Local Lawyers Think 'Gross Negligence' Explains an Unlawful Murder Charge Based on a 'Self-Induced Abortion'
Starr County District Attorney Gocha Allen Ramirez has yet to explain how this egregious error escaped his notice.

Ignorance and incompetence, as opposed to pro-life convictions, seem to be the most likely explanations for why Starr County, Texas, prosecutors pursued a legally invalid murder charge against a woman for "a self-induced abortion." A local lawyer interviewed by The Washington Post said the consensus in the legal community is that the decision was the result of "gross negligence."
Ross Barrera, a former chairman of the Starr County Republican Party, described District Attorney Gocha Allen Ramirez as "a hardcore Democrat" who simply misunderstood the law. "I think his office just failed in doing their work," Barrera said. "I would put my hand on the Bible and say this was not a political statement."
Willfully ignoring the law to indict, arrest, and jail a young woman who clearly had committed no crime would be an outrageous abuse of power. But not knowing the law and not bothering to look it up before putting her through that ordeal amount to an egregious failure that should disqualify Ramirez from continuing to serve in an office that gives him broad authority to bring charges that can send people to prison—in this case, potentially for life.
Lizelle Herrera, the 26-year-old victim of Ramirez's astonishing carelessness, was treated at a hospital during a miscarriage in January. Rockie Gonzalez, founder of the abortion rights group La Frontera Fund, said Herrera "allegedly confided to hospital staff that she had attempted to induce her own abortion, and she was reported to the authorities by hospital administration or staff."
Even though it should have been clear from the outset that the allegation against Herrera was not a crime under Texas law, the Starr County Sheriff's Office referred the matter to Ramirez's office, which obtained a March 30 indictment that said Herrera "intentionally and knowingly cause[d] the death of an individual" on or about January 7 "by a self-induced abortion." Herrera was arrested last Thursday and spent two nights in jail before she was released after posting a $500,000 bond.
All of this was completely unlawful, as Ramirez conceded in a press release on Sunday. After "reviewing applicable Texas law," he decided to "immediately dismiss the indictment against Ms. Herrera," because "it is clear that Ms. Herrera cannot and should not be prosecuted for the allegation against her." The Texas Penal Code explicitly says a murder charge "does not apply to the death of an unborn child if the conduct charged is…conduct committed by the mother of the unborn child."
It remains unclear who in Ramirez's office sought the indictment against Herrera. The Post says "court officials referred questions about which prosecutor presented Herrera's case to the grand jury to Ramirez," who "could not be reached Wednesday morning." I emailed Ramirez and left a message for him, and I will update this post if I hear back from him.
The Post notes that one of the five prosecutors in Ramirez's office, Judith Solis, is the same lawyer who filed a divorce petition for Herrera's estranged husband on April 7, the day Herrera was arrested. "Melisandra Mendoza, a lawyer who used to work in the district attorney's office, said if Solis does not make Herrera's arrest an issue in the divorce, there may not be a conflict of interests," the Post says. But while local prosecutors are allowed to handle private civil cases, "she said she would not have taken the divorce case."
Herrera and her husband, who were married in 2015 and have two children, separated less than a week before her hospital visit, which suggests her decision regarding her pregnancy may have had something to do with it. "Listen, right now, I have no words," he told a local TV reporter. "It was a son. A boy."
Whether it was Solis or a different prosecutor who sought the indictment, that person clearly failed to meet the most basic requirement of such a decision: verifying that a suspect's alleged conduct satisfies the elements of the contemplated charge. Ramirez likewise displayed either a shocking indifference to the law (assuming that he approved the decision in advance) or lax supervision (assuming that he heard about the seemingly groundbreaking charge only afterward). The fact that it took a week and a half for Ramirez to discover his office's "gross negligence," and then only in response to the storm of criticism that Herrera's arrest provoked, does not reflect well on his attentiveness or his legal acumen.
In an interview with Nexstar Media Group, Southern Methodist University law professor Joanna Grossman "hypothesized" that the decision to charge Herrera with murder "could have been an error" based on "a misunderstanding" of S.B. 8, a.k.a. the Texas Heartbeat Act, which authorizes "any person" (except for government officials) to sue "any person" who performs or facilitates an abortion after fetal cardiac activity can be detected (typically around six weeks into a pregnancy). If Grossman is right, Ramirez (or an unsupervised underling) was remarkably ignorant.
S.B. 8, which took effect last September, explicitly says it does not authorize lawsuits against women who obtain prohibited abortions. Furthermore, the law does not authorize criminal prosecution of anyone, and it certainly does not amend the state's definition of criminal homicide. Both of those points were emphasized again and again in seven months of debate and litigation over S.B. 8. Nexstar reports that Ramirez's office "said it would not be providing any more commentary about the situation"—presumably to avoid further embarrassment.
As the Post notes, "even staunch antiabortion activists" condemned Herrera's arrest. "The Texas Heartbeat Act and other pro-life policies in the state clearly prohibit criminal charges for pregnant women," said John Seago, Texas Right to Life's legislative director. "Texas Right to Life opposes public prosecutors going outside of the bounds of Texas' prudent and carefully crafted policies."
The Post reports that Ramirez called Herrera's lawyer on Saturday, two days after her arrest and 10 days after the indictment, to admit that the murder charge had been a grave error. "I'm so sorry," Ramirez wrote in a text message to "an acquaintance" the next day. "I assure you I never meant to hurt this young lady."
That apology is open to interpretation: Did Ramirez mean that he did not approve the baseless murder charge or that he did not realize it would "hurt this young lady"? The latter possibility seems utterly implausible, but so does the series of unconscionable actions or inactions that put Herrera in jail: by the hospital, by the sheriff's office, by the prosecutor who presented the charge, by the grand jurors, and, most of all, by Ramirez himself.
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Wow. This abortion stuff is driving you guys crazy.
You don't call for the permanent disbarment of prosecutors for other negligence or malpractice.
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No, typically we just recommend a good woodchipping. Are you new here or something? Reason ha always taken a harsh stance against malfeasance by prosecutors, judges, and others in the legal system.
Look, this comment section is dominated by the Farmers for Trump. They're not worried about abortion, hey, they want to keep that woman in line anyways and they could always use help on the farm.
Welcome to liberty as envisioned by Farmers for Trump!
Trite.
As of the time-stamp on your post, there was one comment from User Agammamon questioning the neutrality of article coverage and one reply from a spam-bot. I have trouble calling that a comment section "dominated" by anything. Perhaps there's some projection on your part?
I get it sullum. I too think your mom should have had an abortion
Seconded.
""The Texas Heartbeat Act and other pro-life policies in the state clearly prohibit criminal charges for pregnant women," said John Seago, Texas Right to Life's legislative director'
He forgot to say "for now". Or is that not supposed to be admitted until after Roe is overturned?
The gross negligence is wilfully failing to recognize that taking the life of another helpless innocent person, abortion, is murder.
So are Nazi death camps. But like Democrats don't view babies as human, Herr Misek holds similar opinions on Jews.
Follow your leader.
People die in prison camps everywhere fuckwit.
There is zero physical evidence of a holocaust and mountains of irrefutable evidence against it.
Why do you need to conflate recognizing that there was no holocaust with the desire to kill Jews?
Because ONLY the real criminalization of sharing the evidence that refutes the holocaust in every nation where it allegedly occurred prolongs the coercion caused by that lie.
No evidence. Yup. But you've got your lost ubermention.
Just for the sake of a list...
en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Holocaust_memorials_and_museums
Holocaust memorials are filled with, an old shoe, a staged photograph, a can of insecticide paid and coerced testimony but zero irrefutable evidence of a holocaust.
All credible evidence, arias photos, Red Cross reports, decrypted secret communication, existing physical structures and real science demonstrate not only zero evidence of a holocaust but soundly refute the bullshit story.
Arial photos.
If it wasn’t a real crime to do so, a thorough forensic analysis of all evidence, from museums, at alleged sites and of testimony would demonstrate what researchers have pieced together in a hostile environment.
The 167 th Jewish claim of a holocaust of 6 million Jews during WW2 is as much of a hoax as their previous 166 claims between 1900 and 1945 are.
"Herrera and her husband, who were married in 2015 and have two children, separated less than a week before her hospital visit, which suggests her decision regarding her pregnancy may have had something to do with it."
Why is everything about this case so light on facts? Are we talking about a woman taking abortion pills and then going to the hospital, or are we talking about a psychotic woman who was 7 months and tried to kill her husband's baby because he left her? Those are two different things, and while one is possibly not illegal, it certainly changes the story and may shed some light on why she was arrested.
And why is no one at Reason asking these questions?
Because asking those questions brings nuance onto a subject where they do not want any.
'Free and easy access to abortion up through birth' is the goal.
I hope there is a hell so Jared Polis can sizzle like a pig on a spit for the lost lifespans of all children murdered under that monstrosity.
For better or for worse, abortion prior to live birth isn't murder, legally. And if you don't break the law, you shouldn't be arrested.
I agree that, for accuracy's sake, where she was in her pregnancy would be a good detail to include.
However, since a murder charge for an abortion isn't justified for any fetus, it doesn't change the point of the story. She shouldn't have ever been charged with murder and that she was is an indictment of the sheriff's office that arrested her and the district attorney's office that filed charges against her.
And before the cultural conservatives lose their shit, no one is talking about what the law *should* be. It's about what the law is today.
Don't let facts get in the way ...
Nota bene: Sullum left out that the indictment identifies the deceased individual with initials as "J.A.H." and that the last initial matches the first letter in Herrera.
Initials are rountinely used in child protection cases. See, e.g, IN THE INTEREST OF B.M.S. and J.R.S., Children, No. 04-21-00265-CV (Tex.App.- San Antonio, April 13, 2022, no pet. h.)("To protect the identity of the minor children, we refer to the parties by fictitious names, initials, or aliases. See TEX.FAM. CODE ANN. § 109.002(d); TEX. R. APP. P. 9.8(b)(2)."
https://search.txcourts.gov/Case.aspx?cn=04-21-00265-CV&coa=coa04
Since an image of the indictment has been posted by reason, it is highly likely that the omission of the initials is deliberate. If not that, it's certainly grossly negligent for the author to leave out the documentary fact that the deceased subject of the homicide indictment had a name, instead of being referred to as "unborn child" or fetus.
The omission is all the more noteworthy in light of the fact that Mr. Sullum also endeavors to report/regurgitate information that is unofficial and hearsay (what the DA allegedly communicated privately).
Also a new addition to the the story: that the woman was married at the relevant time (and likely still is, given the timeframe for Texas divorce litigation), which would make the husband the presumed father by operation of law, i.e., the Family Code.
Sec. 160.204. PRESUMPTION OF PATERNITY. (a) A man is presumed to be the father of a child if: (1) he is married to the mother of the child and the child is born during the marriage; (2) he is married to the mother of the child and the child is born before the 301st day after the date the marriage is terminated by death, annulment, declaration of invalidity, or divorce; [other presumptions omitted]
More here:
https://statutes.capitol.texas.gov/Docs/FA/htm/FA.160.htm#160.204
So, at the minimum, we know that the deceased that is the subject of the homicide indictment had a name. Why is that?
What don't we know?
There have been exactly zero assertions that the fetus wasn't, in fact, a fetus. Rampant speculation based solely on the fact that someone, somewhere may have already chosen a name for the fetus doesn't move the needle, nor does it change the law.
If the fetus was never born alive, a murder charge is legally indefensible. An abortion (self-induced or otherwise) isn't murder. Not morally, not logically, and definitely not legally.
OUTRAGE VS. OBJECTIVE INQUIRY
Re: No one should be prosecuted for an abortion, and what the current law is in Texas vs. what it should be
Well, under Texas law, if the boyfriend helps with the abortion, he is subject to prosecution for murder or even capital murder. The fetus mother is expressly exempted by the Texas homicide statute, Chapter 19 of the Penal Code (Criminal Homicide)
Penal Code Sec. 19.06. APPLICABILITY TO CERTAIN CONDUCT. This chapter does not apply to the death of an unborn child if the conduct charged is:
(1) conduct committed by the mother of the unborn child; [...]
There may be good reasons to change the law, at least to lessen the penalties for such offenses by others, but that's a different question from what the current law is. It invokes the question of what the law ought to be, and that is a public policy choice, ergo a matter to be resolved through the political process. Then there is the issue of equality under the law: fetus mother exempted from prosecution, fetus father not. That would be a constitutional question for the courts.
Regarding criminal liability for DIY abortion, see
Flores v. State, 245 S.W.3d 432 (Tex. Crim.App. 2008).
"Appellant was convicted of murdering his pregnant girlfriend's twin fetuses by stepping on her abdomen, though he maintains that she also took measures to cause the deaths. Appellant raises three constitutional challenges to the capital murder statute. We hold that the statute is constitutional. In addition, appellant contends that the court of appeals erred in ruling that he was not entitled to a jury instruction on the lesser-included offense of deadly conduct. We disagree. Thus, we shall affirm the court of appeals."
https://scholar.google.com/scholar?scidkt=1872185080165793642&as_sdt=2&hl=en
In this case, the constitutional challenge based on disparate treatment of fetus mother and fetus father under state law was overruled.
Does Sullum have a quota he has to fill?