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IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
FOR THE NORTHERN DISTRICT OF TEXAS
AMARILLO DIVISION

ALLIANCEFOR HIPPOCRATIC
MEDICINE, et al.,
Plaintiffs,

2 :22- CV- 223- Z

V.

U.S.FOODAND DRUG
ADMINISTRATION
, et al. ,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUMOPINION AND ORDER

Before the Court is Plaintiffs Motion for Preliminary Injunction ( Motion ) (ECF No. 6), filed
onNovember 18, 2022. The Court GRANTS the Motion INPART.

Over twenty years ago , the United States Food and Drug Administration ( FDA ) approved

chemical abortion ( 2000 Approval ). The legality of the 2000 Approval is now before this Court .
Why did it take two decades for judicial review in federal court? After all, Plaintiffs petitions
challenging the 2000 Approval date back to the year 2002 , right?

Simply put, FDA stonewalled judicial review

until now .Before Plaintiffs filed this case,

FDA ignored their petitions for over sixteen years, even though the law requires an agency response
within 180 days of receipt of the petition . 21 C.F.R. § 10.30(e )(2)) . But FDA waited 4,971 days

to adjudicate Plaintiffs first petition and 994 days to adjudicate the second . See ECF Nos. 1-14,
1-28, 1-36 , 1-44 ( 2002 Petition, 2019 Petition

respectively ) . Had FDA responded to

Plaintiffs petitions within the 360 total days allotted , this case would have been in federal court

decades earlier.Instead, FDA postponed and procrastinated for nearly 6,000 days .

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Plaintiffs are doctors and national medical associations that provide healthcare for pregnant and
post-abortive women and girls . Plaintiffs sued Defendants to challenge multiple administrative actions

culminating in the 2000 Approval of the chemical abortion regimen for mifepristone . ECF No. 1at 2.

Mifepristone

also known as RU-486 or Mifeprex

is a synthetic steroid that blocks the hormone

progesterone ,halts nutrition ,and ultimately starves the unborn human until death . ECF No. 7 at

Because mifepristone alone will not always complete the abortion , FDA mandates a two-step drug
regimen : mifepristone to kill the unborn human , followed by misoprostol to induce cramping and

contractions to expel the unborn human from the mother’s womb .Id. at 8.

In 1996 , the Population Council² filed a new drug application ( NDA ) with FDA for
mifepristone . ECF No. 1 at 35. Shortly thereafter , FDA reset the NDA from

review

standard to priority

. In February 2000 , FDA wrote a letter to the Population Council stating that adequate

information ha[d] not been presented to demonstrate that the drug , when marketed in accordance

with the terms of distribution proposed , is safe and effective for use as recommended . ECF No.

1-24 at 6 (emphasis added ) . FDA also noted the restrictions on distribution will need to be
amended Id.

Jurists oftenusethe word fetus to inaccuratelyidentifyunbornhumans inunscientificways. The word fetus
refersto a specific gestationalstage of development, as opposedto the zygote, blastocyst, or embryo stages.
See ROBERTP. GEORGE & CHRISTOPHERTOLLEFSEN, EMBRYO27–56 (2008) ( explainingthe gestationalstages ofan
unborn human) . Becauseotherjuristsusethe terms unbornhuman or unborn child interchangeably, and because
both termsareinclusiveof the multiplegestationalstages relevantto the FDA Approval, 2016 Changes, and2021
Changes, this Court uses unbornhuman or unbornchild terminologythroughoutthis Order, as appropriate.
2

The PopulationCouncilwas founded by John D. Rockefellerin 1952 after he conveneda conferencewith

populationactivists such as Planned Parenthood’sdirectorand several well- knowneugenicists.
MATTHEWCONNELLY, FATAL MISCONCEPTION: THE
TO
WORLD POPULATION156 (2008) .
Theconferenceattendeesdiscussed the problemof quality. John D.Rockefeller, On the Origins ofthe
PopulationCouncil, 3 POPULATIONANDDEV. REV. 493, 496 ( 1977) . They concludedthat [ m odern civilizationhad
reducedthe operationofnaturalselectionby saving more weak lives and enablingthem to reproduce thereby
resultingin a downward trend in . . genetic quality. Id.

2

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Mere months later, FDA approved the chemical abortion regimen under Subpart H commonly
known as accelerated approval and originally designed to expedite investigational HIV medications
during the AIDS epidemic.³ Subpart H accelerates approval of drugs that have been studied for their
safety and effectiveness in treating serious or life-threatening illnesses and that provide meaningful

therapeutic benefit to patients over existing treatments (e.g. , ability to treat patients unresponsive to,or

intolerant of, available therapy , or improved patient response over available therapy). 21 C.F.R.
314.500

FDA then imposed post-approval restrictions to assure safe use. See 21 C.F.R. 314.520.
These restrictions were later adopted when Subpart Hwas codified as a Risk Evaluation and Mitigation
Strategy ( REMS ) to ensure that the benefits ofthe drug outweigh the risks. 21 U.S.C.

355-1(a)(1)

(2).The drugs were limited to women and girls with unborn children aged seven-weeks gestation

or younger. ECF No. 7 at 9. FDA also required three (3) in-person office visits : the first to
administer mifepristone, the second to administer misoprostol , and the third to assess any
complications and ensure there were no fetal remains in the womb . Id. Additionally , abortionists

were required to be properly trained to administer the regimen and to report all adverse events
from the drugs .Id.
Plaintiffs American Association of Pro-Life Obstetricians & Gynecologists ( AAPLOG )
and Christian Medical & Dental Associations filed the 2002 Petition with FDA challenging the

2000 Approval . Id. In 2006 , the U.S. House Subcommittee on Criminal Justice , Drug Policy, and
Human Resources expressed the same concerns and held a hearing to investigate

handling

See, e.g., Jessica Holden Kloda & Shahza Somerville, FDA’s Expedited ReviewProcess: The Needfor Speed, 35
APPLIED CLINICAL TRIALS 17, 17-18 (2015) ( In1992, in response to a push by AIDS advocates to makethe
investigationalanti-AIDS drug azidothymidine (AZT) accessible, the FDA enacted Subpart H
to as accelerated approval; givingrise to expedited review ofdrugs by the FDA. ) .

3

commonly referred

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of mifepristone and its subsequent monitoring ofthe drug.4 Then-Chairman Souder remarked that
mifepristone was

associated with the deaths of at least 8 women,9 life-threatening incidents,232

hospitalizations, 116 blood transfusions , and 88 cases of infection. Additionally, Chairman

Souder noted more than 950 adverse event cases associated with mifepristone out of only
575,000 prescriptions, at most. The subsequent StaffReport concluded that
monitoring of mifepristone was

approval and

substandard and necessitates the withdrawal of this dangerous

and fatal product before more women suffer the known and anticipated consequences or

fatalities . 7 The report stated the unusual approval demonstrated a lower standard of care for

women, and [mifepristone’s] withdrawal from the market is justified and necessary to protect the
public’s health.
8

FDA rejected the 2002 Petition on March 29, 2016

nearly fourteen years after it was

filed . ECF No. 7 at 9. That same day, FDA approved several changes to the chemical abortion
drug regimen , including the removal of post-approval safety restrictions for pregnant women and

girls . Id. at 10. FDA increased the maximum gestational age from seven-weeks gestation to

ten-weeks gestation . Id. And FDA also :(1) changed the dosage for chemical abortion ; (2) reduced
the number of required in-person office visits from three to one ; (3 ) allowed non-doctors to
prescribe and administer chemical abortions ; and (4 ) eliminated the requirement for prescribers to
report non-fatal adverse events from chemical abortion .Id.

4

See The FDA and RU-486: Lowering the Standardfor Women’s Health: HearingBeforethe Subcomm. on Crim.
Just , DrugPol’y, & Hum. Res. ofthe H. Comm. on Gov’t Reform, 109th Cong. 3 ( 2006) ( Subcommittee Report ) .
The transcript of the hearing before the House Subcommittee is available at https://www.govinfo.gov/content/pkg/
CHRG- 109hhrg31397/ html/ CHRG- 109hhrg31397.htm .
.

SubcommitteeReportat40.

.

4

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In March 2019, Plaintiffs AAPLOG and American College of Pediatricians filed the 2019
Petition challenging

2016 removal of safety restrictions. Id. On April 11, 2019 , FDA

approved GenBioPro, Inc.’s abbreviated new drug application ( ANDA ) for a generic version of
mifepristone without requiring or reviewing new peer-reviewed science ( 2019

Generic

Approval ). Id. Two years later, on April 12, 2021, FDA announced it would exercise

enforcement discretion to allow dispensing of mifepristone through the mail .

mail-order pharmacy during the COVID pandemic

or through a

notwithstanding the nearly 150-year-old

Comstock Act banning the mailing of [e]very article, instrument, substance, drug, medicine or
thing that produces abortion. Id. Finally,on December 16 ,2021,FDA denied most ofPlaintiff’s

2019 Petition.Id. at 11. Specifically, FDA expressly rejected the 2019 Petition’s request to keep
the in-person dispensing requirements and announced that the agency would permanently allow
chemical abortion by mail. Id.
After Plaintiffs filed suit, Danco Laboratories , LLC ( Danco )
mifepristone

the holder of the NDA for

moved to intervene as a defendant . ECF No. 19. On February 6 , 2023 , this Court

granted Danco’s motion . ECF No. 33. Plaintiffs now seek a preliminary injunction ordering

Defendants to withdraw or suspend : (1) FDA’s 2000 Approval and 2019 Approval of mifepristone

tablets ,200 mg, thereby removing both from the list of Approved Drugs ; (2)

2016 Changes

and 2019 Generic Approval ; and (3 ) FDA’s April 12 , 2021, Letter and December 16 , 2021,
Response to the 2019 Petition concerning the in-person dispensing requirement for mifepristone .

ECF No. 7 at 12. Additionally , Plaintiffs seek to enjoin Defendants from taking actions
inconsistent with these orders .Id.

5

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LEGAL STANDARD

A court may issue a preliminary injunction when a movant satisfies the following four
factors : (1) a substantial likelihood of success on the merits (2) a substantial threat of irreparable

harm ifthe injunction does not issue; (3) the threatened injury outweighs any harm that will result

ifthe injunction is granted ; and (4) the grant of an injunction is inthe public interest . See Louisiana

v.Becerra,20 F.4th 260, 262 (5th Cir . 2021) . The purpose of a preliminary injunction is always
to prevent irreparable injury so as to preserve the court’s ability to render a meaningful decision
the merits Canal Auth. of State of Fla. v. Callaway, 489 F.2d 567 , 576 (5th Cir . 1974).
The same standards apply to prevent irreparable injury underthe Administrative Procedure Act
( APA ). See 5 U.S.C.

705 ; Wages & White Lion Invs., L.L.C. v. U.S. Food & Drug Admin ., 16

F.4th 1130, 1143 (5th Cir . 2021).
ANALYSIS

A. Plaintiffs Have Standing

The judicial power of federal courts is limited to certain Cases and Controversies .

U.S.

.art. III, 2. The case-or-controversy requirement requires a plaintiff to establish he

has standing to sue. See Cibolo Waste, Inc. v. City of San Antonio , 718 F.3d 469, 473 (5th Cir.

2013) To have standing, the party invoking federal jurisdiction must show : (i) that he suffered

an injury in fact that is concrete , particularized, and actual or imminent; (ii) that the injury was
likely caused by the defendant ; and (iii) that the injury would likely be redressed by judicial relief.

Trans Union LLC v . Ramirez, 141 S. Ct. 2190 , 2203 (2021). Courts should assess whether the
alleged injury to the plaintiff has a

close relationship to harm traditionally

recognized as

providing a basis for a lawsuit in American courts . Id. at 2204. [S]tanding is not dispensed in

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gross; rather, plaintiffs must demonstrate standing for each claim that they press and for each form
of reliefthat they seek (for example , injunctive relief and damages ). Id. at 2208 .

  1. Plaintiff
    MedicalAssociationshaveAssociational
    Standing

An association or organization can establish an injury -in-fact through either of two

theories , appropriately called associational standing and organizational standing . OCA
Greater Hous. v. Texas , 867 F.3d 604 , 610 (5th Cir. 2017). Under a theory of associational

an association has standing to bring a suit on behalf of its members when its members
would otherwise have standing to sue in their own right, the interests at stake are germane to the
organization’s purpose , and neither the claim asserted nor the relief requested requires the
participation of individual members in the lawsuit . Tex . Ass’n of Mfrs.v. U.S. Consumer Prod
Safety Comm’n ,989 F.3d 368 , 377 (5th Cir . 2021) (quoting Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw
Env’t Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528 U.S. 167 , 181 (2000 )) .
standing

Here, the associations members have standing because they allege adverse events from

chemical abortion drugs can overwhelm the medical system and place enormous pressure and
stress on doctors during emergencies and complications . ECF No. 7 at 14. These emergencies
9

consume crucial limited resources, including blood for transfusions ,physician time and attention ,
space inhospital and medical centers , and other equipment and medicines . ECF No. 1-5 at 9. This

is especially true in maternity-care deserts

geographical areas with limited physician

availability .Id. These emergencies force doctors into situations

in which they feel complicit in

the elective chemical abortion by needing to remove a baby with a beating heart or pregnancy

9

See James Studnicki et al., A LongitudinalCohortStudyofEmergencyRoomUtilizationFollowingMifepristone
Chemicaland SurgicalAbortions, 1999-2015, 8 HEALTHSERV. RSCH. MGMT. EPIDEMIOLOGY8 (2021) (
visits

followingmifepristoneabortion grew from 3.6% of all postabortionvisits in 2002 to 33.9% of all postabortionvisits
in 2015. The trend toward increasinguse ofmifepristone abortion requires all concernedwith health careutilization
to carefully follow the ramificationsof ERutilization. ) .

7

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tissue as the only means to save the life of the woman or girl. ECF No. 1 at 85. Members of
Plaintiff medical associations oppose being forced to end the life of a human being in the womb
for no medical reason,including by having to complete an incomplete elective chemical abortion .

. at 86 see also Texas v. Becerra , No. 5 :22-CV – 185 -H, 2022 WL 3639525 , at * 12 (N.D. Tex.
Aug. 23 , 2022 ) (unwanted participation in elective abortions is cognizable under Article III).

Plaintiffs also argue the challenged actions prevent Plaintiff doctors from practicing

evidence-based medicine and have caused Plaintiffs to face increased exposure to allegations of
malpractice and potential liability , along with higher insurance costs . ECF No. 7 at 15. The lack

of information on adverse events harms the doctor-patient relationship because women and girls

are prevented from giving informed consent to providers . Id see also American Medical
Association Code of Medical Ethics, Opinion 2.1.1: Informed Consent (informed consent is
fundamental in both ethics and law ) . To obtain informed consent , physicians must [a]ssess the
patient’s ability to understand relevant medical information and present to their patient relevant

information accurately and sensitively

including the burdens and risks of the procedure .Id.

Women also perceive the harm to the informed-consent aspect of the physician-patient
relationship . In one study , fourteen percent of women and girls reported having received

insufficient information about ( 1) side effects , ( 2) the intensity of the cramping and bleeding,
(3) the next steps after expelling the aborted human, and (4) potential negative emotional reactions

like fear , uncertainty , sadness , regret, and pain. See Katherine A. Rafferty & Tessa Longbons,

AbortionChanges You : A Case Study to Understand the Communicative Tensions in Women’s

Medication

Abortion

(2021). Plaintiffphysicians

Narratives,

HEALTH

36

COMMC’N

1485,

1485-94

lack of pertinent information on chemical abortion harms their

physician-patient relationships because they cannot receive informed consent from the women and

8

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girls they treat in their clinics. Plaintiffs allege these actions have

ofcare.

4431

radically altered the standard

ECF No. 1-6 at 7 .

Additionally,Plaintiff medical associations have associational standing via their members

third-party standing to sue on behalf of their patients . See N.Y. State Club Ass’n, Inc. v. City of
New York,487 U.S. 1,9 ( 1988) ( It does not matter what specific analysis is necessary to determine

that the members could bring the same suit. );Pa. Psychiatric Soc.v. Green Spring Health Servs.,

Inc., 280 F.3d 278, 293 (3d Cir.2002) ( So long as the association’s members have or will suffer
sufficient injury to merit standing and their members possess standing to represent the interests of

third-parties, then associations can advance the third -party claims of their members without
suffering injuries themselves . ) ; Ohio Ass’n of Indep. Schs . v. Goff, 92 F.3d 419 , 422 (6th Cir.

1996) (associational standing via member schools third-party standing to assert constitutional
rights of parents to direct their children’s education ) ; 13A Charles Alan Wright & Arthur R. Miller,
FederalPractice and Procedure 3531.9.3 (3d ed . 2022) ( Doctors regularly achieve standing to
protect the rights ofpatients and their own related professional rights. ).

The requirements for third -party standing are met here because : ( 1) the patients have
endure [d] many intense side effects and suffer [ed] significant complications requiring medical

attention and suffer distress and regret

(2) the patients have a close relation to the physician

members of the Plaintiff medical associations ; and (3 ) some hindrance exists to the patients
ability to protect their interests . See ECF No. 7 at 13 Powers v. Ohio , 499 U.S. 400 , 410–11
(1991) Singleton v. Wulff, 428 U.S. 106, 117 ( 1976 ) (women seeking abortions may be chilled

by a desire to protect the very privacy of [their ] decision from the publicity of a court suit );

Cf. Trans Union, 141 S. Ct. at 2211 ( Nor did those plaintiffs present evidence that

they suffered some other

injury (such as an emotional injury) ) ; Denney v. Deutsche Bank AG, 443 F.3d 253 , 265 (2d Cir . 2006) .

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Pa.Psychiatric ,280 F.3d at 290 ( [A ] party need not face insurmountable hurdles to warrant third

..

party standing ) The injuries suffered by patients of the Plaintiff medical associations members

are sufficient to confer associational standing .
Here ,the physician -patient dynamic favors third -party standing . Unlike abortionists suing

on behalf of women seeking abortions , here there are no potential conflicts of interest between the
Plaintiff physicians and their patients .See June Med. Servs L.L.C. v. Russo , 140 S. Ct.2103 ,2167
(2020) (Alito , J. , dissenting ), abrogated by Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Org., 142 S. Ct .

2228 (2022) (abortionists have a financial interest in avoiding burdensome regulations , while

women seeking abortions have an interest in the preservation of regulations that protect their
health ) . And the case for a close physician -patient relationship is even stronger here than in the

abortion context . See id. at 2168 ( [ A] woman who obtains an abortion typically does not develop

a close relationship with the doctor who performs the procedure .On the contrary ,their relationship
is generally brief and very limited . ); see also ECF No. 1-9 at 7 ( [ ]n many cases there is no
doctor-patient relationship [between a woman and an abortionist ],so [women ] often present to
overwhelmed emergency rooms in their distress , where they are usually cared for by physicians
other than the abortion prescriber . ); ECF No. 1-11 at 4 (because there is no follow -up or

additional care provided to patients by abortionists , there is no established relationship with a
physician

and patients are simply left to report to the emergency room ) . Plaintiff physicians

often spend several hours treating post -abortive women, even hospitalizing them overnight or
providing treatment throughout several visits . See ECF No. 1-8 at

. Given the Supreme Court’s

jurisprudence on the close relationship between abortionists and women, the facts of this case

indicate that Plaintiffs relationships with their patients are at least as close

purposes of third -party standing .

10

if not closer

for

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,women who have already obtained an abortion may be more hindered than women
who challenge restrictions on abortion . Women who have aborted a child especially through
chemical abortion drugs that necessitate the woman seeing her aborted child once it passes often
experience shame , regret , anxiety , depression , drug abuse, and suicidal thoughts because of the
abortion . See ECF No. 96 at 25 ; David C. Reardon et al., Deaths Associated with Pregnancy
Outcome : A Record Linkage Study of Low Income Women , 95 S. MED . J. 834 , 834–41 (2002)
(women who receive abortions have a 154% higher risk of death from suicide than if they gave
birth, with persistent tendencies over time and across socioeconomic boundaries , indicating self
destructive tendencies , depression , and other unhealthy behavior aggravated by the abortion
experience ) Priscilla K. Coleman , Abortion and Mental Health : Quantitative Synthesis and
Analysis of Research Published 1995-2009 , 199 BRITISH J. PSYCHIATRY 180, 180-86 (2011)
Finally

same). Subsequently ,in addition to the typical privacy concerns present in third -party standing in
abortion cases, adverse abortion experiences that are often deeply traumatizing pose a hindrance
to a woman’s ability to bring suit . In short,Plaintiffs rather than their patients are most likely
the least awkward challenger [s ] to Defendants actions . Craig v. Boren , 429 U.S. 190, 197
(1976).
(

  1. Plaintiff
    MedicalAssociationshaveOrganizational
    Standing

[ ]rganizational standing

does not depend on the standing of the organization’s

members. OCA, 867 F.3d at 610. The organization can establish standing in its own name ifit

meets the same standing test that applies to individuals. Id. (internal marks omitted) .
An organization can have standing if it has proven a drain on its resources resulting from
counteracting the effects of the defendant’s actions. La.ACORN Fair Hous. v. LeBlanc, 211 F.3d

298, 305 (5th Cir.2000);see also Zimmerman v. City ofAustin, Tex., 881 F.3d 378,390 (5th Cir.

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2018) (changing one’s plans or strategies in response to an allegedly injurious law can itself be a
sufficient injury to confer standing ).

concrete and demonstrable injury to the organization’s

activities with the consequent drain on the organization’s resources constitutes far more than
simply a setback to the organization’s abstract social interests . Havens Realty Corp. v. Coleman ,

455 U.S. 363 , 379 ( 1982) (internal marks omitted) .
One way an organization can establish standing is by identifying specific projects that [it]

had to put on hold or otherwise curtail in order to respond to the [challenged action

Tex . State

LULAC v. Elfant, 52 F.4th 248 , 253 (5th Cir . 2022 ) (internal marks omitted ) . This is not a
heightening of the Lujan standard ,

11

but an example of how to satisfy it by pointing to a non

litigation-related expense . OCA, 867 F.3d at 612. Plaintiffs

need not identify specific projects

that they have placed on hold or otherwise curtailed . La Unión del Pueblo Entero v.Abbott ,No.
5:21-CV-0844 -XR , 2022 WL 3052489 , at * 31 (W.D. Tex . Aug. 2, 2022 ) . Rather ,this is simply

the most secure foundation to establish organizational standing. 13A Charles Alan Wright &

Arthur R. Miller,Federal Practice and Procedure § 3531.9.5 (3d ed. 2022 ). Furthermore , [a]t

the pleading stage , we liberally construe allegations of injury. Bezet v. United States , 714 Fed.
Appx . 336, 339 (5th Cir .2017) (quoting Little v. KPMG LLP, 575 F.3d 533 , 540 (5th Cir .2009)).

Here, Plaintiff medical associations have standing via diversionary injury . Because of
failure to require reporting of all adverse events , Plaintiffs allege FDA’s actions have
frustrated their ability to educate and inform their member physicians , their patients , and the public

on the dangers of chemical abortion drugs . ECF No. 7 at 12. As a result , Plaintiffs attest they have
See Lujan v . Defs. of Wildlife , 504 U.S. 555 ( 1992) .

At the hearing, Danco argued Elfant held there was no standing where organizations failed to identify specific
projectsput on hold. ECF No. 136 at 125. This is incorrect. The Fifth Circuit in Elfantassumed without deciding the
plaintiffs pled an injury-in- fact but heldthey did not have standingbecausethe causation and redressability elements
were not met. See 52 F.4th at 255.

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diverted valuable resources away from advocacy and educational efforts to compensate for the

lack of information. See ECF No. 1 at 91. Such diversions expend considerable time, energy, and

resources, to the detriment of other priorities and functions and impair Plaintiffs ability to carry
.

out their educational purpose. Id at 92; N.A.A.C.P. v. City ofKyle, Tex., 626 F.3d 233, 238 (5th
Cir.2010)

Similarly , Plaintiffs allege their efforts to respond to

actions have tak [ en]

them away from other priorities such as fundraising and membership recruitment and retention.
ECF Nos . 1-4 at 6, 1-5 at 11. Consequently , Plaintiffs have re-calibrated their outreach efforts to
spend extra time and money educating their members about the dangers of chemical abortion
drugs . Combined,these facts are sufficient to confer organizational standing. See OCA,867 F.3d

at 612 (finding organizational standing even where the injury was not large ) ; Fowler, 178 F.3d
at 356 (injuries in fact need not measure more than an identifiable trifle ) (internal
marks omitted).

  1. Plaintiffs allegedInjuries are Concrete and Redressable

Defendants contend that Plaintiffs theories of standing depend upon layer after layer of
speculation

ECF No. 28 at 20. But Plaintiffs allege FDA’s chemical abortion regimen caused

intense side effects and significant complications for their patients requiring medical intervention

and attention .ECF No. 7 at 13 see id. ( The harms that the FDA has wreaked on women and girls
have also injured , and will continue to injure ,Plaintiff doctors and their medical practices . ) ;id. at

14 ( The FDA’s actions have placed enormous pressure and stress on Plaintiff doctors during these

13

It is true that Plaintiffsmust allege their activitiesin response to the challenged actions differ fromtheir “ routine

activities. See, e.g., City ofKyle, 626 F.3d at 238. ButPlaintiffshave done so. For example, Plaintiffsargue they
conducted independentstudies and analyses of available data to the detriment of their advocacy, educational, and
recruitmentefforts. ECF No. 1-8 at 8. The Fifth Circuithas found diversionary injuries to constitute injuries- in-fact
evenwhere it was less clear the plaintiffs diverted from routine activities. See Ass n of Cmty. Orgs. for ReformNow
v . Fowler, 178 F.3d 350, 360 (5th Cir. 1999) (injury-in- fact where organizationregularly conductedvoter
registration drivesand expended resources registeringvoters in low registrationareas who would have alreadybeen
registered ifnot for the challengedactions).

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emergency situations . ) ; id. at 15 ( The FDA has caused Plaintiff doctors to face increased

exposure to allegations of malpractice and potential liability ,along with higher insurance costs. ).

In fact,Plaintiffs declarations list specific events where Plaintiff physicians provided emergency

care to women suffering from chemical abortion . See ECF Nos. 1-8 at 5–6 , 1-9 at 4–9 , 1-10 at
7 , 1-11 at
. And Defendants even concede the existence of adverse events related to chemical
abortion drugs .See ECF No. 28 at 21. Consequently ,Defendants misconstrue Plaintiffs pleadings

and mischaracterize Plaintiffs evidence as speculative . It is not.
Past injuries thus distinguish this case from Clapper v. Amnesty Int’l USA , where the
Supreme Court held a threatened injury must be certainly impending to constitute injury in fact .

568 U.S. 398 , 410 (2013 ) (quoting Whitmore v. Arkansas , 495 U.S. 149 , 157–58 ( 1990)). Were

there no past injuries in this case, the alleged future harms are still less attenuated than those in
Clapper . See id. (finding

a highly attenuated chain of five separate possibilities needed to align
for the alleged harm to occur ); McCardell v. U.S. Dep’t of Hous . & Urb . Dev., 794 F.3d 510 , 520
(5th Cir. 2015 ) ( [U]nlike in Clapper , where the alleged injury depended on a long and tenuous

chain of contingent events ,the chain -of-events framework in this case involves fewer steps and no
unfounded assumptions . ) (internal marks omitted ). See also ECF No. 1-31 at 10 (roughly eight
percent of women who use abortion pills will require surgical abortion ) ; ECF No. 1-14 at 23
(discussing a study in which 18.3 percent of women required surgical intervention after chemical

abortion ). And as post -Whitmore cases have demonstrated ,the certainly impending standard for

an imminent injury is not as demanding as it sounds . See TransUnion , 141 S. Ct. at 2197
(material risk of future harm can suffice so long as the risk of harm is sufficiently imminent and
substantial ) Susan B. Anthony List v. Driehaus , 573 U.S. 149 , 158 (2014) ( An allegation of

future injury may suffice if the threatened injury is certainly impending , or there is a substantial

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risk that the harm will occur. ) (emphasis added ) ; Clapper , 568 U.S. at 414 n.5 ; Massachusetts v.

E.P.A. , 549 U.S. 497 , 526 n.23 (2007 ) ( Even a small probability of injury is sufficient

provided

of course that the relief sought would , if granted , reduce the probability . ) ; Deanda v. Becerra ,

No. 2:20-CV-092-Z,2022 WL 17572093 , at *2 (N.D. Tex.Dec. 8,2022 ) (collecting cases )
For similar reasons , Defendants reliance on City of Los Angeles v. Lyons also fails .

461 U.S. 95 (1983 ). There ,the Supreme Court held Lyons did not have standing to seek injunctive
relief because [t]here was no finding that Lyons faced a real and immediate threat of again being
illegally choked by Los Angeles police .Id. at 110. The Lyons holding

is based on the obvious

proposition that a prospective remedy will provide no relief for an injury that is, and likely will

remain , entirely in the past. Am . Postal Workers Union v. Frank , 968 F.2d 1373 , 1376 (1st Cir.

1992). No such reluctance , however , is warranted here . Hernandez v. Cremer , 913 F.2d 230,
234 (5th Cir. 1990 ) . Considering FDA’s 2021 decision to permit mail-in chemical abortion ,

many women and girls will consume mifepristone without physician supervision . And in
maternity -care

deserts , women may not have ready access to emergency care. In sum,there are

fewer safety restrictions for women and girls today than ever before . Plaintiffs have good reasons

to believe their alleged injuries will continue in the future , and possibly with greater frequency
than in the past.

Defendants relianceonSpokeo, Inc.v . Robinsis also unavailing. 578 U.S. 330 (2016) . Courts should indeed
assesswhetherthe alleged injury to the plaintiffhas a close relationship to harm traditionally recognizedas the
basis for a lawsuit in Americancourts. See TransUnion, 141 S. Ct. at 2204. But a plaintiffdoesn’t needto
demonstratethat the level of harm he has suffered would be actionableundera similar, common-law causeof
action Perezv . McCreary, Veselka, Bragg& Allen, P.C., 45 F.4th816 , 822 ( 5th Cir. 2022) . Rather, Plaintiffs only
needto show the type of harm allegedly suffered is similar in kind to a type of harm that the commonlawhas
recognizedas actionable. Id see also CampaignLegalCtr. v . Scott, 49 F.4th931, 940 (5thCir. 2022) (Ho. , J,
concurring) (evidence of injuryrequiredby TransUnion is not burdensome) . Harmresultingfrom unsafedrugs is
similar to harm actionable under the common law.

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Defendants next argue Plaintiffs theories depend on unfettered choices made by
independent actors not before the courts and whose exercise of broad and legitimate discretion the

courts cannot presume either to control or to predict . ECF No. 28 at 20 (quoting Lujan,504 U.S.

at 562). [A ] plaintiff must allege personal injury fairly traceable to the defendant’s allegedly
unlawful conduct and likely to be redressed by the requested relief Allen v. Wright,468 U.S. 737 ,
751 (1984),abrogated on other grounds by Lexmark Int’l,Inc. v. Static Control Components, Inc.,

572 U.S. 118 , 134 (2014) see also Simon v. E. Ky. Welfare Rts. Org.,426 U.S. 26 , 41–42 (1976)
In other words , the case or controversy limitation of Art . III still requires that a federal court

act only to redress injury that fairly can be traced to the challenged action of the defendant , and
not injury that results from the independent action of some third party not before the court . ).

In this case,a favorable decision would likely relieve Plaintiffs of at least some of the
injuries allegedly caused by FDA. See Larson v. Valente, 456 U.S. 228 , 243 n.15 (1982)
( [Plaintiffs] need not show that a favorable decision will relieve [their ] every injury . ); Duke

Power Co. v. Carolina Env’t Study Grp., Inc., 438 U.S. 59, 74–75 ( 1978) (a substantial

likelihood of the requested reliefredressingthe alleged injury is enough); Sanchez v. R.G.L., 761
F.3d 495,506 (5th Cir.2014) (a plaintiff need only show that a favorable ruling could potentially

lessen its injury ) Texas v. Becerra, 577 F. Supp . 3d 527 , 560 (N.D. Tex . 2021) ( That the
plaintiffs have brought forth specific evidence and examples of how they will be harmed . . .
distinguishes this case from others where a third party’s actions might have hurt the plaintiff. ) .

And redressability is satisfied even ifrelief must filter downstream through third parties uncertain
to comply with the result, provided the relief would either: ( 1) remove an obstacle for a nonparty
to act in a way favorable to the plaintiff; or (2) influence a nonparty to act in such a way. See, e.g.,
Dep’t of Com.v. New York , 139 S. Ct. 2551, 2565–66 (2019) ( [T ]hird parties will likely react in

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predictable ways . ); Bennett v. Spear, 520 U.S. 154, 169 ( 1997) ( defendants actions need not be

the very last step in the chain of causation ); Larson, 456 U.S. at 242–44; NiGen Biotech, L.L.C.

. Paxton,804 F.3d 389, 396-98 (5th Cir. 2015) . Therefore , Plaintiffs alleged injuries are fairly
traceable to Defendants and redressable by a favorable decision.

  1. Plaintiffsarewithin the

Zone ofInterests

Plaintiffs are also within the zone of interests of the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act
( FFDCA ) and the Comstock Act . Plaintiffs suing under the APA must assert an interest that is
arguably within the zone of interests to be protected or regulated by the statute that they say was

violated Texas v. United States, 809 F.3d 134 , 162 (5th Cir. 2015) (internal marks omitted).

The zone-of-interests test is not meant to be especially demanding and is applied in keeping
with Congress’s evident intent when enacting the APA to make agency action presumptively
reviewable

. (internal marks omitted).The zone-of-interests test looks to the law’s substantive

provisions to determine what interests (and hence which plaintiffs) are protected.

Simmons v.

UBS Fin. Servs., Inc., 972 F.3d 664, 669 (5th Cir . 2020). That interest, at times , may reflect

aesthetic ,conservational, and recreational as well as economic values . Ass ofData Processing

Serv. Orgs., Inc. v. Camp, 397 U.S. 150, 154 (1970).

A federal court’s obligation to hear and decide cases within its jurisdiction is virtually
unflagging

Lexmark , 572 U.S. at 126 (internal marks omitted ). And the trend is toward

enlargement of the class of people who may protest administrative action . Camp ,397 U.S. at 154.

No explicit statutory provision is necessary to confer standing .Id. at 155. The test forecloses
suit only when a plaintiff’s interests are so marginally related to or inconsistent with the purposes
implicit in the statute that it cannot reasonably be assumed that Congress intended to permit the

suit Texas v. United States ,809 F.3d at 162 (internal marks omitted ). In other words , ]here is

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no presumption against judicial review and in favor of administrative absolutism unless that
purpose is fairly discernible in the statutory scheme. Camp, 397 U.S. at 157 (internal marks

omitted) see also Barlow v. Collins, 397 U.S. 159 , 165 ( 1970) (courts must decide if Congress
has in express or implied terms precluded judicial review or committed the challenged action
entirely to administrative discretion ) .

Defendants argue that Plaintiffs identify no particular provision of the FFDCA protecting

their interests . ECF No. 28 at 26. But Plaintiffs interests are not marginally related to the

purposes implicit in the FFDCA . The statute’s substantive provisions protect the safety of
physicians patients and the integrity of the physician-patient relationship .See generally 21 U.S.C.

  1. Furthermore ,this Court finds Plaintiffs havethird -party standing on behalf of their patients .
    Plaintiffs patients are within the zone of interest of the FFDCA because patients seek safe and

effective medical procedures.
Likewise , Plaintiffs are within the zone of interests of the Comstock Act . This statute

indicates a national policy of discountenancing abortion as inimical to the national life. Bours v.

United States ,229 F. 960 , 964 (7th Cir . 1915);see also Bolger v. Youngs Drug Prods. Corp. ,463
U.S. 60 , 71 n.19 ( 1983) (the thrust of the Comstock Act was to prevent the mails from being

used to corrupt the public morals ) . There is no evidence that Congress sought to preclude judicial
review of administrative rulings by FDA as to the legitimate scope of activities available
concerning chemical abortion drugs under these statutes . Camp , 397 U.S. at 157. For all the

aforementioned reasons, Plaintiffs have standing .
B. Plaintiffs Claims Are Reviewable

Defendantsaver that [ a] llofPlaintiffs claims are untimely or unexhausted except their
challenge to FDA’s December 16, 2021, response to the 2019 citizen petition. ECFNo.28 at 26.

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This includes Plaintiffs challenges to: ( 1) the 2000 Approval and FDA’s 2016 Response to the

2002 Petition challenging that approval ; (2) the 2019 Generic Approval ; and (3) , the April 2021
letter As for FDA’s December 2021 Response to the 2019 Petition , Defendants maintain review
is limited to the narrow issues presented in the 2019 Petition
concerning the Comstock Act. Id. at
1.

15

which did not include arguments

The Court disagrees with each of these arguments .

FDA Reopened its Decisionin 2016 and 2021

FDA’s final decision on a citizen petition constitutes final agency action under the APA .

21 C.F.R. 10.45(c). Challenges to agency actions have a six -year statute of limitations period.
See 28 U.S.C. 2401(a ) . Therefore , the statute of limitations for challenging the 2000 Approval
began running on March 29, 2016

the date of FDA’s denial of the 2002 Petition . Because the

2016 Denial of the 2002 Petition occurred more than six years before Plaintiffs filed this suit ,
Defendants argue the challenge is untimely .ECF No. 28 at 26. But if the agency opened the issue

up anew , and then reexamined and reaffirmed its prior decision, the agency’s second action

rather than the original decision

951 (5th Cir .2021) ,

starts the limitations period . See Texas v. Biden,20 F.4th 928,

in part on other grounds , 142 S. Ct . 2528 (2022).

The reopening doctrine arises where an agency conducts a rulemaking or adopts a policy

on an issue at one time,and then in a later rulemaking restates the policy or otherwise addresses
the issue again without altering the original decision .

Wash . All. of Tech . Workers v. U.S. Dep’t

of Homeland Sec ., 892 F.3d 332 , 345 (D.C. Cir . 2018 ); see also Nat’l Biodiesel Bd. v. EPA, 843

F.3d 1010, 1017 (D.C. Cir . 2016) ( The reopener doctrine allows an otherwise untimely challenge

15 The Courtrefers to the 2000 Approval, the 2016 Changes and denialof the 2002 Petition, and the 2019 Generic
Approvalcollectively as FDA’s Pre-2021 Actions. Similarly, the Court refers to FDA’s April 2021 letter and
December2021 Response as FDA’s 2021 Actions.
16 Courts have even applied the doctrine where agencies decide not to engage in rulemaking and then revisit and
reaffirm that decision . See Pub. Citizen v . Nuclear Regul. Comm’n , 901 F.2d 147, 152 (D.C. Cir. 1990) .

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undertaken to reexamine its

former choice . ) (internal marks omitted ); CTIA -Wireless Ass n v. F.C.C. , 466 F.3d 105 , 112 (D.C.

Cir. 2006) (agency reconsidered
justifications

policy by reaffirming policy

and offering two new

not found in prior orders ).

In the rulemaking context , courts have identified four non-exhaustive factors to apply the
doctrine where the agency : ( 1) proposed to make some change in the rules or policies ; (2) called
for comment on new or changed provisions , but at the same time ; (3 ) explained the unchanged ,
republished portions ; and (4) responded to at least one comment aimed at the previously decided

issue . Tripoli Rocketry Ass’n , Inc. v. U.S. Bureau of Alcohol , Tobacco & Firearms , No.
00CV0273 (RBW), 2002 WL 33253171 , at * 6 (D.D.C. June 24 , 2002) (internal marks omitted ).

But a court cannot stop there

it must look to the entire context of the rulemaking including

all relevant proposals and reactions of the agency to determine whether an issue was in fact
reopened . Pub . Citizen , 901 F.2d at 150. For example , an agency can reopen a prior action if it

removes restrictions or safeguards related to the first action or affects a sea change in the
regulatory scheme . See Sierra Club v. EPA , 551 F.3d 1019 , 1025 (D.C. Cir .2008 );
Biodiesel ,
843 F.3d at 1017 (declining to apply doctrine when the basic regulatory scheme remain [ed]
unchanged ) ;Pub . Citizen , 901 F.2d at 152 (agency reopens decision when it reiterates a policy in

such a way as to render the policy subject to renewed challenge on any substantive grounds ).
In the adjudication context, an agency need not solicit or respond to comments to reopen a

decision because adjudication does not require notice and comment procedures . See 5 U.S.C. §§
553 ( ), 554. The reopening doctrine has been applied in the adjudication context where an agency
undertakes a serious , substantive reconsideration of a prior administrative decision.
Chenault v.McHugh,968 F. Supp . 2d 268 ,275 (D.D.C. 2013 );see also Battle v. Sec’y U.S. Dep’t

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ofNavy, 757 Fed. Appx . 172, 175 (3d Cir . 2018) (a petition for reconsideration can restart Section

2401(a) s limitation period if the agency reopens the action based on a finding of new evidence

or that the petition reflects some changed circumstances ); Peavey v. United States , 128 F.

.

3d 85 , 100 (D.D.C. 2015), aff’d, No. 15-5290 ,2016 WL 4098768 (D.C. Cir .2016) (reopening in

2011 occurred where agency elected to conduct a substantive review of servicemember’s 1968
application to correct military records ). For formal agency adjudications , even an order stating

“only that it is denying reconsideration is not conclusive if the agency has altered its original
decision Sendra Corp. v. Magaw, 111 F.3d 162 , 167 (D.C. Cir . 1997).
The standard for reopening is satisfied here.

requirements for distribution inits 2000

Approval originally included:
In-person dispensing from the doctor to the patient;

Secure shipping procedures
Tracking system ability
Use of authorized distributors and agents and

Provision of the drug through direct, confidential physician distribution systems that
ensures only qualified physicians will receive the drug for patient dispensing.
See ECF No.

at 40.

2016 Changes to this regulatory scheme included the following

alterations

Extendingthe maximum gestational age at which a woman or girl can abort her unborn
child from 49 days to 70 days;
Altering the mifepristone dosage from 600 mgto 200 mg, the misoprostoldosage from
400 mcgto 800 mcg, and misoprostoladministration from oral to buccal;
Eliminatingthe requirement that administrationof misoprostol occur in- clinic ;

Broadeningthe window for misoprostol administration to include a range of
hours after taking mifepristone, instead of 48 hours afterward;

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Adding a repeat 800 mcg buccal dose of misoprostol in the event of incomplete
chemicalabortion;
Removing the requirement for an in-person follow -up examination after an abortion ;

Allowing healthcareproviders other than physicians to dispense and administerthe
chemicalabortiondrugs and
Eliminating the requirement for prescribers to report all non- fatal serious adverse
events from chemical abortion drugs.

Id.at 53-54 . And in 2021,FDA removed the in-person dispensing requirement and signaled that

it will soon allow pharmacies to dispense chemical abortion drugs . Id. at 68. Plaintiffs warn that
without this requirement , there is a dramatically reduced chance that the prescriber can confirm
pregnancy and gestational age , discover ectopic pregnancies , and identify a victim of abuse or

human trafficking being coerced into having a chemical abortion . ECF No. 120 at 19 .

FDA’s 2016 and 2021 Changes thus significantly departed from the agency’s original
approval of the abortion regimen. FDA repeatedly altered its original decision by removing
safeguards and changing the regulatory scheme for chemical abortion drugs . Sierra Club , 551 F.3d

at 1025

Biodiesel, 843 F.3d at 1017. Additionally , FDA’s response to the 2019 Petition

explicitly states FDA undertook a full review of the Mifepristone REMS Program in 2021. ECF

No. 1-44 at 7 (emphasis added); see also Peavey, 128 F. Supp . 3d at
17

(agency reopened

decision by conducting thorough review of the merits, even where the order did not state it was

a reconsideration and did not reference prior decision). And FDA even granted the 2019 Petition
in part. ECF No. 1-44 at 3. A full review of a REMS for a drug with known serious risks
necessarily considers the possibility that a drug is too dangerous to be on the market , any mitigation

See also Questions and Answers on Mifepristone for Medical Termination of Pregnancy Through Ten Weeks
Gestation , FDA (Jan. 4 , 2023 ), https://www.fda.gov/drugs/postmarket-drug-safety-information-patients-and
providers/ questions – and- answers -mifepristone – medical – termination – pregnancy -through – ten – weeks- gestation
(describing the 2021 review as

comprehensive ) .

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strategy notwithstanding.FDA has the authority to withdraw an approved drug application on this

basis. See 21 U.S.C. 355(e) . Because the agency reaffirmed its prior actions after undertaking a

substantive reconsideration ofthose actions, the limitations period for those actions starts in 2021.
See Pub. Citizen, 901 F.2d at 152 (an agency reconsidering and reaffirming original policy
necessarily raises the lawfulness of the original policy, for agencies have an everpresent duty to

insure thattheir actions are lawful ).
Alternatively, the Court finds Plaintiffs claims are not time-barred under the equitable
tolling doctrine. See United States v. Patterson, 211 F.3d 927 , 931 (5th Cir. 2000) (courts must

be cautious notto apply the statute of limitations too harshly ) ;P & V Enters. v. U.S. Army Corps

of Engr’s, 466 F. Supp . 2d 134, 149 (D.D.C. 2006) , aff’d, 516 F.3d 1021 (D.C. Cir. 2008) (a

“rebuttable presumption of equitable tolling applies to lawsuits governed by the six-year
limitations period of Section 2401(a )); Bornholdt v. Brady, 869 F.2d 57, 64 (2d Cir. 1989) ( The
existence of 2401 as a catchall provision

does not necessarily mean that Congress intended

the six-year period to be applied whenever a substantive statute does not specify a limitations
period . ). [A] litigant is entitled to equitable tolling of a statute of limitations only if the litigant

establishes two elements : (1) that he has been pursuing his rights diligently, and (2) that some
extraordinary circumstance stood in his way and prevented timely filing Menominee IndianTribe

of Wis.v. United States, 577 U.S. 250, 255 (2016) (internal marks omitted); see also Holland v.

Florida, 560 U.S. 631, 650 (2010) ( The flexibility inherent in equitable procedure enables courts

18 To date, it is unclear whether the reopening doctrine has been applied inthe precise context of FDA’sapproval of
anNDA However, much of the rationale courts have applied in boththe rulemaking and adjudication context
applies here. And the Court isunaware of any legalprinciple that would preclude the doctrine from being applied to
these facts. Assumingarguendo Plaintiffs allegations are true, a contrary holding would mean there is no judicial
remedy to FDA’s insistence on keeping an unsafe drug on the market, so long as enough time has passed.

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to meet new situations that demand equitable intervention, and to accord all the reliefnecessary to
correct particular injustices . ) ( cleaned up).
Equitable tolling is appropriate here in large part because of FDA’s unreasonable delay in
responding to Plaintiff’s 2002 and 2019 Petitions . See WildEarth Guardians v. U.S. Dep’t ofJust.

. 3d 651, 670 (D. Ariz. 2015) (it is grossly inappropriate to apply a statute of

181 F.

limitations where the agency unreasonably delayed a claim because the agency could immunize
its allegedly unreasonable delay from judicial review simply by extending that delay for six years )
(internal marks omitted) . It took FDA 13 years , 7 months , and 9 days to respond to the 2002

Petition FDA then moved the goalposts by substantially changing the regulatory scheme on the

same day itissued its Response.And it took FDA 2 years, 8 months, and 17 days to respondto the
2019 Petition which challenged those changes . Thus, in the 20 years between the 2002 Petition
and the filing of this suit, Plaintiffs were waiting on FDA for over 16 of those years. See Hill

Dermaceuticals, Inc. v. U.S. Food & Drug Admin., 524 F. Supp. 2d 5 , 9 (D.D.C. 2007) ( Once

citizen petitions are submitted, the FDA Commissioner is required to respond in one of three

manners within 180 days of receipt of the petition. ) (quoting 21 C.F.R. 10.30(e)(2)).

19

Additionally , statutes

of limitations

are primarily designed to assure fairness to

defendants , and to promote justice by preventing surprises through the revival of claims that
have been allowed to slumber until evidence is lost, memories have faded , and witnesses have
disappeared

Clymore v. United States , 217 F.3d 370 ,376 (5th Cir .2000 ),as corrected on reh’g

.

(Aug. 24 , 2000) (internal marks omitted ) But it has not been argued , and cannot seriously be ,

that the government was unfairly surprised when Plaintiffs filed this suit .Id. Plaintiffs have been

Incidentally, the delayed FDA Response is extreme but not unprecedented. See, e.g., Bayer HealthCare, LLC v.
U.S. Food & DrugAdmin., 942 F. Supp. 2d 17, 22 (D.D.C. 2013) ( FDA had yet to respond to a 2006 petition when
itapproved a related ANDA in 2013) .

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reasonably diligent in pursuing their claims . See, e.g. , ECF No. 1-4 at 6 (after years of waiting for

FDA to respond to the Petition,Plaintiff called upon FDA to issue a response in 2005 and again

in 2015 ). And the public interest in this case militates toward resolving Plaintiffs claims on the
merits Accordingly , Plaintiffs challenges to FDA’s Pre-2021 Actions concerning chemical
abortion drugs are not time -barred.
2.

FDA’s April 2021 Decision on

In- Person Dispensing Requirements is not

” Committed to Agency Discretionby Law
Defendantsalso argue any challenge to FDA’s decision regardingthe in-person dispensing

requirement is foreclosed under Heckler v. Chaney , 470 U.S. 821, 832 ( 1985) . ECF No. 28 at 30.

In Heckler, the Supreme Court held that FDA’s decision not to recommend civil or criminal

enforcement action to prevent violations of the FFDCA was committed to agency discretion by
law 470 U.S. at 837–38; see also Texas v.Biden, 20 F.4th at 982 ( Inother words ,a litigant may

not waltz into court, point his finger , and demand an agency investigate (or sue, or otherwise
enforce against) that person over there . ). [T]he Supreme Court and the Fifth Circuit have
consistently read Heckler as sheltering one- off nonenforcement decisions rather than decisions to

suspend entire statutes . Texas v. Biden,20 F.4th at 983. The committed to agency discretion by

law exception to judicial review is a very narrow exception that applies only where statutes

are drawn in such broad terms that in a given case there is no law to apply. Citizens to Pres.
Overton Park,Inc. v. Volpe , 401 U.S. 402 , 410 (1971), overruled on other grounds by Califano v.
Sanders, 430 U.S. 99 (1977).

That is not the case here. The Secretary has the authority to determine that drugs with

known serious risks may be dispensed only in certain health care settings , such as hospitals .
See 21 U.S.C. 355-1 (f)( 3)( C) ; Gomperts v. Azar , No. 1:19-CV-00345-DCN,2020 WL 3963864,

at 1 (D. Idaho July 13, 2020) ( [T ]hese restrictions mandate that Mifeprex be dispensed only in

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certain healthcare settings ) . The statute also provides other elements to assure safe use of
dangerous drugs. 21 U.S.C. § 355-1 (f)( 1) , (3 ) . The Secretary must publicly explain

how such

elements will mitigate the observed safety risk. 21 U.S.C. § 355-1(f)(2) . The Secretary must also
consider whether the elements would be unduly burdensome on patient access to the drug and

must minimize the burden on the health care delivery system. Id. Additionally, the elements
shall include [one] or more goals to mitigate a specific serious risk listed in the labeling of the
drug

21 U.S.C. § 355-1( f)(3 ) . And as the Court will later explain, federal law prohibits the

mailing of chemical abortion drugs. Thus, unlike in Heckler, there is

law to apply to FDA’s

decision See Texas v. Biden, 20 F.4th at 982 ( [T ]he executive cannot look at a statute, recognize
that the statute is telling it to enforce the law in a particular way or against a particular entity, and

tell Congress to pound sand. ). And even if Defendants have significant discretion in how they
administer Section 355-1, that does not mean all related actions are immune to judicial review

under Section 701(a)(2) of the APA .
In sum Defendants cannot shield their decisions from judicial review merely by
characterizing the challenged action as exercising

enforcement discretion. ECF No. 28 at 15 ; see

also Texas v.Biden,20 F.4th at 987 ( The Government is still engaged in enforcement

even if

it chooses to do so in a way that ignores the statute . That’s obviously not nonenforcement . ) ; id.

at 985 ( Heckler cannot apply to agency actions that qualify as rules under 5 U.S.C. § 551 (4). );
Heckler,470 U.S. at 833 n.4 (a decision to consciously and expressly adopt a general policy that
is

extreme as to amount to abdication of its statutory responsibilities is not committed to

agency discretion ) ( emphasis added ) . Furthermore ,the suggestion that FDA has full discretion

20 See also FrequentlyAsked Questions (FAQS) aboutREMS, FDA (Jan. 26, 2018), https://www.fda.gov/drugs/risk
evaluation-and-mitigation-strategies-rems/frequently-asked-questions-faqs-about-rems ( A REMSis requiredto
ensure the drug is administeredonly in a healthcare facility withpersonneltrained to manage severe allergic
reactionsand immediate accessto necessary treatments and equipmentto managing such events. ).

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under Section 355-1 to not require any REMS for dangerous drugs would likely present

even under a modest view of that doctrine . See, e.g. , Gundy v. United
States , 139 S. Ct. 2116 , 2123 (2019). So too the notion that FDA could exercise its non
enforcement discretion in violation of other federal laws . Therefore ,FDA’s decision to not enforce
the in-person dispensing requirement is reviewable because the decision is not committed to
agency discretion by law.
nondelegation problems

  1. Plaintiffs Failureto ExhaustCertainClaimsisExcusable

Plaintiffs allege FDA’s 2021 Decision to dispense mifepristone through the mail did not
acknowledge or address federal criminal laws that expressly prohibit[] such downstream

distribution ECF No. 7 at 26. Defendants maintain Plaintiffs argument is unexhausted because
they failed to present it at any stage of any administrative proceeding. ECF No. 28 at 38. Similarly,

Plaintiffs have not exhausted their challenge to FDA’s approval of the supplemental NDA for
generic mifepristone.Id.at 26. These failures to exhaust claims do not preclude judicial review.

The general rule of nonreviewability is not absolute Myron v. Martin, 670 F.2d 49, 52
(5th Cir . 1982). To begin, exhaustion is not required where the agency action is in excess of the
agency’s authority . Id. And a court will review for the first time

a particular challenge to an

agency’s decision which was not raised during the agency proceedings where the agency action

is likely to result in individual injustice or is contrary to an important public policy extending
beyond the rights of the individual litigants. Id.; see also Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S. 319 ,330
(1976) ( [

ases may arise where a claimant’s interest in having a particular issue resolved

promptly is so great that deference to the agency’s judgment is inappropriate . ); Abbott

Laboratories v. Gardner ,387 U.S. 136 , 149 ( 1967) (injunctive remedies applied to administrative
determinations should evaluate both the fitness of the issues for judicial decision and the hardship

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to the parties of withholding court consideration ); Dawson Farms, LLC v. Farm Serv. Agency,
504 F.3d 592 ,606 (5th Cir. 2007) (exhaustion may be excused when irreparable injury will result

absent immediate judicial review ) Bd. of Pub. Instruction of Taylor Cnty., Fla. v. Finch, 414

F.2d 1068, 1072 (5th Cir. 1969) (exceptional circumstances include where injustice might
otherwise result ).
Courts have also excused a claimant’s failure to exhaust administrative remedies where

exhaustion would be futile because the administrative agency will clearly reject the claim.
GulfRestoration Network v. Salazar, 683 F.3d 158, 176 (5th Cir . 2012) (internal marks omitted);

see also Oregon Nat. Desert Ass ‘n v. McDaniel, 751 F. Supp . 2d 1151, 1159 (D. Or. 2011)
(exceptional circumstances include evidence of administrative bias). Additionally , courts will

consider any issue that was raised with sufficient clarity to allow the decision maker to understand

and rule on the issue raised , whether the issue was considered sua sponte by the agency or was
raised by someone other than the petitioning party ” Pac. Choice Seafood Co. v. Ross, 976 F.3d

932,942 (9th Cir. 2020) . In short, there is no bright-line standard as to when this requirement has
been met Nat’lParks & Conservation Ass’n v. Bureau ofLandMgmt., 606 F.3d 1058, 1065 (9th
Cir. 2010). Finally, [a]dministrative remedies that are inadequate need not be exhausted.

Coit Indep. Joint Venture v. Fed. Sav. & Loan Ins. Corp., 489 U.S. 561, 587 ( 1989) (a lack of

reasonable time limits in the claims procedure renders the procedure inadequate).
a.

Contrary to Public Policy

Judicial review of Plaintiffs unexhausted claims is appropriate for several reasons.

First,Defendants alleged violation ofthe Comstock Act would be contrary to an important public
policy Myron, 670 F.2d at 52. As a case Defendants rely upon explains , the word

abortion in

the statute indicates a national policy of discountenancing abortion as inimical to the national

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life See Bours , 229 F. at 964; ECF No. 28-1 at 206. And twenty -two states filed an amicus brief
arguing FDA’s decision to permit

mail -in chemical abortion harms the public interest by

undermining states ability to enforce laws regulating
b

21

ECF No. 100 at 17.

IndividualInjusticeandIrreparableInjury

Second,the agency’s actions are likely to result in individual injustice or cause
irreparable injury. Myron, 670 F.2d at 52 Dawson, 504 F.3d at 606. Plaintiffs allege

many

intense side effects and significant complications requiring medical attention resulting from

Defendants actions. ECF No. 7 at 13. Many women also experience intense psychological
trauma and post-traumatic stress from excessive bleeding and from seeing the remains of their
aborted children . See ECF No. 96 at 25-29 ; Pauline Slade et al., Termination of pregnancy:

Patient’s perception of care, J. OF FAMILY PLANNING & REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH CARE

No.2,

. 27,

(2001)( Seeing the foetus , in general, appears to be a difficult aspect of the medical

termination process which can be distressing,bring home the reality of the event and may influence

later emotional adaptation. ) . Parenthetically, said “individual justice and irreparable injury
analysis also arguably applies to the unborn humans extinguished by mifepristone

especially in

21 See David S. Cohen et al., Abortion Pills, 76 STAN . L. REV . 1, 9 (forthcoming 2024) ( Despite state laws, mailed
medication abortion can cross borders in ways that undermine state laws
A new organization , Mayday Health ,
for example , focuses on those who live in states with abortion bans , giving users step – by- step instructions on how to
set up temporary addresses in an abortion permissive state and forward the mail into the banned state . ) (internal
marks omitted) .
22

Atleast4,213 adverse events from chemical abortiondrugs have been reported. See ECF No.96 at 12 n.16.

Butthe actualnumber is likely far higher because non-fataladverseevents are no longer requiredto be reported, and
becausemorethan 60 percent of women and girls emergencyroomvisits afterchemicalabortionsare miscodedas
miscarriages. See James Studnickiet al. , A PostHoc ExploratoryAnalysis: InducedComplicationsMistakenfor
Miscarriagein the EmergencyRoom are a Risk Factorfor Hospitalization, 9 HEALTHSERV.RSCH. MGMT.
EPIDEMIOLOGY1, 1 ( 2022) ; see also ECF No. 1-8 at 7 (describingPlaintiffs difficulty in submittingadverse event
reports to mifepristonemanufacturerDanco) . Otherdata sources such as the Center for Disease Control and
PreventionAbortion SurveillanceReportsare profoundlyflawed because state reporting is voluntary, with many
states reporting intermittentlyand some not at all. Studnickiet al. , supra note 9, at 2. OnePlaintiffphysician
allegesthat when she reportedan adverse eventto her state’s healthdepartment, the reportwas rejectedbecausethe
Statesaiditwas not a true adverse event because the patientultimatelyrecovered. ECF No. 1-10 at 7.

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the post -Dobbs era. See Dobbs , 142 S. Ct . at 2261 ( Nothing in the Constitution or in our Nation’s
legal traditions authorizes the Court to adopt [the ] theory of life” that States are required

a fetus as lacking even the most basic human right

to live

to regard

at least until an arbitrary point in

a pregnancy has passed . ) (internal marks omitted ) Brief of Amici Curiae Scholars of
Jurisprudence John M. Finnis and Robert P. George in Support of Petitioners , Dobbs , 142 S. Ct.

2228 (2022) (arguing unborn humans are constitutional persons entitled to equal protection ).

. Administrative Procedures are Inadequate
Third , FDA’s combined response time of over sixteen years to Plaintiffs two petitions
shows their procedures have been inadequate . See Coit, 489 U.S. at 587 Bowen v. City ofNew

York , 476 U.S. 467 , 476 ( 1986) (“ [T ]he harm imposed by exhaustion would be irreparable. ).
FDA slow -walked

or rather ,snail-walked

its response to the 2002 Petition by waiting nearly

fourteen years to deny the petition. ECF No. 7 at 9. Requiring Plaintiffs to exhaust their

administrative remedies may equate to another decade -plus of waiting for the agency to give them
the time of day.
Exhaustionwould be Futile

Alternatively, any attempt by Plaintiffs to challenge Defendants actions would likely be

futile. Even ifPlaintiffs did not endure sixteen years of delay, dawdle, and dithering,their efforts
would surely be futile because the administrative agency will clearly reject the claim.

GulfRestoration Network, 683 F.3d at 176. “President Biden has emphasized the need to protect

accessto mifepristone since the day ofthe Supreme Court’s decision in
stated that

PresidentBiden

protecting reproductive rights is essential to our Nation’s health, safety, and

23 See FACT SHEET: President Biden to Sign Memorandum on Ensuring Safe Access to Medication Abortion ,
THE WHITE

(Jan. 22, 2023 ) , https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/statements-releases/2023/01/22/fact

sheet- president- biden- to – sign- presidential – memorandum- on- ensuring – safe – access – to – medication – abortion/ .

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progress.

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He also criticized States efforts to impose restrictions on mifepristone because such

efforts have stoked confusion, sowed fear , and may prevent patients from accessing safe and

effective FDA-approved medication.

Thus, it is unlikely FDA would reverse course on its

mail-order abortion regimen. ECF No. 7 at 7. Defendants position on the Comstock Act in this
litigation only confirms that fact . See ECF No. 28 at 38 ( Plaintiffs misconstrue the Comstock

Act. )
.

The ComstockAct was raisedwith SufficientClarity

Finally,the Comstock Act issue was raised with sufficient clarity . Ross,976 F.3d at 942.

This is because ( 1) the 2019 Petition requested FDA to retain the in-person requirement for
dispensing of chemical abortion drugs and (2) the Comstock Act issue was also raised by the

United States Postal Service and the Department of Health & Human Services on July 1, 2022,
[i]n the wake of

The Office of Legal Counsel specifically mentioned FDA’s regimen

for chemical abortion drugs when concluding the mere mailing of such drugs to a particular
jurisdiction is an insufficient basis for concluding that the sender intends them to be used
unlawfully

OLC Memo at * 1. This shows not only that the issue was raised with sufficient

clarity ,but also the futility of raising the issue before the agency . Therefore , Plaintiffs failure to

exhaust their claims does not preclude judicial review.
Memorandumon Further Efforts to ProtectAccess to Reproductive Healthcare Services, THE WHITE

(Jan.

22, 2023) , https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/presidential-actions/2023/01/22/memorandum-on-further
efforts- to – protect- access – to – reproductive – healthcare – services/

25

26 The D.C.Circuithas hinted that the futilitydoctrine is ordinarily predicatedon the worthlessnessof an argument
before an agency that has rejectedit in the past ratherthan the likelihoodthat the agency wouldrejectitinthe
future Tesoro Refin. & Mktg. Co. v. FERC, 552 F.3d 868, 874 (D.C. Cir. 2009) . But in this case, there is no
principleddistinctionbetweenthe two scenarios. Defendantsdo not even pretend the agency might have accepted
Plaintiffs arguments. Other cases may involve uncertaintyaboutfuture agency rejection, butit is not this case.
27

See Application ofthe Comstock Act to the Mailing ofPrescriptionDrugs That Can Be Usedfor Abortions, 2022
WL 18273906 ( O.L.C. Dec. 23 , 2022) ( OLC Memo ) .

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C. Plaintiffs Challenges to FDA’s 2021 Actions Have a Substantial Likelihood of
Success on the Merits

To satisfy the first element of likelihood of success on the merits, Plaintiffs must present

a prima facie case but need not show that [they are] certain to win. Janvey v.Alguire 647 F.3d
585 , 595-96 (5th Cir .2011) (internal marks omitted ) . Under the APA , courts must hold unlawful
and set aside agency action, findings , and conclusions found to be . . . arbitrary, capricious , an
abuse of discretion , or otherwise not in accordance with law, or in excess of statutory
jurisdiction , authority ,or limitations ,or short of statutory right . 5 U.S.C. § 706 (2)(A) & (C) .

The Courtwill first address FDA’s 2021Actions that eliminated the in-person dispensing
requirement and announced that FDA would allow abortionists to dispense chemical abortion
drugs by mail or mail- order pharmacy . Plaintiffs have a substantial likelihood of success on their
claims that these actions violate federal law.

  1. The ComstockActprohibits the Mailingof ChemicalAbortion Drugs

The Comstock Act declares [e]very obscene , lewd, lascivious , indecent , filthy or vile
article ,matter,thing, device ,or substance to be nonmailable matter that shall not be conveyed

in the mails or delivered from any post office or by any letter carrier . 18 U.S.C. § 1461. The next
clauses declare nonmailable [e]very article or thing designed , adapted ,or intended for producing
abortion , or for any indecent or immoral use; and [e]very article , instrument, substance , drug
medicine ,or thing which is advertised or described in a manner calculated to lead another to use

or apply it for producing abortion,or for any indecent or immoral purpose . Id. Similarly , Section
1462 forbids the use of any express company or other common carrier to transport chemical
abortion drugs in interstate or foreign commerce .
Defendants argument that the Comstock Act does not prohibit the mailing of chemical
abortion drugs relies on the reenactment canon. That is, courts may distill a statute’s meaning

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when federal courts of appeals settled upon a consensus view and Congress never modified the

relevant statutory text to reject or displace this settled construction . ECF No. 28 at 39.
This purported consensus view is that the Comstock Act does not prohibit the mailing of items
designed to produce abortions

where the sender does not intend them to be used unlawfully

This argument is unpersuasive for several reasons.
Congress is presumed to be aware of an administrative

or judicial interpretation of a

statute and to adopt that interpretation when it re-enacts a statute without change . Lorillard v.
Pons , 434 U.S. 575 , 580 ( 1978 ) . But “[t]here is an obvious trump to the reenactment argument :
[

here the law is plain , subsequent reenactment does not constitute an adoption of a previous

administrative construction

Brown v. Gardner , 513 U.S. 115 , 121 ( 1994) (quoting Demarest v.

Manspeaker , 498 U.S. 184 , 190 ( 1991)); see also Milner v. Dep’t of Navy, 562 U.S. 562 , 576
(2011) (

e have no warrant to ignore clear statutory language on the ground that other courts

have done so. ) . Additionally , the presumption only applies when the judicial or administrative
gloss represented settled law when Congress reenacted the [language in question

Keene Corp.

v. United States , 508 U.S. 200 , 212 ( 1993 ) ; see also Jama v. Immigr . & Customs Enf’t, 543 U.S.
335 , 349 (2005 ) (presumption applies only when the supposed judicial consensus at the time of

reenactment was so broad and unquestioned that we must presume Congress knew of and

endorsed it ) Davis v. United States , 495 U.S. 472 , 482 (1990 ) ; Fed.Deposit Ins . Corp. v. Phila .
Gear Corp. ,476 U.S. 426 , 437 (1986); United States v. Powell , 379 U.S. 48 , 55 n.13 ( 1964 )

28

28 See also ANTONIN SCALIA & BRYAN A. GARNER, READING LAW: THE INTERPRETATIONOF LEGAL TEXTS 325
(2012) ( Buthow numerous must the lower-court opinions be, or how prominent and long- standing the
administrative interpretation, to justify the level of lawyerlyreliance that justifies the canon? What about two
intermediate-court decisions? (We doubt it
though some cases have relied on just a single intermediate- court
decision.)
seven courts of first instance? (Perhaps.) ) .

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The canon is easily overcome for one simple reason: it is a dubious means of ascertaining
congressional intent .

There are plenty of reasons to reenact a statute that have nothing to do with

codifying the glosses that courts have already put on the statute .” CALEB NELSON, STATUTORY

INTERPRETATION 481 (2011 ) . For example , perhaps the original statute contained a sunset
provision Maybe Congress wanted to change the statute in some other respects but found it easier

to communicate those changes by reenacting a modified version of the complete statute than by
casting each discrete change as an amendment to the existing language .

Id. at n.14

Congress

was perhaps conducting a more general codification or reorganization of the statutes in a
particular field ,for the sake of making the structure of its statutes easier to follow . Id. Or maybe
Congress simply wanted to enact the relevant title of the United States Code into positive law . Id.

To the extent that Congress reenacts statutory language for one of those other reasons, members
of Congress may well not mean to be expressing any view at all about the glosses that have piled
up in the meantime . Id

see also HENRY M. HART , JR . & ALBERT M. SACKS , THE LEGAL

PROCESS BASIC PROBLEMS INTHE MAKING AND APPLICATION OF

1367 (William N. Eskridge ,

Jr., & Philip P. Frickey eds ., 1994) (tent . ed . 1958) (criticizing the canon for adding to the costs of
the legislative process in counterproductive ways ).
Here , the plain text of the Comstock Act controls . See Bostock v. Clayton Cnty., Ga., 140

S. Ct. 1731, 1749 (2020 ) ( [W]hen the meaning of the statute’s terms is plain , our job is at an

end . ); Lawson v. FMR LLC , 571 U.S. 429 , 441 (2014) ( Absent any textual qualification ,we
presume the operative language means what it appears to mean . ) . The Comstock Act declares

nonmailable every article , instrument , substance , drug , medicine ,or thing which is advertised

or described in a manner calculated to lead another to use it or apply it for producing abortion .
18 U.S.C.

1461 (emphasis added ) . It is indisputable that chemical abortion drugs are both

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and are for producing abortion . Therefore , federal criminal law declares they are

nonmailable . See Texas v. Becerra , No. 5 : 22 -CV -185-H, 2022 WL 3639525 , at *26 n.21 (N.D.

Tex . Aug. 23 , 2022 ) (“ [F] ederal law bar [s] the importation or delivery of any device or medicine
designed to produce an abortion . ).

The statute plainly does not require intent on the part of the seller that the drugs be used
unlawfully. To be sure, the statute does contain a catch- all provision that prohibits the mailing

ofsuch things for producing abortion,or for any indecent or immoralpurpose. 18 U.S.C. § 1461
(emphasis added) . But or is almost always disjunctive.” Encino Motorcars, LLC v. Navarro,

138 S. Ct. 1134, 1141 (2018) (internal marks omitted). Additionally , the or in Section 1461 is
preceded by a comma, further disjoining the list of nonmailable matter. Thus , the Court does not

readthe or as an “and. Similarly,the Act requires that the defendant knowingly uses the mails
for the mailing of anything declared by the Act to be nonmailable. 18 U.S.C.

  1. A

defendant could satisfy this mens rea requirement by mailing mifepristone and knowing it is for
producing abortion. The statute does not require anything more. See, e.g. , United States v. Lamott,

831 F.3d 1153, 1157 (9th Cir.2016)(where Congress intends to legislate a specific intent crime,
the statute typically uses the phrase with the intent to ) (internal marks omitted).

Even if the statute were ambiguous , the legislative history also supports this
interpretation.29 See H.R. Rep . No. 91-1105 , at 2 ( 1970) (“ Existing statutes completely prohibit

the importation, interstate transportation ,and mailing of contraceptive materials,or the mailing of
advertisement or information concerning how or where such contraceptives may be obtained or

how conception may be prevented. ). Congress unsuccessfully tried to modify Section 1461 to

This Court reviews the legislative history as mere evidence of the ordinary public meaning of the current statutory
language. See ANTONIN SCALIA , A MATTER OF INTERPRETATION 17 ( 1997) ( It is the law that governs , not the intent
ofthe lawgiver

Men may intend what they will; but it is only the laws that they enact which bind us. ) .

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prohibit mailing drugs

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intended by the offender

40 (

.

See REP.OF THE SUBCOMM. ON CRIM . JUST.,95TH

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4458

to be used to produce an illegal abortion.

.,REP.ON RECODIFICATION OF FED .

.

Print 1978) (emphasis added); Bostock, 140 S. Ct. at 1824 (Kavanaugh, J. ,

dissenting)( In the face of the unsuccessful legislative efforts

simply because of their own policy views . ).

judges may not rewrite the law

In fact, the House Subcommittee Report on the

proposed amendment acknowledged the plain meaning of the statute : [U]nder current law,the

offender commits an offense whenever he knowingly mails any of the designated abortion

materials, and the proposed amendment would

require proof that the offender specifically

intended that the mailed materials be used to produce an illegal abortion. If Congress believed
the statute already contained the intentionality requirement gloss in prior reenactments,there is
little reason why Congress would amend the provision to include that requirement.
Defendants aver Plaintiffs interpretation of the Comstock Act is foreclosed by the Food

and Drug Administration Amendments Act of 2007 ( FDAAA ) for one reason: Congress was

well aware that it was directing mifepristone’s preexisting distribution scheme to continue in
enacting the FDAAA . ECF No. 28 at 40. But neither

critics [of FDA’s 2000 Approval of

mifepristone ] nor anyone else in the congressional debate mentioned the Comstock Act.

Memo at 7 n.18 ; see also In re Lively, 717 F.3d 406 , 410 (5th Cir . 2013 )

Repeals by

implication are disfavored and will not be presumed unless the legislature’s intent is clear and

manifest. ) (internal marks omitted ). Because the Comstock Act is not even implicitly mentioned

Bostock’s majority opinionwarns that speculation about why a later Congress declined to adopt new legislation
offers a particularly dangerous basis on which to rest aninterpretation of an existing law a different and earlier
Congress did adopt. 140 S. Ct. at 1747. But the opinion does not suggest judges can rewrite the law . Instead,
Bostock’s stated rationale was that the disputed term was implicitinthe statutory text all along. No such textualist
analysis couldplausiblyjustify Defendants interpretation of the Comstock Act, and Defendants offer none.

31 REP. OF THE SUBCOMM. ONCRIM. JUST., 95THCONG., REP. ONRECODIFICATIONOF FED. CRIM.
Print1978) ( emphasisadded) .

36

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in the FDAAA’s enactment, there is no repeal by implication. And in any case, Defendants
arguments based on legislative history cannot overcome clear statutory text.
Consequently , reenactment of the Comstock Act does not constitute an adoption of prior

constructions because the law is plain. Brown , 513 U.S. at 121 ( 1994 ) . Even if that were not the

case, the reenactment canon does not apply here because the relevant judicial glosses do not
represent a broad and unquestioned

the

consensus . Jama , 543 U.S. at 349. Defendants rely heavily

Memo that purports to establish this consensus . But none of the cases cited in the

Memo support the view that the Comstock Act bars the mailing of abortion drugs only when
the sender has the specific intent that the drugs be used unlawfully .
the contrary , the Seventh Circuit reasoned that the word abortion in the context of

the Act indicates a national policy of discountenancing abortion as inimical to the national life.
Bours ,229 F. at 964. Bours further declared it is immaterial what the local statutory definition of

abortion is, what acts of abortion are included , or what excluded . Id. Similarly ,the Sixth Circuit’s
decision in Davis v. United States only suggests that legitimate uses of drugs should not fall within

the scope of the statute merely because they are capable of illegal uses . 62 F.2d 473 , 474 (6th
Cir. 1933). In other words , the Davis holding reflects the position that legitimate uses
beyond the purposes the statute condemns

uses

should be excluded from the scope of the statute ,not

that whatever uses are lawful under state law should be .ECF No. 114 at 10. Likewise ,the Second

Circuit interpreted the statute to embrace articles the 1873 Congress would have denounced as

immoral if it had understood all the conditions under which they were to be used . United States

v. One Package , 86 F.2d 737 , 739 (2d Cir . 1936 ). The court further observed that t]he word
unlawful would make this clear as to articles for producing abortion . Id see also James S.
Witherspoon , Reexamining

Roe : Nineteenth -Century Abortion Statutes and the Fourteenth

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Amendment, 17 ST.

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L.J. 29, 33 ( 1985) (explaining that thirty of thirty -seven states had

statutory abortion prohibitions in 1868

just five years before Congress enacted the Comstock

Act).

Defendants maintain the legality of the agency actions needs to be judged at the time of

the decision ,all of which occurred when Roe and Casey were still good law. ECF No. 136 at 109.

Even assuming that is true in all cases, Roe did not prohibit all restrictions on abortions . And it is

not obvious that enforcement of the Comstock Act post-Casey would have necessarily run afoul
of Casey’s arbitrary undue burden test. Dobbs, 142 S. Ct . at 2266. Therefore , there is no reason
why the Act should not have at least been considered . In any case, the Comstock Act plainly

forecloses mail-order abortion in the present , and Defendants have stated no present or future

intention of complying with the law.Defendants cannot immunize the illegality of their actions by
pointing to a small window in the past where those actions might have been legal.

In sum,the reenactment canon is inapplicable here because the law is plain. Even ifthat

were not true, the cases relied on in the OLC Memo do not support Defendants interpretation.
And even ifthey did, a small handful of cases cannot constitute the broad and unquestioned

consensus required under the reenactment canon.Therefore,Plaintiffs have a substantial likelihood
ofprevailing on their claim that Defendants decisionto allow the dispensing of chemical abortion
drugs through mail violates unambiguous federal criminal law.
2.

FDA’s 2021Actions violate the Administrative ProcedureAct

Because FDA’s 2021 Actions violate the Comstock Act , they are otherwise not in
accordance with law . 5 U.S.C. § 706 (2)(A ) . Additionally , the actions were likely arbitrary and
capricious . Id. FDA relied on FDA Adverse Event Reporting System data despite the agency’s

2016 decision to eliminate the requirement for abortionists to report non-fatal adverse events .

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ECF No. 7 at 25. Defendants maintain_that “Plaintiffs offer no explanation for why it was
impermissibleto rely on the reported data. ECFNo.28 at 33. The explanation shouldbe obvious

it is circular and self- serving to practically eliminate an adverse event reporting requirement
and then point to a low number of adverse events as a justification for removing even more
restrictions than were already omitted in 2000 and 2016. In other words , it is a predetermined
conclusion in search of non-data

a database designed to produce a null set. But even ifFDA’s

explanation were well -reasoned , the actions would still run afoul of the Comstock Act and
therefore violate the APA.

D. Plaintiffs Challenges to FDA’s Pre-2021 Actions Have a Substantial Likelihood
of Success on the Merits

FDA’s2000 ApprovalviolatedSubpartH

In 1992, FDA issued regulations needed to assure safe use of new drugs designed to treat
life-threatening diseases like HIV and cancer. See 57 Fed. Reg. 58,942 , 58,958 (Dec. 11, 1992)
(codified at 21 C.F.R.

314.520) . Subpart H

Serious or Life-Threatening Illnesses

titled Accelerated Approval of New Drugs for

applies to drugs that satisfy two requirements . First,the

drug must havebeen studied for [its] safety and effectiveness in treating serious or life-threatening

illnesses. 21 C.F.R. 314.500 . And second, the drug must provide [a] meaningful therapeutic
benefit to patients over existing treatments . Id. These rules were promulgated by FDA

as

part of an attempt to correct perceived deficiencies in FDA’s approval process made apparent by

the need to quickly develop drugs for HIV/AIDS patients. ECF No. 1-13 at 20 .
When FDA originally approved Mifeprex , the agency relied upon Subpart H to place

certain restrictions on the manufacturer’s distribution of the drug product to assure its safe use.
ECF No. 28 at 14 ;see also ECF No. 1-13 at 9 (the American Medical Association explained that
Mifepristone ] poses a severe risk to patients unless the drug is administered as part of a complete

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treatment plan under the supervision of a physician ) . Thus ,to satisfy Subpart H, FDA deemed
pregnancy a serious or life -threatening illness [ and concluded that mifepristone provide [d] [a]
meaningful therapeutic benefit to patients over existing treatments .

See 21 C.F.R. §§ 314.500 ;

314.560 FDA was wrong on both counts .
a.

Pregnancy is not an

Illness

Pregnancy is a normal physiological state most women experience one or more times
during their childbearing

years

a natural process essential to perpetuating human life.

Defendants even admit pregnancy is not an illness . FDA claims the Final Rule explained Subpart

was available for serious or life-threatening conditions , whether or not they were understood
colloquially to be illnesses . ECF No. 28 at 36. But the Final Rule says no such thing . One
comment asserted that neither depression nor psychosis is a disease ,nor is either one serious or
life -threatening . 57 Fed. Reg. 58,946 . FDA responded to the comment that

signs of these

diseases are readily studied and that its reference to depression and psychosis

was intended to

give examples of conditions or diseases that can be serious for certain populations or in some or

all of their phases . Id. In other words , FDA’s response to this comment was not that depression
and psychosis qualify because they are conditions

even though they are not colloquially

understood as illnesses . Rather , FDA simply disagreed with the comment’s characterization of
these conditions and explained that they were examples of diseases that can be serious .
Nothing in the Final Rule supports the interpretation that pregnancy is a serious or life-threatening

illness .

FDA’s 2016 Denial of the 2002 Petition is similarly unpersuasive . For example ,FDA noted

that approximately fifty percent of pregnancies in the United States are unintended and that
unintended pregnancies may cause depression and anxiety . ECF No. 1-28 at 5. But categorizing

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or negative psychological experiences arising from pregnancy as illnesses is
materially different than classifying pregnancy itself as a serious or life-threatening illness per se .
Tellingly , FDA never explains how or why a condition would not qualify as a serious or life
threatening illness . Suppose that a woman experiences depression because of lower back pain
that inhibits her mobility . Under
reading ,a new drug used to treat lower back pain which
can cause depression , just like unplanned pregnancy could obtain accelerated approval under
complications

Subpart H.

Defendants cite zero cases reading Subpart H like FDA reads Subpart H. On the contrary ,

courts have read serious or life-threatening illnesses to mean what it says . See, e.g. , Tummino v.

,

. 2d 162 , 182 (E.D.N.Y. 2013 ) ( Whether an illness is serious or life
threatening is based on its impact on such factors as survival , day -to -day functioning , or the
likelihood that the disease , if left untreated , will progress from a less severe condition to a more
serious one . ) (quoting 57 Fed . Reg. at 13235 ). The preamble to the final rule also clarified the
terms would be used as FDA has defined them in the past . 57 Fed . Reg . at 13235.
Hamburg 936 F. Supp

Likewise,the Final Rule expressly stated this nomenclature is the same as FDA defined
and used the terms in two rulemakings : the first in 1987; the second in 1988. 57 Fed. Reg. at
58,945 . In the 1988 rulemaking , FDA defined life-threatening to include diseases or conditions

where the likelihood of death is high unless the course of the disease is interrupted (e.g. , AIDS
and cancer), as well as diseases or conditions with potentially fatal outcomes where the end point
of clinical trial analysis is survival (e.g. , increased survival in persons who have had a stroke or

heart attack). See 53 Fed. Reg . at 41517 ; id. at 41516 (referencing AIDS , cancer, Parkinson’s
disease, and other serious conditions ); CSX Transp., Inc. v. Ala . Dep’t ofRevenue,562 U.S. 277,

294 (2011) (the canon of ejusdem generis limits general terms that follow specific ones to matters

41

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4464

similar to those specified ) (internal marks omitted). Therefore, diseases and conditions are
used interchangeably, and even conditions must be serious or life-threatening as defined.

Food and Drug scholars have understood Subpart H’s scope the same way . See, e.g.,
Charles Steenburg , The Food and Drug Administration’s Use of Postmarketing (Phase IV) Study

:

Requirements Exception to the Rule?, 61 FOOD & DRUG L.J. 295

, 323 (2006) (Subpart H

“extend [ ] only to drugs and biological products that target [] serious or life-threatening illnesses
and offer [] a meaningful benefit over existing treatments ). Even the Population Council argued

to FDA that the imposition of Subpart H is unlawful because [t ]he plain meaning of these terms
does not comprehend normal , everyday occurrences such as pregnancy and unwanted pregnancy
ECF No. 1-14 at 21. This reading is also consistent with the fact that aside from mifepristone , FDA

had approved fewer than forty NDAs under Subpart H by early 2002. See id. at 20. And of those
other approvals , twenty were for the treatment of HIV and HIV -related diseases ,nine were for the

treatment of various cancers and their symptoms , four were for severe bacterial infections , one

was for chronic hypertension , and one was for leprosy . Id. One of these things is not like the
others ,one of these things just doesn’t belong. See Sesame Street .
b

Defendantsarenot entitledto AuerDeference

Courts sometimes extend Auer deference to agencies reasonable readings of genuinely
ambiguous regulations . Kisor v. Wilkie , 139 S. Ct . 2400 , 2408 (2019 ) . Auer deference is rooted

inan always rebuttable presumption that Congress would generally want the agency to play the
primary role in resolving regulatory ambiguities . Id. at 2412.

appropriate and sometimes not . Id. at 2408.

Auer deference is sometimes

First and foremost ,a court should not afford Auer

deference unless the regulation is genuinely ambiguous . Id. at 2415. And before concluding that

a rule is genuinely ambiguous , a court must exhaust all the traditional tools of construction . Id.

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(internal marks omitted). That means a court cannot wave the ambiguity flag just because it found

the regulation impenetrable on first read. Id. Ifgenuine ambiguity remains , the agency’s reading

must stillbe reasonable. Id. And even if the regulation is genuinely ambiguous, the agency’s
interpretation

must in some way implicate its substantive expertise. Id. at 2417. Finally, an

agency’s reading ofa rule must reflect fair and considered judgment to receive Auer deference.

. (internal marks omitted).
Here,Auer deference is not appropriate because the language of [the ] regulation is plain
and unambiguous . McCann v. Unum Provident , 907 F.3d 130 , 144 (3d Cir.2018 ). As explained ,
FDA’s definitions in prior rulemakings foreclose its interpretation of Subpart H. If there is any

or life-threatening illnesses , the ordinary meaning principle resolves that
ambiguity See Bostock, 140 S. Ct . at 1825 (Kavanaugh , J, dissenting) ( The ordinary meaning
principle is longstanding and well settled. ). [C] ommon parlance matters in assessing the
ordinary meaning of a statute or regulation because courts heed how most people would have
understood the text . Id. at 1828 (internal marks omitted) . The word illness refers to poor
health; sickness , or a specific sickness or disease , or an instance of such. Merriam
Webster invokes the definition for sickness
an unhealthy condition of body or mind.
Likewise ,a Wikipedia search for illness re-directs to the entry for Disease , which is defined
as a particular abnormal condition that negatively affects the structure or function of all or part
of an organism , and that is not immediately due to any external injury. Pregnancy,on the other
ambiguity in serious

32

34

Illness Dictionary.com, https://www.dictionary.com/browse/illness(last visited Mar. 22, 2023) ; see also
Bostock, 140 S. Ct. at 1766 (Alito , J , dissenting) ( Dictionary definitions are valuable because they are evidenceof
what people at the time of a statute’s enactment would have understood its words to mean. ) .
Illness
, Merriam-Webster.com
, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/illness
( last visitedMar.22, 2023) .
Disease
, Wikipedia
, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Disease
( emphasisadded) ( lastvisitedMar.22, 2023) .

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hand, is defined as the time during which one or more offspring develops (gestates) inside a
woman’s uterus (womb).

35

Most readers would not define pregnancy to be a serious or life-threatening illness.

Even FDA does not earnestly defend that position. True, complications can arise during
pregnancy, and said complications can be serious or life-threatening. But that does not make

pregnancy itself an illness . See ECF No 1-13 at 21. And even if the regulation were genuinely
ambiguous

after exhausting all traditional tools of statutory construction, Defendants

interpretation :(1) is not reasonable ; (2) does not implicate their substantive expertise ; and (3) does

not reflect fair and considered judgment . Accordingly, Defendants are not entitled to Auer
deference on their interpretations of serious or life-threatening illnesses. By interpreting Subpart

H’s scope as reaching any state or side effect that can be considered an undefined condition,
Defendants broaden the regulation on accelerated approval of new drugs farther than the text of

the regulation would ever suggest. Therefore, FDA’s approval of chemical abortion drugs under
Subpart H exceeded its authority under the regulation’s first requirement.
C.

ChemicalAbortion Drugs do not provide a Meaningful Therapeutic Benefit

FDA also exceeded its authority underthe second requirement of Subpart H. In addition to
treating a serious or life-threatening illness , chemical abortion drugs must also provide a
meaningful therapeutic benefit

to patients over surgical abortion . 21 C.F.R. 314.500.

As explained,this cannot be the case because chemical abortion drugs do not treat serious or life

a prerequisite to reachingthe second requirement. Id. Similarly, chemical
abortion drugs cannot be therapeutic because the word relates to the treatment or curing of
disease. But even putting that aside, chemical abortion drugs do not provide a meaningful
threatening illnesses

36

35

36

Pregnancy, Wikipedia , https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pregnancy

( last visited Mar. 22 , 2023) .

Therapeutic , Dictionary.com , https://www.dictionary.com/browse/illness

44

( last visited Mar. 28, 2023) .

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therapeutic benefit over surgical abortion . See 21 C.F.R.

benefit is the

Page 45 of 67

4467

314.500 (examples include where the

ability to treat patients unresponsive to, or intolerant of, available therapy , or

improved patient response over available therapy ) . To the extent surgical abortion can be

considered a therapy , the clinical trials did not compare chemical abortion with surgical abortion
to find such a benefit . ECF No. 1at 44

Defendants argue just one meaningful therapeutic benefit : chemical abortion drugs

avoided an invasive surgical procedure and anesthesia in 92 percent of patients in the trial. ECF

No. 28 at 37. But [b]y defining the therapeutic benefit solely as the avoidance of the current
standard of care’s delivery mechanism , FDA effectively guarantees that a drug will satisfy this
second prong of Subpart H as long as it represents a different method of therapy ECF No. 1-14

at 22. And even if that were a benefit , chemical abortions are over fifty percent more likely than
surgical abortion to result in an emergency room visit within thirty days . ECF No. 7 at
Consequently ,the number of chemical abortion -related emergency room visits increased by over

five hundred percent between 2002 and 2015. ECF No. 1at 19.
One study revealed the overall incidence of adverse events is fourfold higher in chemical

abortions when compared to surgical abortions . Women who underwent chemical abortions also
experienced far higher rates of hemorrhaging , incomplete abortion , and unplanned surgical

evacuation.39 Chemical abortion patients

reported significantly higher levels of pain , nausea,

37 Some studies report that the exact number is fifty- three percent . See Studnicki et al. , supra note 22.

.

See MaaritNiinimäki et al , Immediate Complications After Medical Compared with SurgicalTermination of
Pregnancy, 114 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY 795 (2009) . FDA agrees with this study but finds it not surprising

given that chemical abortion is associated with longer uterine bleeding. ECF No. 1-44 at 38. See also ECFNo 1
13 at 15, n.68-72 (collecting studies demonstrating the far higher rates ofadverse events in chemical abortion over
surgical abortion) .
39

.

45

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vomiting and diarrhea during the actual abortion than did surgical patients

4468

Post-abortion pain

occurred in 77.1% of mifepristone patients compared with only 10.5% of surgical patients .
ECF No 1-13 at 24. And before the approval , an FDA medical officer recognized the medical
regimen had more adverse events , particularly bleeding , than did surgical abortion . Failure rates

exceeded those for surgical abortion

This is a serious potential disadvantage of the medical

method Id. at 23 (emphasis added).
Other studies show eighty -three percent of women report that chemical abortion changed
them

and seventy-seven percent of those women reported a negative

Thirty

women reported issues with anxiety,depression , drug abuse , and suicidal thoughts
because of the chemical abortion.4¹ Bleeding from a chemical abortion ,unlike surgical abortion ,
can last up to several weeks And the mother seeing the aborted human appears to be a difficult
aspect of the medical termination process which can be distressing , bring home the reality of the
event and may influence later emotional adaptation . For example ,one woman was surprised
and saddened to see that her aborted baby had a head, hands , and legs with [d efined fingers and
toes. ECF No. 1 at 21. The entire abortion process takes place within the mother’s home,without
physician oversight , potentially leading to undetected ectopic pregnancies , failure of rH factor
incompatibility detection ,and misdiagnosis of gestational age all leading to severe or even fatal
eight percent of

43

40

See Katherine A. Rafferty & Tessa Longbons, #Abortion Changes You: A Case Study to Understand the

Communicative Tensions in Women’s Medication Abortion Narratives, 36 HEALTH COMM. 1485 , 1485–94 (2021) ,
https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10410236.2020.1770507 .
41

42

.

After Mifepristone: When bleeding will start and how long will it last?, WOMEN ON

https://www.womenonweb.org/en/page/484/when-will-you-start-bleeding-and-howlong-will-it-last . See also ECF
No. 1-28 at 25 ( Up to 8 % of all subjects may experience some type of bleeding for 30 days or more. ) .
PaulineSladeet al. , TerminationofPregnancy
: Patient’sPerceptionof Care, 27 J. OF FAMILYPLANNING&
REPRODUCTIVEHEALTHCARE 72 , 76 ( 2001) .

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4469

. Contrary to popular belief and talking points, the

evidenceshows chemicalabortion is not as easy as taking Advil. Id. at20.
Compelling evidence suggests the statistics provided by FDA on the adverse effects of

chemical abortion understate the negative impact the chemical abortion regimen has on women
and girls . When women seek emergency care after receiving the chemical abortion pills, the
abortionist that prescribed the drugs is usually not the provider to manage the mother’s
complications . Consequently , the treating physician may not know the adverse event is due to
mifepristone .Id. at 13. Studies support this conclusion by finding over sixty percent of women and

girls emergency room visits after chemical abortions are miscoded as “miscarriages rather than

adverse effects to mifepristone.45 Simply put, FDA’s data are incomplete and potentially
misleading,as are the statistics touted by mifepristone advocates .
Lastly , chemical abortion does not

treat patients unresponsive to , or intolerant of,

available therapy See 21 C.F.R. § 314.500 . To the contrary , because medical abortion failures
should be managed with surgical termination the option for surgical abortion must be available

for any Mifeprex patient. ECF No. 1-14 at 23 ( quoting the Mifeprex Warnings label) . One study
showed that 18.3 percent of women required surgical intervention after the chemical abortion
regimen failed .Id. Hence , any patient who would be intolerant of surgical abortion ,if such a class

of patients exists , cannot use the Mifeprex Regimen. Id. at 24. On balance, the data reflect little

to no benefit over surgical abortion

much less a meaningful therapeutic benefit .

Kathi Aultman et al., Deaths and Severe Adverse Events after the use ofMifepristone as an Abortifacient from
September 2000 to February 2019 , 36 ISSUES INLAW & MED.,

45 Studnicki et al., supra note 9.

47

(2021) .

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4470

d Defendants Misapplication of Subpart Hhas not been Cured by Congress
Defendants contend Plaintiffs arguments about Subpart H have been overtaken by
congressional action . ECF No. 28 at 35. In the FDAAA , Congress specifically directed
drugs with elements to

that

assure safe use in effect on the effective date on this Act would be

deemed to have in effect an approved REMS . Id. (citing Pub . L. No. 110-85 , § 909 (b)(1)) .

But the sponsors of such drugs were also required to submit a proposed REMS within 180 days .
See Pub .L. No. 110-85 , 909 (b)(3 ) . Hence , Congress deemed preexisting safety requirements

to be a sufficient REMS until a new REMS was approved . The FDAAA did not affect , however ,
whether an NDA was properly approved or authorized under Subpart H in the first place .
Rather,the FDAAA required that such drugs needed continued restrictions in place to mitigate

risks . Implementation of a REMS under the FDAAA does not somehow repeal or supplant the
approval process under Subpart H or 21 U.S.C. § 355 (d) . The FDAAA only eased the regulatory

transition from Subpart H to the REMS provision . Simply stated , Congress’s general reiteration
that dangerous drugs should carry a REMS did not codify FDA’s specific approval of the
mifepristone NDA . It did not consider the chemical abortion approval at all.

In sum, Subpart H doubly forecloses FDA’s approval of mifepristone .At most ,FDA might

have lawfully approved mifepristone under Subpart H for cases where a pregnant woman’s life or
health is in danger . But even a limited approval of this sort would still not render pregnancy an
illness . And surgical abortion

a statistically far safer procedure

would still be available to

her. But in any case, that is not what FDA did . Instead , FDA manipulated and misconstrued the

text of Subpart H to greenlight elective chemical abortions on a wide scale . Therefore , Plaintiffs
have a substantial likelihood of prevailing on their claim that Defendants violated Subpart H.

48

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FDA’s Pre- 2021 Actions were Arbitrary and Capricious

Under the FFDCA, a pharmaceutical company seeking to market a new drug must first
obtain FDA approval via an NDA .See 21 U.S.C. 355 (a ), (b) . The NDA must include adequate

tests by all methods reasonably applicable to show whether or not such drug is safe for use under
the conditions prescribed ,recommended , or suggested inthe proposed labeling thereof. 21U.S.C.

355 ( ). The

trials

must

provide

an

adequate

basis for

physician

labeling.

21 C.F.R. 312.21(c ). In those trials , the drug is used the way it would be administered when

marketed

The Secretary must deny the NDA if he has insufficient information to determine

whether such drug is safe for use under such conditions . 21 U.S.C. § 355(d)(4).

Here,the U.S. trials FDA relied upon when approving mifepristone required that : ( 1) each

woman receive an ultrasound to confirm gestational age and exclude an ectopic pregnancy ;47 (2)
physicians have experience in performing surgical abortions and admitting privileges at medical

facilities that provide emergency care; (3) all patients be within one hour of emergency facilities

or the facilities of the principal investigator ; and (4) women be monitored for four hours to check
for adverse events after taking misoprostol . ECF No. 7 at 23. However, FDA included none of

these requirements

which were explicitly stated in the clinical trial FDA relied on most

the 2000 Approval . Id. Likewise,

in

2016 Changes omitted the requirements of the underlying

tests : (1) gestational age confirmed by ultrasounds; (2) participants required to return for clinical
assessment; and (3) surgical intervention if necessary . at 24.
46

Glossary, WEILL CORNELL MEDICINE, https://research.weill.cornell.edu/compliance/human-subjects-research
institutional- review-board/ glossary-faqs-medical-terms- lay- 3 (last visited Mar. 22, 2023) (emphasis added) .

47

The 2016 Denialof the 2002 Petitionbriefly notes the two Frenchclinical trials did not require an ultrasoundbut
insteadleftthe decision to the investigator’s discretion. ECF No. 1-28 at 19 n.47. Defendants do not explain how
many investigators chose to perform an ultrasound. The higherthat number is, the more it supports Plaintiffs
argument. But in any case, the U.S. trial was larger thanthe two French trials combined and is thereforethe more
reliable study Id. at 9 .

49

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Page 50 of 67

Defendants maintain there is no legal basis for Plaintiffs contention that the approved

conditions of use of a drug must duplicate the protocol requirements for the clinical trials
supporting its approval.

ECF No. 28 at 35. But FDA’s actions must not be arbitrary and

capricious.48 See 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A); United States v. An Article ofDevice

F.2d 826, 832–33 (7th Cir. 1985) (concluding

Diapulse, 768

denial was not arbitrary and capricious

because the proposed labeling did not specify conditions of use that are similar to those followed

inthe studies ). The scope of review under the arbitrary and capricious standard is narrow and a
court is not to substitute its judgment for that of the agency. Motor Vehicle Mfrs.

ofU.S.,

Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co. , 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983) (internal marks omitted).
Nevertheless,the agency must examine the relevant data and articulate a satisfactory explanation

for its action including a rational connection between the facts found and the choice made . Id.
(internal marks omitted); see also Sw. Elec.Power Co. v. EPA, 920 F.3d 999 , 1013 (5th Cir.2019)

judicial review of agency action is not toothless ). Courts must consider whether the decision

was based on a consideration of the relevant factors and whether there has been a clear error of
judgment . Id. (internal marks omitted ) . An agency’s action is arbitrary and capricious

if it

entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem , offered an explanation for its

decision that runs counter to the evidence before the agency , or is so implausible that it could not
be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency expertise . Id. Defendants fail this test .

Plaintiffsalso frame what the Courtcharacterizedas the study-match problem as a statutoryviolation of the
FFDCA See ECF No.7 at 22. The Court does not read21 U.S.C. § 355( d) as necessarilyrequiringan exact
match betweentrial conditions and the conditions on the approved labelingof a new drug. But Section 355(d)
doesmandatethe Secretary issue an order refusingto approve the application ifhe findsthe investigationsdo not
show the drug is safe for use under the suggestedconditions in the proposed labeling. FDA made sucha finding yet
did notdenythe Application. See ECF No. 1-24 at 6 ( We have concluded that adequate informationhas not been
presentedto demonstratethat the drug, when marketed in accordancewiththe terms of distributionproposed, is safe
and effective for use as recommended. ) . Thus, evenif Defendants could survive arbitrary and capricious analysis
ofthe study- match problem Defendants still violated Section 355(d) ontheir own terms.

50

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. The 2000 Approval

begin,FDA entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem by omitting
any evaluation of the psychological effects of the drug

or an evaluation of the long-term medical

consequences of the drug .State Farm, 463 U.S. at 43 ; ECF No. 84 at 12. Considering the intense
psychological trauma and post-traumatic stress women often experience from chemical abortion ,

this failure should not be overlooked or understated . Nor was the drug tested for under-18 girls
undergoing reproductive development.49 But that is not all . Clinical trial protocols in the United

States for the 2000 Approval required a transvaginal ultrasound for each patient to accurately date
pregnancies and identify ectopic pregnancies . ECF No. 1-28 at 19. But FDA ultimately concluded

that a provider can accurately make such a determination by performing a pelvic examination and
obtaining a careful history . Id. Thus , FDA determined it was inappropriate

to mandate how

providers clinically assess women for duration ofpregnancy and for ectopic pregnancy . ECF No.

1-28 at 19. FDA believed it is reasonable to expect that the women’s providers would not have
prescribed Mifeprex
pregnancy

if a pelvic ultrasound examination had clearly identified an ectopic

. Id.at 20 .

FDA thus assumes physicians will ascertain gestational age . But put another way , there is
simply no requirement that any procedure is done to rule out an ectopic pregnancy

which is a

serious and life-threatening situation . This is arbitrary and capricious . The mere fact that other

clinical methods can be used to date pregnancies does not support the view that it should be the

49

In1998, FDAissued the Pediatric Rule, which “ mandatedthat drug manufacturers evaluatethe safety and

effectiveness of their products on pediatric patients, absent an applicable exception. Ass n ofAm. Physicians&
Surgeons, Inc.v . U.S. Food& Drug Admin. , 391 F.Supp. 2d 171, 173-74 (D.D.C.2005) . Two years after approving
mifepristone, FDA was enjoined from enforcing the Pediatric Rule because it lacked statutory authority in issuing
the rule. See Ass n ofAm. Physicians & Surgeons v . FDA, 226 F. Supp. 2d 204 , 222 (D.D.C.2002) . In response,
Congressenacted the Pediatric Research EquityAct of 2003 to codify the Pediatric Rule. See 21 U.S.C.
Inthe 2000 Approval, FDA clarified that the Mifeprex NDA was covered by the Pediatric Rule. See ECF No.1-26
at 4. However, FDA fully waived the rule’s requirementswithout explanation. ECF No. 1-28 at 30.

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4474

is used to make this determination . FDA

has never denied that an ultrasound is the most accurate method to determine gestational age and
identify ectopic pregnancies . See ECF No. 1-14 at 62. And the fact that other clinical methods can

be used does not mean that all such methods are equal in their accuracy and reliability FDA did
rely on a study showing that clinicians rarely underestimate gestational age . ECF No. 1-28 at 19

n.49. But this study does nothing to support FDA’s view that a transvaginal ultrasound is not
necessary to diagnose ectopic pregnancies . To this point, FDA merely argues that even
transvaginal ultrasounds do not guarantee an existing ectopic pregnancy will be identified .Id. at

  1. Ifthat is the case, it does not follow that it should be left to the provider’s discretion to employ
    less reliable methods

orno methods at all

Correct diagnosis of gestational age and ectopic pregnancies is vital . The error in
judgment is borne out by myriad stories and studies brought to the Court’s attention

. One woman

an ultrasound or any other physical examination before receiving
chemical abortion drugs from Planned Parenthood . ECF No. 1 at 22. The abortionist misdated
the baby’s gestational age as six weeks , resulting in the at -home delivery of a lifeless , fully
formed baby in the toilet, later determined to be around 30-36 weeks old Id see also Patel v.
State , 60 N.E.3d 1041, 1043 (Ind Ct . App . 2016) (woman who used chemical abortion drugs
delivered a live baby of approximately twenty -five to thirty weeks gestation who died shortly
after birth ) . Another woman was given chemical abortion drugs during an ectopic pregnancy
because her ultrasound was not even that of a uterus but was of a bladder. ECF No. 31 at 5 .
.

alleged she did not receive

51

Studies reflect that women recurrently miscalculate their unborn child’s gestational age. See P. Taipale & V.
Hiilesmaa, Predictingdelivery date by ultrasound and last menstrual period in early gestation, 97 OBSTETRICS
GYN 189 (2001) ; David A. Savitz et al., Comparison ofpregnancy dating by last menstrualperiod, ultrasound
scanning, and their combination, 187 AM. J.

GYN. 1660 (2002) .

This incidentalso demonstratesthat even where ultrasounds are used, only a qualifiedprovider can assure they are
done properly.
52

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The resulting rupture led to massive infection and a collapse of her vital systems .
Amicus Human Coalition identified four of their clients who were unknowingly ectopic when they

arrived at their clinic with abortion pills in hand . ECF No. 96 at 20. And at least two women
died from chemical abortion drugs last year . See ECF No. 120 at 30 n.5 . One of those women was

.

an estimated twenty -one weeks pregnant . See id Presumably , the fact that the woman obtained
chemical abortion drugs more than two months past FDA’s gestational age cutoff suggests that no
adequate procedures confirmed the gestational age in her case.

FDA has also reported at least ninety-seven cases where women with ectopic pregnancies

took mifepristone.52 But these data are likely incomplete because FDA now only requires reporting

on deaths. See ECF No. 1 at 4. And as noted above, hospitals often miscode complications from
chemical abortions as miscarriages . Studies show that women are thirty percent more likely to die

from aruptured ectopic pregnancy while seeking abortions ifthe condition remains undiagnosed.
A woman may interpret the warning signs of an ectopic pregnancy
bleeding

cramping and severe

as side effects of mifepristone .In reality ,the symptoms indicate her life is in danger.

54

Another study revealed that of 5,619 chemical abortion visits , 452 patients had a pregnancy of

unknown location and 31 were treated for ectopic pregnancy

including 4 that were ruptured.

55

Yet another study examined 3,197 unique, U.S.-only adverse event reports dated September 2000

52

FDA, MifepristoneUS. Post- MarketingAdverseEventsSummaryThrough6/30/2022
, http://www.fda.gov/media/
164331
/ download.

H.K. Atrash et al. , Ectopic pregnancy concurrent with induced abortion : incidence and mortality, 162 AM. J.
OBSTETRICS GYN. 726 ( 1990) .
54

.

Alisa B. Goldberg et al., Mifepristone and Misoprostol for Undesired Pregnancy of Unknown Location, 139
OBSTETRICS GYN. 771, 775 (2022) .

53

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to February 2019.56 That study noted 20 deaths, 529 life-threatening events, and 1,957 severe
adverse events before concluding that a pre-abortion ultrasound should be required to rule out
ectopic pregnancy and confirm gestational age .

57

The record confirms FDA once shared these concerns. After all , many tragedies could be

avoided by auditing physician qualifications and requiring ultrasounds . In 1996, the FDA
Advisory Committee expressed to the Population Council serious reservations on how the drugs

were described in terms ofassuring safe and adequate credentialing of providers. ECF No. 1-14
at 51. Population Council initially committed to conducting post-approval studies in 1996, and

FDA reiterated these requirements mere months before the September 2000 approval. See ECF
No. 1-24 at 6 ( We remind you ofyour commitments dated September 16, 1996,to perform the

Phase 4 studies . ) . Those protocols would have required , inter alia, that the Population Council:
(1) assess the long-term effects of multiple uses of mifepristone ; (2) ascertain the frequency with

which women follow the regimen and outcomes of those that do not; (3 ) study the safety and
efficacy of chemical abortion in girls under the age of eighteen; and (4 ) ascertain the regimen’s

effects on children born after treatment failure .58 ECF No. 1-28 at 32.

56 Aultmanet al., supra note44.
Id
.

58

See 153 Cong. Rec. S5765 (daily ed . May9 , 2007) ( statement of Sen. Coburn) (

recently learned of a woman

whowas given RU-486 after she had a seizure. Herphysiciansassumedthat the seizure was life-threateningto the
babyshe was carryingand gave her RU-486 for a therapeutic abortion. RU 486 was not effective in hercase and the
woman carried the baby to term. Whenthe baby was born at a low birth weight, it also suffered from failureto
thrive. That baby has had three subsequentbrain surgeries due to hydrocephalus. The baby also suffersfrom
idiopathic lymphocyticcolitis]
aninflammatorydisease ofthe colon, which is extremely rare in children. It is
clear that RU- 486 not only is unsafe in women, but itis also notcompletely effective. And when it is not effective,
the results are devastating. ) .

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Similarly, on February 18, 2000

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months before chemical abortion approval

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FDA

informed the Population Council that adequate information ha [d] not been presented to

demonstrate that the drug , when marketed in accordance with the terms of distribution proposed ,

is safe and effective for use as recommended . ECF No. 1-24 at 6 ( emphasis added) . FDA then
stated the restrictions on distribution will need to be amended . Id. Accordingly , FDA informed

the Population Council that it would proceed under Subpart H

the only provision that could

.

implement the requisite restrictions on distribution . Id But as explained above , that was the
improper regulation for the approval of chemical abortion . Regardless , the restrictions were

insufficient to ensure safe use.

June 1, 2000 , FDA privately delivered to the Population Council a set of proposed

restrictions to rectify the safety issues . Said proposal required physicians who were: (1) “trained
and authorized by law to perform surgical abortions ; (2) trained in administering mifepristone

and treating adverse events ; and (3) allowed continuing access (e.g. , admitting privileges) to a
medical facility equipped for instrumental pregnancy termination , resuscitation procedures , and

blood transfusion at the facility or [one hour’s ] drive from the treatment facility . See ECF No. 1
14 at 53-54 . When FDA’s proposal was leaked to the press , a political and editorial backlash

ensued . In response ,the Population Council rejected the proposal and repudiated the restrictions
the sponsor itself proposed in 1996

what FDA deemed a very significant change in the

sponsor’s position . Id. at 50. Because [t]he whole idea of mifepristone was to increase access,

abortion advocates argued that restrictions on mifepristone would effectively eliminate the

main advantage and would kill [] the drug .

59

60

Sheryl Gay Stolberg
, FDAAdds Hurdlesin ApprovalofAbortionPill, THE NEWYORK TIMES (June 8 , 2000) ,

https://www.nytimes.com/2000/06/08/us/fda-adds-hurdles-in-approval-of-abortion-pill.html.60

.

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In September 2000, FDA abandoned its safety proposals and acquiesced to the objections
of the Population Council and Danco . Despite its serious reservations about mifepristone’s
safety, FDA approved a regimen that relied on a self-certification that a prescribing physician has

the ability to diagnose ectopic pregnancies . Id. at 51, 62 see also ECF No. 1-28 at 21 ( [W]e
concluded that there was no need for special certification programs or additional restrictions . ) .

FDA later released the applicant entirely from its Phase 4 duties

twelve years after the 1996

commitment .ECF Nos. 1-24 at 6, 1-28 at 32 see also 21 C.F.R. 314.510 ( Approval under this
section will be subject to the requirement that the applicant study the drug further , to verify and
describe its clinical benefit, where there is uncertainty

of the observed clinical benefit to

ultimate outcome . Postmarketing studies would usually be studies already underway. ) (emphasis
added)

FDA must refuse to approve a drug if the agency determines there is insufficient
information to determine whether such drug is safe for use” or a lack of substantial evidence that

the drug will have the effect it purports or is represented to have under the conditions of use in

the proposed label.21 U.S.C. 355 ( d)(4) (5) ;see also 21 C.F.R. 314.125(b). FDA is therefore
required to deny an NDA if it makes the exact findings FDA made in its 2000 review. [A]n
agency’s decision to change course may be arbitrary and capricious if the agency ignores or

countermands its earlier factual findings without reasoned explanation for doing so. F.C.C. v. Fox

Television Stations,Inc., 556 U.S. 502,537 (2009) . The agency must ordinarily display awareness

that it is changing position, and must show that there are good reasons for the new policy. Id.

at 515. And ifthe agency’s decision was in any material way influenced by political concerns it
should not be upheld Earth Island Inst. v. Hogarth, 494 F.3d 757, 768 ( 9th Cir. 2007).
only acknowledgments of its prior proposals were that FDA and the applicant were not always in

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full agreement about the distribution restrictions and that fulfilling the Phase 4 commitments
would not be feasible.” ECF No. 1-28 at 18, 32-33 .

The Court does not second -guess FDA’s decision -making lightly . But here , FDA
acquiesced on its legitimate safety concerns

in violation of its statutory duty

based on plainly

unsound reasoning and studies that did not support its conclusions . There is also evidence
indicating FDA faced significant political pressure to forego its proposed safety precautions to

better advance the political objective of increased access to chemical abortion

whole idea of mifepristone

which was the

As President Clinton’s Secretary for Health & Human Services

( HHS ) explained to the White House , it was FDA that arranged the meeting between the French

pharmaceutical firm

who owned the mifepristone patent rights

and the eventual drug sponsor

Population Council . The purpose of the FDA – organized meeting was

to facilitate an agreement

between those parties to work together to test [mifepristone ] and file a new drug application . ECF

No. 95 at 14. HHS also initiated another meeting to assess how the United States Government

i.e. ,the Clinton Administration

might facilitate successful completion of the negotiations

between the French firm and the American drug sponsor to secure patent rights and eventual FDA
approval . Id. at 16. In fact , for their negotiations [to be ] successfully concluded

the HHS

Secretary believed American pressure on the French firm was necessary .62 Id

Whether FDA abandonedits proposed restrictionsbecauseofpoliticalpressure or not,one
thing is clear the lack of restrictions resulted in many deaths and many more severe or life

Stolberg, supra note 59.

Seealso LarsNoah, A MiscarriageintheDrugApprovalProcess?:MifepristoneEmbroilsthe FDAinAbortion
Politics, 36 WAKEFORESTL.REV. 571, 576 (2001) ( The Clintonadministrationwentto great lengthsto bring
mifepristoneinto the UnitedStates. Frompressuringthe hesitantmanufacturerto apply for approval, and utilizinga
specializedreviewprocedurenormallyreservedfor life- savingdrugs, to imposingunusualrestrictionson
distribution, andpromisingto keep the identityof the manufacturera secret, the FDA’sapprovalprocessdeviated
from the normin severalrespects. ) .

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threatening adverse reactions. Due to

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lax reporting requirements, the exact number is not

ascertainable . But it is likely far higher than its data indicate for reasons previously mentioned.

Whatever the numbers are, they likely would be considerably lower had FDA not acquiesced to
the pressure to increase access to chemical abortion at the expense of women’s safety .
FDA’s failure to insist on the inclusion of its proposed safety restrictions was not the product of

reasoned decisionmaking. State Farm, 463 U.S. at 52. To hold otherwise would be tantamount

to abdicating the judiciary’s responsibility under the [APA] to set aside agency actions that are
arbitrary , capricious , an abuse of discretion , or otherwise not in accordance with law.

A.L. Pharma,Inc. v. Shalala, 62 F.3d 1484, 1491 (D.C. Cir. 1995)(quoting 5 U.S.C. 706(2)(A)).
Finally,the 2000 Approval was also arbitrary and capricious because it violated Subpart H.63

The 2016 Changes

FDA made numerous substantial changes to the chemical abortion regimen in 2016. These
changes include but are not limited to : ( 1) eliminating the requirement for prescribers to report all

nonfatal serious adverse events ; (2) extending the maximum gestational age from 49 days to 70
days ; (3) eliminating the requirement that administration of misoprostol occurs in-clinic ; (4)
removing the requirement for an in-person follow -up exam ; and (5) allowing

providers

healthcare

other than physicians to dispense chemical abortion drugs . ECF No. 1 at

.

Plaintiffs allege the 2016 Changes were also arbitrary and capricious because none of the studies

on which FDA relied were designed to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of chemical abortion

63

As one scholar noted, the agency took this route so that it could better justify imposing otherwise unauthorized
restrictions on the use and distribution of the drug. See Noah, supra note 62, at 582. And while agency action may
generally be entitled to a presumption ofregularity, here FDA itself acknowledges that its action has not been
regular: itfailed to respond to the Citizen Petition for years. Bayer, 942 F. Supp . 2d at 25 (internal marks omitted).
the hearing, Defendants leading argument for Subpart H was that none of it really matters because of the
FDAAA See ECF No. 136 at 100. This is not the argument of an agency that is confident in the legality ofits
actions. ECF No. 100 at 15.

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drugs for use under the conditions prescribed , recommended, or suggested in the proposed
labeling ECF No. 7 at 24.

For similar reasons as the 2000 Approval ,the Court agrees . Unlike the crucial studies FDA
relied upon to extend the maximum gestational age , change the dosing regimen , and authorize a
repeat dose of misoprostol , the labeling approved by FDA in 2016 did not require : (1) an

ultrasound; (2) an in-person follow -up exam ; or (3 ) the ability of abortionists to personally perform

a surgical abortion if necessary . Id. Simply put, FDA built on its already -suspect 2000 Approval
by removing even more restrictions related to chemical abortion drugs that were present during the
final phase ofthe investigation .And it did so by relying on studies that included the very conditions
FDA refused to adopt.64 None of the studies compared the safety of the changes against the then

current regimen , nor under the labeled conditions of use. Moreover , FDA shirked any
responsibility for the consequences of its actions by eliminating any requirement that

adverse events be reported . Thus , FDA took its chemical abortion regimen

culminated in thousands of adverse events suffered by women and girls

non-fatal

which had already

and removed what little

restrictions protected these women and girls , systematically ensuring that almost all new adverse

events would go unreported or underreported .
Defendants aver that Plaintiffs point to no statutory provision requiring the conditions of

use in a drug’s approved labeling to duplicate the protocol requirements used in the studies
supporting its approval. ECF No. 28 at 32.

The [FFDCA] thus requires FDA to apply its

scientific expertise in determining whether a drug has been shown to be safe and effective under
particular conditions of use, and the application of that expertise is owed substantial deference.

. But FDA does not have unfettered discretion to approve dangerous drugs under substantially

64 See ECF No. 1-35 .

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different conditions than the tests , trials , and studies cited. To be clear , the Court does not hold

that any difference between approval conditions and testing conditions

no matter how well

means the approval fails as a matter of law. But the agency must cogently explain
why it has exercised its discretion in a given manner, and that explanation must be sufficient to
enable [the Court ] to conclude that the [agency’s action] was the product of reasoned
decisionmaking A.L. Pharma, 62 F.3d at 1491 (quoting State Farm,463 U.S. at 52) . Defendants
have not done so here .
2016 Actions were not the product ofreasoned decision-making.

justified

C.

The 2019 Generic Approval

The FFDCA allows a generic drug manufacturer to submit an ANDA for premarket review

and approval . 21 U.S.C. § 355 (j ) ; 21 C.F.R. § 314.94 . The generic sponsor must show that : (1)the

conditions of use prescribed , recommended , or suggested in the labeling have been previously
approved ; and (2 ) the drug product is chemically the same as the already approved drug
allowing it to rely on FDA’s previous finding of safety and effectiveness for the approved drug .

. On April 11, 2019 , FDA approved GenBioPro , Inc.’s ANDA for a generic version of
mifepristone . ECF No. 7 at 10. In doing so, FDA relied on Mifeprex’s safety data . Id.

Plaintiffs argue the 2019 Approval was unlawful because FDA relied on the unlawful 2000
Approval and its unlawful 2016 Changes when approving generic mifepristone . ECF No. 7 at 27 .

FDA withdraws the listed drug on which the ANDA -approved generic drug is based ,the agency
is generally required to withdraw the generic drug as well . 21 U.S.C. § 355 (j)(6) ; 21 C.F.R. §

314.151 Because the Court agrees that Plaintiffs have a substantial likelihood of success in their
challenges to the 2000 and 2016 Actions ,the Court is inclined to agree with Plaintiffs on this claim

as well

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E. There Is a Substantial Threat of Irreparable Harm

To satisfy the second element of the preliminary injunction standard , Plaintiffs must

demonstrate that ifthe district court denied the grant of a preliminary injunction, irreparable harm

would result. Janvey , 647 F.3d at 600 (internal marks omitted ). In general,a harm is irreparable

where there is no adequate remedy at law, such as monetary damages . Id. (internal marks
omitted). When determining whether injury is irreparable , it is not so much the magnitude but the
irreparability that counts . Texas v. U.S. Env’t Prot. Agency ,829 F.3d 405 , 433-34 (5th Cir .2016)
(internal marks omitted ). Where

the likelihood of success on the merits is very high , a much

smaller quantum of injury will sustain an application for preliminary injunction. Mova Pharm.
Corp. v. Shalala , 955 F. Supp . 128, 131 (D.D.C. 1997) ,
(citing Cuomo v. U.S. Nuclear Regul.

, 140 F.3d 1060 (D.C. Cir . 1998)

, 772 F.2d 972 ,974 (D.C.Cir . 1985) (per curiam)) .

Plaintiffs Motion satisfies this standard .

For reasons already stated , Plaintiffs are likely to suffer irreparable harm if the Motion is

not granted . At least two women died from chemical abortion drugs just last year . See ECF No.

120 at 30 n.5 Deerfield Med.Ctr.v. City ofDeerfieldBeach,661F.2d 328, 338 (5th Cir. 1981)
(finding irreparable harm to third -party pregnant women) .

The physical and emotional trauma

that chemical abortion inflicts on women and girls cannot be reversed or erased . ECF No. 7 at 28;

see also E.E.O.C. v. Chrysler Corp. , 733 F.2d 1183 , 1186 (6th Cir . 1984) ( affirming irreparable
harm for plaintiffs emotional distress ). The crucial time that doctors need to treat these injured

women and girls cannot be replaced. Id. The mental and monetary costs to these doctors cannot
be repaid. Id. “ And the time, energy and resources that Plaintiff medical associations expend in

Oneof those womenwas reportedlytwenty- one weekspregnant
, whichis well past the cutofffor gestationalage
evenafterthe2016 Changes. See id. The other maternaldeathoccurredwhile the womanwas sevenweekspregnant
,
whichfalls withinFDA’scurrentrestrictions. Id.

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response to FDA’s actions on chemical abortion drugs cannot be recovered . Id see also

Whitman -Walker Clinic , Inc. v. U.S. Dep’t ofHealth & Hum . Servs .,485 F. Supp . 3d 1, 56 (D.D.C.

2020) (obstacles that make it more difficult for an organization to accomplish its mission provide
injury for both standing and irreparable harm ).

Defendants respond that the drugs at issue have been on the market for more than twenty
years . ECF No. 28 at 41. This argument ignores that many restrictions and safeguards

which

no longer exist were in place for most of that time. Defendants also argue Plaintiffs extreme
delay in filing suit shows they face no irreparable harm. Id. at 42. But the time between the
allegedly unlawful actions and the filing of a suit is not determinative

of whether relief should

be granted.Boire v.Pilot Freight Carriers, Inc., 515 F.2d 1185, 1193 (5th Cir. 1975). Here ,eleven

months does not constitute an extreme delay . See, e.g. , Optimus Steel, LLC v. U.S. Army Corps
ofEng rs,492 F. Supp . 3d 701, 720 (E.D. Tex . 2020) (eleven-month delay did not militate against
equitable relief because the Court can presume that Plaintiff needed ample time to evaluate its

claims )

[

emporary injunctive relief may still be of great value to protect against ongoing

harms,even ifthe initial harm is in the distant past. N.L.R.B. v. Hartman & Tyner ,Inc.,714 F.3d
1244, 1252 (11th Cir.2013).

The Court also disagrees that Plaintiffs theories of injury are too speculative to even show
standing

ECF No. 28 at 42. Plaintiffs have credibly alleged past and future harm resulting from

the removal of restrictions for chemical abortion drugs . Although a court’s analysis of likelihood

of success in the context of an injunctive relief request is governed by the deferential APA’s
arbitrary and capricious standard , a court does not always owe deference to federal agencies

positions concerning irreparable harm ,balance of hardships ,or public interest . San Luis & Delta

To clarify, the eleven months referenced here is the approximate time between FDA’s final agency action inthe
December2021 Denial ofthe 2019 Petition and the commencement of this case.

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Mendota Water Auth . v. Jewell, 969 F. Supp . 2d 1211 , 1215 (E.D. Cal . 2013) ; see also R.J.
Reynolds Vapor Co. v. FDA,No.23-60037 (5th Cir.Mar. 23,2023 ) (noting FDA’s public interest
argument was obviously colored by the FDA’s view of the merits ) ; Sierra Forest Legacy v.

Sherman , 646 F.3d 1161, 1186 ( 9th Cir . 2011) ( Ifthe federal government’s experts were always

entitled to deference concerning the equities of an injunction , substantive relief against federal
government policies would be nearly unattainable , as government experts will likely attest that the

public interest favors the federal government’s preferred policy. ).
F. PreliminaryInjunctionWould Serve the PublicInterest

The third and fourth factors

public interest

assessing the harm to the opposing party and weighing the

merge when the Government is the opposing party . Nken v. Holder , 556 U.S.

418 , 435 (2009 ) . “[T ]he public interest weighs strongly in favor of preventing unsafe drugs from
entering the market . Hill Dermaceuticals , 524 F. Supp . 2d at 12. [T]here is generally no public

interest in the perpetuation of unlawful agency action . State v. Biden , 10 F.4th 538 ,560 (5th Cir .

.

2021) (internal marks omitted ) And there is a strong public interest in meticulous compliance

with the law by public officials . Fund for Animals , Inc. v. Espy, 814 F. Supp . 142 , 152 (D.D.C.
1993) see also State v. Biden , 10 F.4th at 559. Indeed , the Constitution itself declares a prime
public interest that the President and , by necessary inference , his appointees in the Executive

Branch take Care that the Laws be faithfully executed .
Additionally , Defendants

Id. (internal marks omitted ).

actions harm States efforts to regulate chemical abortion in the

interests of life, health , and liberty . ECF No. 100 at 21. The Court appreciates
institutional interest but , given its long -standing disregard of [Plaintiffs Citizen Petition[s ], its
argument has a hollow center Bayer Health Care, 942 F. Supp .2d at 26. To the extent Defendants

67

https://www.ca5.uscourts.gov/opinions/pub/23/23-60037-CV0.pdf .

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and third parties would be harmed by an injunction , the Court still balances these factors in favor
of ensuring that women and girls are protected from unnecessary harm and that Defendants do not
disregard federal law .
For these reasons, a preliminary injunction would serve the public interest.

Defendants maintain that unaborted children of the women who seek but are unable to obtain an

abortion are expected to do worse in school , to have more behavioral and social issues , and
ultimately to attain lower levels of completed education .

ECF No. 28-2 at 7. They are also

expected to have lower earnings as adults , poorer health , and an increased likelihood of criminal

involvement . Id. But [u]sing abortion to promote eugenic goals is morally and prudentially
debatable Planned Parenthood of Ind. & Ky., Inc. v. Comm’r of Ind. State Dep’t of Health, 917
F.3d 532 , 536 (7th Cir .2018) (Easterbrook , J. , dissenting ) see also Box v. Planned Parenthood of

Ind. & Ky., Inc. , 139 S. Ct . 1780 , 1790 (2019) (Thomas , J., concurring ) ( [ A]bortion has proved

to be a disturbingly effective tool for implementing the discriminatory preferences that undergird
eugenics . ) . Though eugenics were once fashionable in the Commanding Heights and High Court ,

they hold less purchase after the conflict , carnage , and casualties of the last century revealed the

bloody consequences of Social Darwinism practiced by would -be Übermenschen . Cf. Buck v. Bell,

274 U.S. 200 ,207 (1927) ( It is better for all the world ,if instead of waiting to execute degenerate
offspring for crime , or to let them starve for their imbecility , society can prevent those who are
manifestly unfit from continuing their kind . The principle that sustains compulsory vaccination is

broad enough to cover cutting the Fallopian tubes . ).
Defendants are correct that one purpose of injunctive relief is to preserve the status quo .
See, e.g. , City ofDallas v. Delta Air Lines , Inc., 847 F.3d 279 , 285 (5th Cir . 2017 ) . But the status

quo to be restored is the last peaceable uncontested status existing between the parties before the

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dispute developed. Texas v. Biden , No. 2:21-CV-067-Z , 2022 WL 17718634, at *9 (N.D. Tex .

Dec. 15 , 2022) (internal marks omitted); see also Texas v. United States , 40 F.4th 205, 220 (5th

Cir.2022)(the relevant status quo is the one absent the unlawful agency action ); Wages & White

Lion, 16 F.4th at 1144 ( In other words , the relief sought here would simply suspend
administrative alteration of the status quo. ) (quoting Nken, 556 U.S. at 430 n.1); Callaway,489

F.2d at 576 ( Ifthe currently existing status quo itself is causing one of the parties irreparable
injury, it is necessary to alter the situation soas to prevent the injury. ). [P arties could otherwise

have no real opportunity to seek judicial review except at their peril. Mila Sohoni, The Power to

. 1121, 1157–58 (2020) Chemical abortion is only the status
.

Vacate a Rule,88 GEO .WASH.L.

quo insofar as Defendants unlawful actions and their delay in responding to Plaintiffs petitions

have made it so. The fact that injunctive relief could upset this status quo is therefore an
insufficient basis to deny injunctive relief.
G. A Stay Under Section 705 of the APA Is More Appropriate Than Ordering
Withdrawal or Suspension of FDA’s Approval
The Motion asks for injunctive relief but goes as far as requesting the Court to order

Defendants to withdraw or suspend the approvals of chemical abortion drugs , and remove them

from the list of approved drugs . ECF No. 7 at 7. Singular equitable relief is commonplace in

APA cases and is often necessary to provide the plaintiffs with complete redress. E. Bay
Sanctuary Covenant

v. Biden, 993 F.3d 640 , 681 (9th Cir . 2021) (internal marks omitted).

Although the Court finds Plaintiffs have a substantial likelihood of prevailing on the merits,the

Court instead exercises its authority under the APA to order less drastic relief. Section 705 of the

APA provides

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When an agency finds that justice so requires , it may postpone the effective date of
action taken by it, pending judicial review . On such conditions as may be required
and to the extent necessary to prevent irreparable injury, the reviewing court ,
including the court to which a case may be taken on appeal from or on application
for certiorari or other writ to a reviewing court, may issue all necessary and
appropriate process to postpone the effective date of an agency action or to
preserve status or rights pending conclusion ofthe review proceedings
5 U.S.C.

705 ( emphasis added) .

The Fifth Circuit has acknowledged

meaningful differences between an injunction ,which

is a drastic and extraordinary remedy , and vacatur , which is a less drastic remedy

Texas v.

Biden , 2022 WL 17718634 at *7 (quoting Texas v. United States , 40 F.4th at 219 ). Whereas an
injunction

tells someone what to do or not to do , a vacatur only reinstates the status quo absent

the unlawful agency action and neither compels nor restrains further agency decision -making . Id.
(internal marks omitted ) . A Section 705 stay can be seen as an interim or lesser form of vacatur

under Section 706. Id. Just as a preliminary injunction is often a precursor to a permanent
injunction ,a stay under Section 705 can be viewed as a precursor to vacatur under Section 706.

see also Nken, 556 U.S. at 428–29 (a stay temporarily suspend [s ] the source of authority to
act
the order or judgment in question not by directing an actor’s conduct ) . Motions to stay
agency action pursuant to [Section 705 ] are reviewed under the same standards used to evaluate
requests for interim injunctive relief. Id. at * 10 (citing Affinity Healthcare Servs .,Inc. v. Sebelius ,

720 F. Supp . 2d 12, 15 n.4 (D.D.C. 2010)); see also Nken , 556 U.S. at 434 Texas v. U.S. Env’t

Prot.Agency , 829 F.3d at 435. Because the Court finds injunctive relief is generally appropriate ,
Section 705 plainly authorizes the lesser remedy of issuing all necessary and appropriate process

to postpone the effective date of the challenged actions . Courts

including the Supreme Court

routinely stay already -effective agency action under Section 705.
( collecting cases) .

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Accordingly , the Court hereby STAYS the effective date of FDA’s September 28 , 2000 ,

Approval of mifepristone and all subsequent challenged actions related to that approval

i.e.,the

2016 Changes , the 2019 Generic Approval , and the 2021 Actions . This Court acknowledges that
its decision in Texas v. Biden has been appealed to the Fifth Circuit . See 2 :21-CV-067-Z ,ECF No.
184 (Feb. 13, 2023) . Ifthe Fifth Circuit reverses this Court’s Section 705 analysis , the Court

clarifies that it alternatively would have ordered Defendants to suspend the chemical abortion
approval and all subsequent challenged actions related to that approval until the Court can render

a decision on the merits .
CONCLUSION

Forthe foregoing reasons,the Court GRANTSthe Motion INPART. FDA’s approval of
mifepristone is hereby STAYED. The Court STAYS the applicability ofthis opinion and order

for seven (7) days to allow the federal government time to seek emergency relief from the United
States Court ofAppeals for the Fifth Circuit .
SO ORDERED
.

April 7 , 2023

MATTHEW J. KACSMARYK
UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE

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