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Another Man Accused of Forcing Abortion Pills on Mother of His Child
It happened again.
This time, an Ohio man, Hassan-James Abbas, is accused of holding his pregnant girlfriend down in the middle of the night by her neck and forcing crushed abortion pills into her mouth.
This is just another case of abortion activists’ illegal provision of abortion pills leading to women being forced to take them against their wills.
The woman said that she scratched and shoved her boyfriend until she was able to escape to the kitchen, at which point she called 911. The 911 call recorded at the location hung up immediately; that’s when she says he snatched the phone from her hand and ended the call. The woman went to the hospital quickly thereafter, told the story of the assault, and was diagnosed with vaginal bleeding, but it’s unclear if the baby survived.
Abbas, who is himself a doctor (though he has just had his medical license suspended), ordered abortion pills over the internet the day after his girlfriend told him she was pregnant.
These abortion pill services, which are run by abortion activists, act with no regard for the law or women’s safety. Anyone — boyfriends intent on killing their unborn children included — need only fill out an online form to receive abortion pills at their doorstep within a matter of days. In Abbas’ case, it took just three days for the deadly drugs to arrive at his address. Abbas admits that he ordered the abortion pills, but he claims that his then-girlfriend agreed to let him administer the crushed-up pills to her.
The guardrails on these abortion pill mills are so nonexistent that Abbas simply filled out his ex-wife’s name and his own address on a form, and the people running the pill mill were happy to send the pills along. Evidently, the unfettered access to abortion drugs made Abbas feel entitled to end the life of his unborn child even as his girlfriend repeatedly stated that she wanted to care for and love their baby. (READ MORE: The Unspeakable Evil of Christopher Cooprider)
The assault allegedly happened on Dec. 18, 2024, yet Abbas’ workplace, the University of Toledo Medical Center, only placed him on “administrative leave” after the State Medical Board of Ohio suspended his medical license on Nov. 5 of this year. Until this month, Abbas had been employed as a surgical resident at the University of Toledo.
That’s a problem, says the victim, because the University of Toledo Medical Center has known about the allegations against Abbas since early this year.
“I think it’s important for people to know that [the University of Toledo Medical Center] says they hold their employees to the highest standards; however, they have had this information since the beginning of this year and they chose to still employ him and not place him on leave until now,” she told Toledo news service WOTL 11.
In suspending Abbas’ medical license, Ohio’s medical board said there was “clear and convincing evidence” that he poses “a danger of immediate and serious harm to the public.” What’s not clear is why his employer let him treat patients for so long after such serious allegations were made, especially as the evidence that he ordered the abortion pills was so readily apparent.
Police investigators acted quickly after the alleged assault. They obtained search warrants soon afterward for Abbas’ parents’ house, explaining that they believed the laptop Abbas used to order the abortion pills was located there. The illegal activities said to be under investigation in a search warrant filed Dec. 30, 2024, were “attempted murder, assault, and disruption of public services.” No criminal charges have been filed yet against Abbas.
This is just another case of abortion activists’ illegal provision of abortion pills leading to women being forced to take them against their wills.
Earlier this year, a woman was charged with using “coercion” to make her daughter take abortion pills to kill her unborn baby. The daughter had been planning a gender reveal party for the baby, but the grandmother evidently did not want to celebrate. New York Gov. Cathy Hochul has refused to extradite the woman charged with providing the abortion pills, Maggie Carpenter. Carpenter allegedly worked through Aid Access, one of the largest abortion-dispensing mills run by activists, to dispense the drugs.
Also this year, a Texas man was charged with murder after he allegedly killed his unborn baby by lacing his pregnant girlfriend’s cookies and drink with abortion pills.
As long as people can order abortion pills easily online, they’ll keep slipping abortion drugs to pregnant women to kill any babies they don’t want alive. Since a killing can easily look like a miscarriage, we can’t know the extent of this crisis.
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