 16-23E-7.
Alabama’s law carries criminal penalties for providers and, as you seem to
acknowledge, your recent change in policy does nothing to dilute the strength of
state laws. Our States will not yield to the Administration’s radical pro-abortion
policies.
As you know, mifepristone is an abortion drug that causes an abortion by
blocking the body’s receptors for the hormone necessary to carry an unborn child
to term. As you also know, the drug is risky. When the FDA first approved it in
2000, the agency recognized that the drug carried serious risks for women,
including infection and bleeding. To mitigate the risk of harm to women, the FDA
imposed several restrictions, which it began issuing as part of a Risk Evaluation
Mitigation Strategy (“REMS”) in 2007. According to the REMS, mifepristone
could only be prescribed by a qualified physician and administered in a hospital,
clinic, or medical office and only by or under the supervision of such a physician.
Until recently, the FDA adhered to the judgment that these requirements—which
prohibited remotely prescribing mifepristone—are necessary to mitigate the
serious health risks to women who take the drug.
Many states have rightly recognized that drugs like mifepristone are
dangerous, especially when prescribed and administered remotely. As part of the
Women’s Health and Safety Act, the Alabama Legislature recognized the risk of
“failure and complications from medical abortion” and provided that “[o]nly a
physician may … administer[] or otherwise prescribe an abortion-inducing drug,”
which can only be prescribed after an in-person examination. Ala. Code § 16-23E-
7; see also, e.g., Ind. Code § 16-34-2-1 (“A physician must dispense the abortion
inducing drug in person and have the pregnant woman consume the drug in the
presence of the physician.”). It is not seriously disputed that provisions like these
are lawful and necessary to protect women’s health.
These laws to protect women’s health and safety comport with longstanding
federal law. Congress mandated that “[e]very article or thing designed, adapted,
or intended for producing abortion” is “nonmailable matter and shall not be
conveyed in the mails or delivered from any post office or by any letter carrier.”
18 U.S.C. 1461; see also 18 U.S.C. 1462 (criminalizing “tak[ing] or receiv[ing]”
such nonmailable matter). Though Congress repealed this provision’s application
to contraceptives in 1971, see Pub. L. No. 91-662, 84 Stat. 1973 (1971), the
provision prohibiting post offices from delivering abortion-related drugs remains
intact. No court—and certainly not the United States Supreme Court—ever
purported to strike down these abortion-related provisions.
About six months after Dobbs was decided, the FDA announced a wholesale
change to the REMS for mifepristone that purports to authorize its remote
prescription and administration. This change isn’t the result of an analysis on how
to help promote women’s health. Instead, the FDA explains that “the REMS must
be modified to reduce burden on the health care delivery system and to ensure the
benefits of the product outweigh the risks.” 1 At the same time, the Office of Legal
Counsel of the Department of Justice issued a creative opinion asserting that,
contrary to the plain text of 18 U.S.C. § 1461, federal law “does not prohibit the
mailing, or the delivery or receipt by mail, of” abortion-inducing drugs. 46 Op.
O.L.C. __ (Dec. 23, 2022) (slip op. at 1-2).
The problems with this change in policy are legion. Most importantly, the
FDA has ignored its responsibility to protect health and safety by prioritizing a
reckless pro-abortion policy over women’s health. Though there are risks to a
woman of using these drugs at any point in pregnancy, abortion-inducing drug are
riskiest when used later in pregnancy. This means that accurately determining the
date of pregnancy is critical for women’s safety. And that determination will be
accurate only if made in-person via ultrasound. Even the American College of
Obstetricians and Gynecologists—a pro-abortion group that unsuccessfully sued
the FDA to try to achieve the result you now marshal in—admits that an ultrasound

1
Information about Mifepristone for Medical Termination of Pregnancy Through Ten
Weeks Gestation, U.S. Food & Drug Admin. (Jan. 3, 2023), https://www.fda.gov/drugs/
postmarket-drug-safety-information-patients-and- providers/ questions-and- answers-
mifepristone- medical-termination-pregnancy-through-ten-weeks-gestation.
is needed to accurately determine gestational age. 2 By permitting and promoting
the remote use of abortion drugs, you are endangering the lives of women. Of
course, your policy enthusiastically endangers the lives of unborn children who
may be even older and more developed than could be known without an in-person
examination.
Aside from ignoring the health of women and the lives of unborn children,
your decision ignores the plain text of federal law. Federal law has long provided
that: “Every article or thing designed, adapted, or intended for producing
abortion … [i]s declared to be nonmailable matter and shall not be conveyed in
the mails or delivered from any post office or by any letter carrier.” 18 U.S.C. §
1461. To be sure, the Biden Justice Department recently tried to invent an
exception to the law, opining that the law “is narrower than a literal reading might
suggest.” 46 Op. O.L.C. __ (slip op. at 5). But the statute couldn’t be plainer, and
it is no suggestion: a violation is a felony that carries five years’ imprisonment.
And yet, you now encourage physicians to facilitate remote abortions and
pharmacies to order and provide abortion drugs.
The Biden DOJ’s conclusion is implausible on its face, and a closer look
makes the conclusion even more farcical. It relies on a series of lower-court
decisions from about 100 years ago, all of which concerned contraceptives, not
abortion. 3 While Congress removed the statutory references to contraceptives in
response to those decisions, Congress has never taken steps to loosen restrictions
on abortion-inducing drugs. Somehow, the Opinion reaches the strained
conclusion that old court decisions disfavoring restrictions on contraceptives can
now be used to speak for Congress on abortion. It should be obvious that this
conclusion is exactly backwards: Congress decided not to remove statutory
restrictions on abortion. The argument that Congress, by removing references to
contraception, meant to remove references to abortion but failed to say so, is
unserious. Furthermore, post-Dobbs, there is no credible legal argument that state
laws could so easily be usurped.
Though the FDA has abdicated its responsibility to protect women’s health,
we have not. To be crystal clear, you have not negated any of our laws that forbid
the remote prescription, administration, and use of abortion-inducing drugs. The
health and safety of our citizens—women and children included—is of paramount
concern. Nothing in the FDA’s recent changes affects how we will protect our
people.

Sincerely,

2
Am. Coll. of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, Committee Opinion No. 700: Methods for
Estimating Due Date, 129 Obstetrics & Gynecology 5 (2017)
(https://www.acog.org/clinical/clinical-guidance/committee-opinion/articles/2017/05/ methods-
for-estimating-the-due-date).
3
Slip op. at 11 n.11 (admitting that “[t]he leading cases … each involved items that could
be used to prevent conception rather than to produce abortion”).
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