UPDATE (May 21 2024, 6:12 p.m. ET): The Louisiana state House passed SB276, which would designate mifepristone and misoprostol as Schedule IV drugs under the state’s “Uniform Controlled Dangerous Substances Law.” The bill now returns to the state Senate.
The state of Louisiana has criminalized virtually all abortions from the moment of fertilization since the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. But now lawmakers want to go even further: On Monday, the state House began debate on a bill that designates the two pills most typically used in medication abortion, mifepristone and misoprostol, as Category IV controlled substances.
Why would Louisiana ban these pills again when it already has a sweeping prohibition in place? The proposal’s origins are of limited help in answering that question. It came as an amendment to a bill that originally focused on people who use abortion drugs on pregnant patients without their consent — an issue that has made headlines in several high-profile stories, including one involving the sister of the bill’s primary sponsor, state Sen. Thomas Pressley. Only after that bill unanimously passed the Senate, though, did Pressley propose the controlled substances amendment.
Abortion opponents have taken aim at members of a patient’s support network partly because other targets are off limits.
An exercise in empty symbolism seems an unlikely explanation. A poll this month by The Times-Picayune found that a majority of Louisianans believe that the state should allow abortions until 15 weeks. Instead, the new bill recognizes that existing bans have not been enough to stop the flow of drugs and patients across state lines — and develops new tools to track the use of these critical medications and frighten anyone who might prescribe them.
Louisiana law typically categorizes medications, such as opioids, as Category IV drugs because they are addictive and thus have a high potential for abuse. To prescribe such drugs, physicians in the state need a special license, and the state tracks the patient, physician and pharmacy involved in each prescription. Therein lies one of the primary functions of the law: The state has had a hard time enforcing its abortion ban in part because it is hard to identify when and how pills change hands. At least when a prescription originates in state, this bill might give Louisiana prosecutors an extra edge in identifying people to prosecute.
Equally important is the bill’s creation of a new crime: the possession of these abortion drugs without a prescription, with a sentence of up to 10 years in prison. The bill does not make it a crime for a “pregnant woman to possess mifepristone or misoprostol for her own consumption” — and, in theory, it exempts other lawful medical uses. But it is intended to crack down on a group antiabortion advocates have targeted since the reversal of Roe: “aiders and abettors,” a term applied to friends, family and others who help abortion patients.
Abortion opponents have taken aim at these members of a patient’s support network partly because other targets are off limits. Antiabortion groups have vowed — in the face of dissension from so-called antiabortion abolitionists — not to punish women. Physicians, for their part, often prove unwilling to run the grievous legal risk involved in violating a criminal ban. That leaves others willing to help patients. This bill gives prosecutors a new tool: If anyone possesses mifepristone or misoprostol without a prescription, it does not matter whether they ever perform an abortion.
The interest in prosecuting aiders and abettors isn’t new. Texas’ SB8, a law that predated Roe’s demise, allowed anyone to sue members of a support network for at least $10,000 any time an abortion occurred. Local ordinances targeting “abortion trafficking” focus on those who transport others seeking an abortion.








