State of Louisiana v. U.S. Food and Drug Administration
Emergency Docket
The emergency docket, sometimes called the “shadow docket,” consists mostly of requests by losing parties in the courts below for a stay of an injunction issued by the lower court, or for an injunction pending certiorari. They are supposed to be limited to circumstances in which emergency relief is requested.
What's at Stake
Anti-abortion politicians in Louisiana filed a federal lawsuit to force the FDA to immediately impose a nationwide restriction on mail and pharmacy access to mifepristone, a safe and effective medication used in nearly two-thirds of U.S. abortions as well as for early miscarriage care. A company that manufactures mifepristone filed an emergency motion in the U.S. Supreme Court, asking to the court to immediately block the Fifth Circuit’s decision reinstating this medically unnecessary in-person dispensing requirement while the company's request that the Fifth Circuit's decision be rejected altogether is considered.
Summary
CASE UPDATE — MAY 2, 2026: A company that manufactures mifepristone filed an emergency motion in the U.S. Supreme Court, asking the Court to immediately block the Fifth Circuit’s May 1 decision reinstating a medically unnecessary, nationwide in-person dispensing requirement for mifepristone while the Supreme Court considers the company's request to reverse the Fifth Circuit's decision altogether. The Fifth Circuit's ruling granted Louisiana’s extraordinary request to reinstate a nationwide requirement, lifted by FDA in 2021, that patients obtain mifepristone in person at a health center, rather than by mail or at a pharmacy after receiving care through telemedicine, while Louisiana’s appeal proceeds.
The appellate court’s order overrides a lower court’s ruling earlier this month pausing the case while the Trump administration conducts a FDA review that is itself a thinly veiled attempt to lay the groundwork for additional medically unjustified restrictions on mifepristone. The Department of Justice (DOJ) argued that Louisiana v. FDA should not move forward because the FDA has already undertaken a new review of its regulations on mifepristone. At no point in the brief did the DOJ defend the merits of the FDA’s evidence-based decision to allow mifepristone patients to fill their prescription by mail and at pharmacies, the issue at the core of the case.
More than 1 in 4 people in the U.S. who have an abortion today do so using telemedicine. If a federal court grants Louisiana’s request to impose restrictions on telemedicine, patients will no longer be able to fill their mifepristone prescription by mail or at a pharmacy being evaluated and counseled by a health care provider through telemedicine. Instead, patients all across the country—including in states where abortion is legally protected—will be required to pick up the pill in person at a hospital, clinic, or medical office, even when they have already received care through telemedicine and there is no medical reason for the travel.
Without this method of care delivery, patients using mifepristone would be forced to travel, sometimes hundreds of miles, to a health center just to pick up a pill, a requirement that leading medical authorities agree has no safety benefit. For some patients — especially people with low incomes, those living in rural areas, people with disabilities, younger people, and survivors of domestic violence — traveling to a clinic is an added barrier that can prevent them from getting an abortion altogether.
Mifepristone’s safety record has been confirmed by more than a hundred peer-reviewed studies and by leading medical authorities like the American Medical Association and the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists. Recent data show that, by June 2025, through more than 1 in 4 U.S. abortions were provided telemedicine using mifepristone.
Despite this scientific backing, in May 2025, the Trump administration announced that the FDA is conducting a new review of its mifepristone regulations, prompted by a debunked, self-published report from a Project 2025 sponsor. This report attacking mifepristone purposefully distorts the safety record of medication abortion and has been denounced by more than 260 expert researchers for its severe scientific flaws.
Legal Documents
-
05/04/2026
Order Granting Administrative Stay -
05/02/2026
Intervenor Danco Laboratories, LLC, Application for Stay the Judgement of the Fifth Circuit & Request for Immediate Administrative Stay
Date Filed: 05/04/2026
Court: Supreme Court (U.S.) - Now
Download DocumentDate Filed: 05/02/2026
Court: Supreme Court (U.S.) - Now
Download Document-
05/01/2026
Opinion and Order Granting Motion to Stay 2023 REMS
Date Filed: 05/01/2026
Court: Appeals Court (5th Cir.)
Download Document-
04/07/2026
Memorandum Ruling -
01/27/2026
Response Brief of the Defendant U.S. Food and Drug Administration -
12/17/2025
Plaintiff State of Louisiana's Motion for Preliminary Injunction
Date Filed: 04/07/2026
Court: District Court (W.D. La.)
Download DocumentDate Filed: 01/27/2026
Court: District Court (W.D. La.)
Download DocumentDate Filed: 12/17/2025
Court: District Court (W.D. La.)
Download DocumentPress Releases
U.S. Supreme Court Issues One-Week Pause on Nationwide Restriction on Abortion and Miscarriage Medication
Federal Appeals Court Orders Nationwide Restrictions on Common Medication for Abortion and Miscarriage Care
Federal Court Pauses Case Seeking to Restrict Abortion and Miscarriage Medication
Urging Federal Court to Reject Abortion Opponents’ Efforts to Make it Harder for People to Get Medication Abortion, Preeminent Medical Associations, Former FDA Commissioners, Advocates for Domestic Violence Survivors and People with Disabilities, Reproductive Freedom Organizations, and Other Experts File Suite of Amicus Briefs
Trump Administration Responds to Lawsuit Seeking Immediate Nationwide Restrictions on Medication Abortion
Louisiana Lawsuit Seeks Immediate Nationwide Restrictions on Medication Abortion