US federal judge pauses Louisiana attempt to restrict abortion pill access - JURIST - News
Summary
News A federal judge on Tuesday paused Louisiana’s bid to reinstate stricter dispensing rules for the abortion pill mifepristone, staying the case while the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) conducts an ongoing review of the drug’s safety. Joseph declined to block the current rules, instead pausing the case to allow the FDA to complete a safety review it had committed to before the lawsuit was filed. The ruling however noted that the stay is not indefinite, explaining that the court’s analysis would shift if the FDA fails to act with “all deliberate speed.” At issue is a 2023 FDA rule change which allowed mifepristone , an abortion pill previously required to be dispensed in person, to be prescribed via telehealth and delivered by mail. The court concluded that allowing the FDA to complete its review served the public’s interest more than judicial intervention, warning against what it called “government by lawsuit.” The ruling ordered the FDA to file a status report within six months and to notify the court within fourteen days of completing its review.
News A federal judge on Tuesday paused Louisiana’s bid to reinstate stricter dispensing rules for the abortion pill mifepristone, staying the case while the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) conducts an ongoing review of the drug’s safety. Joseph declined to block the current rules, instead pausing the case to allow the FDA to complete a safety review it had committed to before the lawsuit was filed. The ruling however noted that the stay is not indefinite, explaining that the court’s analysis would shift if the FDA fails to act with “all deliberate speed.” At issue is a 2023 FDA rule change which allowed mifepristone , an abortion pill previously required to be dispensed in person, to be prescribed via telehealth and delivered by mail. The court concluded that allowing the FDA to complete its review served the public’s interest more than judicial intervention, warning against what it called “government by lawsuit.” The ruling ordered the FDA to file a status report within six months and to notify the court within fourteen days of completing its review.
## Article Content
News
A federal judge on Tuesday
paused
Louisiana’s bid to reinstate stricter dispensing rules for the abortion pill mifepristone, staying the case while the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) conducts an ongoing review of the drug’s safety.
Writing for the District Court for the Western District of Louisiana, Judge David C. Joseph declined to block the current rules, instead pausing the case to allow the FDA to complete a safety review it had
committed
to before the lawsuit was filed. The ruling granted the Defendant’s motion to stay the case pending completion of the FDA’s review, and denied the Plaintiff’s motion for preliminary relief without prejudice. The ruling however noted that the stay is not indefinite, explaining that the court’s analysis would shift if the FDA fails to act with “all deliberate speed.”
At issue is a 2023 FDA rule change which allowed
mifepristone
, an abortion pill previously required to be dispensed in person, to be prescribed via telehealth and delivered by mail.
Louisiana
, which
bans
nearly all abortions,
argued
that the rule unlawfully enabled out-of-state providers to ship the drug to its residents. Louisiana’s
lawsuit
, filed last October, challenged the FDA’s January 2023
Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy
(REMS) for mifepristone under the
Administrative Procedure Act
, arguing the agency acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it removed the in-person dispensing requirement. Louisiana claimed concrete injury including sovereign harm from an effective circumvention of the state’s abortion laws, and financial harm through over $92,000 in Medicaid costs tied to mifepristone-related emergency room cases in 2025.
Tuesday’s memorandum ruling first addressed the threshold issue of standing. In
FDA v. Alliance for Hippocratic Medicine
, the Supreme Court
dismissed
a similar APA challenge in June 2024 after finding that the plaintiff doctors and medical associations lacked a personal stake in the FDA’s actions. Here, Judge Joseph found Louisiana’s position to be different, concluding that the state had demonstrated both sovereign and financial injury which traces back to the 2023 rule change. The court further found Louisiana likely to succeed on the merits, citing arguments made in the 5th Circuit Court of Appeals
ruling
in
FDA v. Alliance
. The court further noted that Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and FDA Commissioner Martin Makary had
previously
acknowledged deficiencies in REMS approvals and committed to a comprehensive safety review.
However, despite finding standing and a likely path to success on the merits, the court on Tuesday declined to issue interim relief to Louisiana. The court concluded that allowing the FDA to complete its review served the public’s interest more than judicial intervention, warning against what it called “government by lawsuit.” The ruling ordered the FDA to file a status report within six months and to notify the court within fourteen days of completing its review.
This comes amidst ongoing tension and legals battles surrounding access to abortion services. Last February, a Louisiana grand jury
indicted
a New York doctor for enabling the termination of a minor’s pregnancy by prescribing mifepristone, while other states have
called
for expanded access to abortion medications.
---
## Expert Analysis
### Merits
- Louisiana claimed concrete injury including sovereign harm from an effective circumvention of the state’s abortion laws, and financial harm through over $92,000 in Medicaid costs tied to mifepristone-related emergency room cases in 2025.
- Kennedy Jr. and FDA Commissioner Martin Makary had previously acknowledged deficiencies in REMS approvals and committed to a comprehensive safety review.
- However, despite finding standing and a likely path to success on the merits, the court on Tuesday declined to issue interim relief to Louisiana.
### Areas for Consideration
- The ruling however noted that the stay is not indefinite, explaining that the court’s analysis would shift if the FDA fails to act with “all deliberate speed.” At issue is a 2023 FDA rule change which allowed mifepristone , an abortion pill previously required to be dispensed in person, to be prescribed via telehealth and delivered by mail.
- Louisiana’s lawsuit , filed last October, challenged the FDA’s January 2023 Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategy (REMS) for mifepristone under the Administrative Procedure Act , arguing the agency acted arbitrarily and capriciously when it removed the in-person dispensing requirement.
- Tuesday’s memorandum ruling first addressed the threshold issue of standing.
### Implications
- The ruling however noted that the stay is not indefinite, explaining that the court’s analysis would shift if the FDA fails to act with “all deliberate speed.” At issue is a 2023 FDA rule change which allowed mifepristone , an abortion pill previously required to be dispensed in person, to be prescribed via telehealth and delivered by mail.
- Here, Judge Joseph found Louisiana’s position to be different, concluding that the state had demonstrated both sovereign and financial injury which traces back to the 2023 rule change.
### Expert Commentary
This article covers fda, louisiana, court topics. Notable strengths include discussion of fda. Areas of concern are also raised. Readability: Flesch-Kincaid grade 0.0. Word count: 514.
Related Articles
UN says Cuba needs humanitarian aid despite recent fuel shipment - JURIST...
3 days, 23 hours ago
Clio Adds Agentic AI Capabilities to Clio Work, Also Launches Vincent Mobile...
4 days, 1 hour ago
DRC agrees to take third-county deportees from US - JURIST - News
4 days, 6 hours ago
Kenya dispatch: High Court suspends automated traffic fines system, testing due process...
4 days, 19 hours ago