Charlamagne Gives Man Donkey Award For Giving His Girl An Abortion Pill But Was The Man Wrong? (Live Broadcast)
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Man charged after ‘secretly giving his girlfriend an abortion drug and telling her it was an iron pill’
Massachusetts man is charged with attempted poisoning, among other charges, after tricking his pregnant girlfriend into taking misprostol
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A Massachusetts man gave his pregnant girlfriend abortion medication under the guise of iron pills and vitamins, causing her to miscarry, prosecutors say.
Robert Kawada, 43, is now facing criminal charges of attempted poisoning, assault and battery with a dangerous weapon on a pregnant person and assault and battery on a household or family member, according to Middlesex District Attorney Marian Ryan.
One of the pills he is accused of giving the victim is believed to be misoprostol, which is used in combination with mifepristone to end a pregnancy.
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Mr Kawada was arraigned in Waltham District Court on Tuesday. A not-guilty plea was entered on his behalf and the judge set his bail at $100,000.
During Tuesday’s arraignment, Assistant District Attorney Jacob McCrindle said Mr Kawada and the victim began dating in January after meeting on a dating app. The two went on several in-person dates and engaged in consensual sex on three occasions, The Boston Globe reported.
After learning the victim was pregnant, Mr Kawada ended their relationship. However, the two met in person to discuss the pregnancy. The victim claims Mr Kawada assured her about the pregnancy and shared his experience with his ex-wife’s pregnancy.
On one of those occasions they met, the victim alleges Mr Kawada gave her “homemade raspberry leaf cookies” which caused her to feel unwell.
Prosecutors explained that raspberry leaves are sometimes used to start labor but can be potentially harmful during the first trimester.
On another occasion, Mr Kawada gave the victim pills but she went to the bathroom and spat them out. She later saved them in a Ziplock plastic bag.
Before their final meeting, prosecutors say Mr Kawanda orchestrated a call from a fake nurse to advise the victim she should take iron pills due to her blood levels. Mr Kawanda then showed up at the victim’s home with the supposed iron supplements. Mr McCrindle alleges Mr Kawanda checked her mouth “by pulling on the victim’s cheeks to ensure she had consumed the pills.”
The victim later went to sleep feeling “cold” and “shivering” and woke up with “very bad cramps.” She later miscarried.
The victim called the nurse but soon discovered it was an “internet-based phone number” and became suspicious it was a fake number from a fake nurse. After informing her family of the incident, the victim called the police and provided the previous pills Mr Kawada gave her.
Prosecutors say that when questioned by police, Mr Kawada said he gave her “vitamin C and iron pills.”
Cell phone web searches from Mr Kawanda’s phone show searches for “misoprostol dissolved” and “9-week aborted fetus pics”. Prosecutors say Mr Kawanda also called an online pharmacy that sells misoprostol – which is only available in the state through a prescription.
Mr Kawada is expected to return to court on July 23 for a probable cause hearing.
Texas man faces charges for allegedly slipping abortion drug in wife’s drink
This article is more than 2 years old
Grand jury indicted Mason Herring on two felony counts earlier this month, including assaulting a pregnant person
Lauren ArataniMon 14 Nov 2022 12.30 ESTShare
A Texas man faces criminal charges for allegedly trying to end his wife’s pregnancy without her knowledge by slipping medication used to induce an abortion into her drinks.
Earlier this month, a grand jury indicted the man, a 38-year-old attorney from Houston named Mason Herring, on two felony counts, including assaulting a pregnant person. The second charge Herring faces is “assault – forced induced to have an abortion”, according to court records.
Texas has one of the most restrictive abortion laws in the country, allowing abortions only when a pregnant person’s life is at serious risk, with no exceptions for rape or incest. The law not only makes it a felony to perform an abortion procedure – it also gives civilians the ability to sue any person who helps a person get an abortion.
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Herring’s wife alleges that he began lecturing her in March on the importance of hydration during pregnancy and offered her glasses of water. After drinking from one of the glasses, she noticed the water was cloudy. Herring told her the cloudiness could be from dirty pipes.
She started cramping half an hour later and eventually experienced severe bleeding, leading to an emergency room visit. After experiencing these symptoms, she started to believe that her drink had been tampered with an abortion-inducing medication.
An affidavit written by the Houston police department, described by the Washington Post, said that the Herrings had been married for 11 years, and over time, their relationship became strained. Herring in February expressed wishes to separate from his wife and moved out of their home, though he agreed to couples’ therapy. The couple have two children, ages two and six.
Herring’s wife learned that she was pregnant and told her husband during a couples’ counseling session on 8 March. She told officials that her husband’s reaction to the news was negative.
After Herring’s wife returned home from the emergency room, he allegedly gave her four more drinks over the next week. She noticed three had “an unknown substance” in them, and the fourth was a bottle of orange juice with the seal broken.
Herring was scheduled to visit his wife on 20 April. His wife invited two people over to potentially witness any of his suspicious behavior. During that scheduled visit, Herring tried to give her drink, which his wife and the two people noticed had “an unknown substance” inside.
The next week, Herring’s wife saw him slip the contents of a small plastic bag into a drink that he later gave to her. She also inspected trash that he had taken out and saw open packs of Cyrux, which contains misoprostol, an ingredient known to induce abortions. She showed law enforcement videos of both instances, according to the affidavit.
An assistant district attorney prosecuting the case, Anthony Osso, told local news station KTRK that Herring’s alleged actions were “manipulative”.
“It’s premeditated,” Osso said. “What we are alleging Mr Herring did, which we believe the evidence supports, is a pretty heinous act. To do that to someone who trusts you, it’s taking advantage of that trust.”
Herring is scheduled to appear in court again on 2 December. He is out on $30,000 bond. His lawyers did not immediately respond to comment though said in a statement: “We are aware that the grand jury has returned these charges. That said, we very much look forward to our day in court and are thoroughly convinced that we will prevail in a court of law when our time comes to defend these allegations.”
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