Rosalie’s Story
In 2023, Rosalie Markezich, a Louisiana woman, became pregnant and wanted to keep her baby. Her boyfriend, however, had other plans. Using her email address and mailing information without her consent, he ordered abortion pills from a California-based doctor, Dr. Remy Coeytaux, who mailed the drugs to Louisiana without ever speaking with Rosalie.
“I told him I do not want to get rid of my baby.”
“He ordered pills to my house.”
“I kept standing my ground. I want to keep it.”
“He snapped, raised his voice. I was scared and I felt pressure to take the pills. So I did, and my plan was to immediately go and throw them up. I started freaking out, having a panic attack. Arms and legs all locked up.”
“The blood started coming, and at that moment I knew the chances were not in my favor. I just laid there, bleeding, crying.”
Rosalie later said that “the trauma of my chemical abortion still haunts me.” She believes it never would have happened if the FDA had not allowed abortion pills to be prescribed through telehealth and mailed without an in-person medical consultation.
Louisiana authorities issued an arrest warrant for Dr. Coeytaux, who remains under investigation for mailing abortion pills across state lines in violation of Louisiana law. Unfortunately “shield laws” in states like California protect abortion dealers from facing justice by states such as Louisiana and Texas that protect mothers and babies by prohibiting abortion.
Louisiana Attorney General Liz Murrill said, “Rosalie is bravely representing many women who are victimized by the illegal, immoral, and unethical conduct of these drug dealers.”
Rosalie’s case also ties into Louisiana’s participation in a federal lawsuit seeking to restore in-person medical requirements for abortion drugs. She stated in her declaration:
“Had the FDA required an in-person visit with a doctor before dispensing the drugs, my boyfriend would never have been able to obtain the drugs that he made me take. I also would have told the doctor that I did not want to take them. And I would have told the doctor that I wanted to keep my baby.”
Dr. Coeytaux has been the subject of other legal actions as well, including a Texas lawsuit alleging that he mailed abortion drugs to a woman whose estranged husband placed the order.
Rosalie’s courage and her willingness to share her experience have brought national attention to the real-life harms caused by coercion and telemedicine abortion. Her story represents countless women whose partners or abusers weaponize abortion drugs against them.