HomePoliticsTexas Man Sues California Doctor Over Abortion Pills in Unborn Child Murder Case

Texas Man Sues California Doctor Over Abortion Pills in Unborn Child Murder Case

Sarah Johnson

Sarah Johnson

July 26, 2025

3 min read

Brief

A Texas man sues a California doctor for mailing abortion pills, alleging murder of his unborn children in a landmark wrongful death case.

In a groundbreaking legal battle, a Texas man, Jerry Rodriguez, has launched a federal wrongful death lawsuit against a California physician, Dr. Remy Coeytaux, accusing him of "murdering" his unborn children by mailing abortion pills across state lines. This case, filed in the Southern District of Texas, is a bold test of how far anti-abortion advocates can push against blue state protections using obscure federal laws and Texas statutes.

Rodriguez claims that Dr. Coeytaux facilitated illegal self-managed abortions by sending abortion-inducing drugs to Galveston County, Texas, where they were used to terminate two pregnancies in 2024 and 2025. The heart-wrenching details allege that Rodriguez’s girlfriend was pressured by her estranged husband—who reportedly paid Coeytaux via Venmo—to take the pills, ending pregnancies Rodriguez insists were his. Ultrasound images of a second pregnancy, claimed to be a boy, are part of the evidence submitted.

What makes this case particularly explosive is its revival of the Comstock Act, an 1873 federal law banning the mailing of abortion-related materials. Though largely dormant for over a century, it’s now being wielded as a weapon by Rodriguez’s attorney, Jonathan Mitchell, the mind behind Texas’s controversial heartbeat law. The suit argues Coeytaux violated this federal statute and Texas laws requiring in-state oversight for abortion procedures—none of which the California doctor allegedly followed.

Rodriguez is not holding back, seeking over $75,000 in damages, a national class certification for fathers of unborn children, and a permanent block on Coeytaux mailing such drugs. This lawsuit sidesteps California’s abortion shield laws by filing directly in federal court, potentially carving a new path for anti-abortion litigants to target out-of-state providers.

As this case unfolds, it’s clear it could reshape the battle over abortion pills post-Dobbs, challenging the very supply chain that sustains access in restrictive states. With no response yet from Coeytaux, the legal and cultural fireworks are just beginning.

Topics

Texas abortion lawsuitCalifornia doctor abortion pillsComstock Actwrongful death unborn childRodriguez v CoeytauxPoliticsUS NewsAbortion LawsTexas

Editor's Comments

Well, folks, if the Comstock Act is making a comeback, does that mean we’re also bringing back Victorian corsets and horse-drawn carriages? This dusty 1873 law being dusted off feels like a legal time machine—just hope it doesn’t crash into modern rights. And hey, mailing pills across state lines? Sounds like Dr. Coeytaux might’ve thought he was running an Amazon Prime for personal choices. Let’s see if this Texas courtroom becomes the new Wild West for abortion battles!

Like this article? Share it with your friends!

If you find this article interesting, feel free to share it with your friends!

Thank you for your support! Sharing is the greatest encouragement for us.

Related Stories