Politics & Government

Kobach urges another U.S. pharmacy giant to not sell abortion pills in Kansas

(NYT15) UNDATED -- Sept. 28, 2000 -- ABORTION-PILL -- The Food and Drug Administration approved the abortion pill, known as mifepristone or RU-486, for sale in the United States. It is the first alternative to surgical abortion approved here. Roussel Ucalf, a unit of Hoechst AG, declined to seek marketing approval for the drug in the United States, saying it feared protests from opponents of abortion rights. In 1994, the company gave the drug’s patent to a nonprofit group, the Population Council, which set out to get market approval. A photo of Roussel Ucalf’s RU-486 when it was introduced in France in 1988. (Roussel Ucalf/The New York Times) *LITE
(NYT15) UNDATED -- Sept. 28, 2000 -- ABORTION-PILL -- The Food and Drug Administration approved the abortion pill, known as mifepristone or RU-486, for sale in the United States. It is the first alternative to surgical abortion approved here. Roussel Ucalf, a unit of Hoechst AG, declined to seek marketing approval for the drug in the United States, saying it feared protests from opponents of abortion rights. In 1994, the company gave the drug’s patent to a nonprofit group, the Population Council, which set out to get market approval. A photo of Roussel Ucalf’s RU-486 when it was introduced in France in 1988. (Roussel Ucalf/The New York Times) *LITE NYT

Attorney General Kris Kobach has urged another U.S. pharmacy giant to follow the lead of Walgreens and not dispense abortion pills in Kansas.

In a letter to CVS on Tuesday, Kobach told the second largest pharmacy in the U.S. that the dispensing of the abortion-inducing drug Mifepristone through the mail is illegal.

There was no immediate response from CVS.

The announcement comes after the largest pharmacy in the U.S., Walgreens, agreed not to dispense the abortion-inducing drug Mifepristone in Kansas in a letter to Kobach.

““Walgreens is not currently dispensing Mifepristone in any of its locations, said the letter by Danielle C. Gray, the company’s chief legal officer and executive vice president. “Walgreens does not intend to dispense Mifepristone within your state and does not intend to ship Mifepristone into your state from any of our pharmacies. If this approach changes, we will be sure to notify you.”

“As the chief law enforcement officer in Kansas, I am writing to advise you that this plan is illegal and Kansas will not hesitate to enforce the law,” Kobach wrote to Walgreens and CVS.

The move comes six months after voters affirmed abortion rights in August by rejecting the “Value Them Both” constitutional amendment that would have allowed the state Legislature to ban abortions.

The legality of such sales is a matter of contention.

The Biden Administration allowed mailing of abortion-inducing drugs as an emergency measure during the COVID-19 pandemic and the Justice Department has issued an opinion that it can continue.

Kobach disagrees.

“It is illegal to knowingly mail any article or thing designed, adapted or intended for producing abortion,” the letter from Kobach read. “It is also illegal to mail any 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.”

Kobach also cited a Kansas law requiring women to take abortion drugs in the same room with the prescribing physician. That law is currently blocked by a court injunction.

Kansans for Life, the state’s leading anti-abortion group, issued a statement hailing Walgreens’ decision and Kobach’s demands.

“We call on other pharmacies to also commit to protecting the health and safety of women who would be endangered by the lack of monitoring of these deadly chemicals,” said Danielle Underwood, the group’s director of communications.

Trust Women, which operates a clinic in Wichita and helped lead the fight against the August amendment, said Kobach is overstepping.

“Mifepristone is a safe and effective method of abortion that has been approved by the FDA for over 20 years,” the group said in a statement. “The Attorney General is not a physician, yet still feels qualified to weigh in on matters that Kansans have continually insisted politicians leave to medical professionals — as recently as last August when voters rejected an anti-abortion constitutional amendment.”

The FDA released a statement outlining updates to the current access to abortion medication. The new ruling would allow for more retail pharmacies to provide drugs used in medication abortions.

Planned Parenthood launched telehealth medication abortion in December in an effort to expand access options in Kansas. The state’s only abortion-providing clinics are in Wichita and the Kansas City area.

Related Stories from Wichita Eagle
Eduardo Castillo
The Wichita Eagle
Eduardo covers crime and breaking news for The Wichita Eagle. His previous work experience includes stints at KWCH 12 Eyewitness News, the local CBS affiliate in Wichita, and as a marketing manager for a local real estate team. In addition to writing, Eduardo also enjoys still photography and cinematography. News tips? email at Edcastillo@wichitaeagle.com or call 316-268-6213.
Get unlimited digital access
#ReadLocal

Try 1 month for $1

CLAIM OFFER