why wasn t he set? i can tell you that this is not suddenly happens all the time. i spoke to the founder and chairwoman of the fun, an abortion advocacy group. she told me that this is probably the first case like this in the whole state. it so they are trying to far more about what that means. and i think we are going to have to wait to see details in terms of what was the exact thing reported to police. pablo de la rosa, from texas public radio, thank you for your time, please keep us posted and let me now. thank you for having me. that is the latest of texas. i want to know, what was this woman charged under? the murder started in texas that we just heard from pablo, does it apply to the limited facts that we know? i also want to know whether it is possible whether we can start seeing other arrests, not lawsuits, but arrests in states with equally restrictive
coming up, i m going to ask political reporter mark caputo exactly those questions. now to a stunning case out of texas. a 26 year old woman is facing murder charges for what a grand jury indictment says was a self induced abortion. at least sell herrera was released on a half 1 million dollar bond last night, with the help of an abortion advocacy fund. it is unclear now with this case has anything to do with the new law in texas banning abortion after six weeks. here to answer our question is toxic public radio s pablo you reported the story yesterday, it is obviously big news. one of the biggest questions is, once a law issued being charged under? we look for that saturday could not find it. hi, good morning. the grand jury indictments that we brought forth by the district attorney, it has details. she was charged with murder, basically.
The Supreme Court rules in a case involving death row inmates and the involvement of spiritual advisors at executions. We'll look at the implications. Other stories were tracking: after a court ordered stay, Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton appeals to the Texas Supreme Court to permit child abuse investigations into parents who help their transgender kids access gender-affirming care. And: With the expiration of pandemic bans on evictions, something somewhat unexpected happening in some courtrooms. We'll hear the backstory. Also: The week in Texas politics and the search for the ultimate roller coaster. All that and more today on the Texas Standard:
Rio Grande Valley trans rights advocates say that CPS investigations resulting from a directive from Gov. Greg Abbott to probe the families of trans children for child abuse are discouraging civic participation in the region.