Appeals Court urged to restart NC abortion drug case

North Carolina legislative leaders are asking the 4th US Circuit Court of Appeals to allow new filings in a case involving state restrictions on the abortion drug mifepristone.
The Bryant v. Moore case has been on hold at the appellate court in Richmond since December 2024. The 4th Circuit placed the case “in abeyance” as it dealt with a similar case from West Virginia.
The 4th Circuit decided the West Virginia dispute, GenBioPro Inc. v. Raynes, with a 2-1 decision in July 2025. The court’s majority ruled that federal law did not block West Virginia from enforcing anti-abortion restrictions in its Unborn Child Protection Act.
Plaintiff GenBioPro manufactures mifepristone. Its suit had alleged that West Virginia’s abortion law effectively banned the sale of mifepristone in the state. The suit argued that West Virginia’s ban conflicted with the federal Food and Drug Administration’s approval of mifepristone.
Now lawyers representing North Carolina legislative leaders “request leave for all parties to file supplemental briefs addressing the GenBioPro decision,” according to a court filing Thursday in Bryant v. Moore. The request has “consent of all parties.”
The court filing asks for an April 27 deadline for new filings of up to 15 pages addressing the impact of the GenBioPro decision on the North Carolina case.
The 4th Circuit set Bryant v. Moore to the side with a one-sentence order issued on Dec. 3, 2024.
Chief US District Judge Catherine Eagles issued an injunction in June 2024 rejecting state restrictions that the judge viewed as conflicting with FDA rules. Eagles allowed other state restrictions on mifepristone to remain in place.
Current Gov. Josh Stein filed a brief in the case in October 2024 in his role as North Carolina’s attorney general. He supported arguments made by Dr Amy Bryant, the UNC Health physician serving as the case’s plaintiff. Both Stein and Bryant relied on the 2007 Food and Drug Administration Amendments Act to bolster their case.
“As the Attorney General concedes, ‘States ordinarily have wide latitude to protect the health and safety of their citizens in different ways, including with respect to the regulation of FDA-approved drugs,’” lawyers for legislative leaders wrote in a brief filed in November 2024. “Given that ‘Congress did not intend FDA oversight to be the exclusive means of ensuring drug safety and effectiveness,’ Plaintiff must persuade this Court that the FDAAA radically altered the federal-state balance long struck by Congress. It did not. Indeed, the case for preemption is particularly weak here because Congress is well aware of state drug regulation in this historical area of state concern and yet declined to expressly preempt state law.”
Lawmakers rebutted arguments based on the legal concept of “obstacle preemption.” Bryant and Stein argued that North Carolina’s law interferes with federal law.
“Plaintiff distances herself from the decision below and says that obstacle preemption applies only to state requirements that the FDA has adopted and then rejected. That is nonsensical,” lawmakers’ lawyers wrote. “That the FDA once found a safety requirement necessary for the safe use of a drug is a point in favor of a state imposing the protection — not against it.”
“More fundamentally, obstacle preemption is based upon congressional purpose,” the brief continued. “Plaintiff never argues that Congress intended to regulate the minutiae of medical practice by eliminating follow-up visits or state reporting requirements. Instead, Plaintiff’s obstacle-preemption theory boils down to her claim that the FDAAA mandates access. To prevail, Plaintiff must establish that Congress intended the FDA to set a federal ceiling for high-risk drugs. But she cannot.”
“Even were this Court to apply Plaintiff’s novel initially-adopted-and-later-rejected test, the challenged provisions would pass,” lawmakers’ lawyers argued. “Several were never adopted by the FDA. Others were never rejected. Plaintiffs and the Attorney General thus invite this Court to displace state law based on ‘similar’ restrictions, ‘effective withdrawals,’ and vague ‘notions’ of agency intent. And while the Attorney General insists that States retain the power to protect their citizens from high-risk drugs like opioids, the FDA has rejected opioid dosage and duration limitations — protections enacted by many States. No FDAAA provision carves out abortion drugs for preemption.”
The FDA dealt with mifepristone through Risk Evaluation and Mitigation Strategies.
“Plaintiff objects to longstanding protections for women seeking abortions like modest waiting periods and informed consent,” lawmakers’ brief argued. “But such protections existed long before Congress enacted the FDAAA in 2007. And in the nearly twenty years since its passage, no one (until very recently) has suggested that REMS displace state laws that survived under Roe and Casey. This Court would be the first to so hold.”
“In short, North Carolina’s statutes regulating abortion drugs complement and reinforce Congress’s purpose: to protect consumers from dangerous drugs like mifepristone and opioids. While States may not reduce or eliminate REMS restrictions, they may supplement them,” lawmakers argued.
Stein’s October 2024 brief noted that the FDA had regulated mifepristone for “more than two decades” under provisions of federal law.
“North Carolina law nonetheless imposes some of the very same restrictions on mifepristone that the FDA has implemented and then subsequently withdrawn,” according to Stein’s brief. “Under settled preemption principles that the Supreme Court has applied for decades, the Supremacy Clause does not permit States to frustrate the considered judgment of a federal agency in that manner.”
“To be sure, States ordinarily have wide latitude to protect the health and safety of their citizens in different ways, and state laws generally ‘offer[ ] an additional, and important, layer of consumer protection that complements FDA regulation.’ But when state law imposes the same restrictions that a federal agency tasked with ‘achiev[ing] a somewhat delicate balance of statutory objectives’ has deliberately rescinded, state law must yield,” Stein argued.
“The district court appropriately applied these preemption principles to enjoin some of the challenged North Carolina laws — but the court should have enjoined them all,” according to Stein’s brief. “Each one countermands the FDA’s expert judgment on how to balance regulatory burdens against patient access to a safe and effective drug that has been in use for decades. For that reason, each of the challenged laws frustrates Congress’s purposes and objectives and is, accordingly, preempted.”
Bryant filed a separate brief on the same day. It offered similar arguments to those in Stein’s court filing.
“Although medication abortion is legal in North Carolina, the state has erected a series of barriers to patients’ ability to access mifepristone that FDA expressly considered and rejected,” Bryant’s lawyers wrote. “For example, it has dictated that only physicians may prescribe mifepristone, even though FDA concluded that mifepristone ‘is safe and effective when prescribed by … physician assistants and nurse practitioners.’ North Carolina has also frustrated FDA’s judgment that telemedicine is appropriate by requiring patients to have at least three in-person visits with a doctor in order to receive the drug: an in-person examination and consultation, a second in-person visit where the patient must take the drug in the doctor’s presence, and a third in-person follow-up visit.”
“North Carolina’s restrictions on mifepristone are preempted because they ‘upset the careful regulatory scheme established by federal law,’” Bryant’s lawyers added.
State legislative leaders defended North Carolina’s restrictions on mifepristone as they filed an opening brief in August 2024 at the 4th Circuit.
“North Carolina possesses the sovereign authority to protect the health and welfare of its citizens. Yet the district court issued a sweeping decision declaring that state ‘safety-related restrictions’ on high-risk abortion drugs are impliedly preempted because they pose an obstacle to a ‘comprehensive regulatory system’ set by the federal government,” wrote lawyers representing state lawmakers. The Washington, DC-based Alliance Defending Freedom makes up part of legislative leaders’ legal team.
The NC Values Institute, American Center for Law and Justice, Family Research Council, Concerned Women for America, Heartbeat International, and Advancing American Freedom filed briefs in August supporting state mifepristone restrictions.
Eagles issued a judgment and permanent injunction in June 2024, confirming a ruling she initially announced in April.
The final three-page document blocked sections of state law “to the extent they prohibit any healthcare provider other than a licensed physician from providing mifepristone,” “to the extent they require mifepristone to be provided in person,” “to the extent they require scheduling an in-person follow-up visit after providing mifepristone or efforts to ensure such a follow-up appointment,” and “to the extent they require the reporting of non-fatal adverse events related to mifepristone to the FDA.”
Eagles dismissed “with prejudice” other elements of the challenge against state restrictions. That ruling means the plaintiff cannot challenge surviving elements of North Carolina’s mifepristone restrictions again.
The ruling followed a 49-page order Eagles issued in April 2024. She determined that state lawmakers could not overrule the FDA’s previous decisions about mifepristone. Eagles’ order upheld portions of the law that the FDA had not addressed.
Bryant’s lawsuit alleged that state rules conflicted with FDA’s REMS for mifepristone.
“This case thus raises the question of whether and when a state can impose additional requirements on the distribution of an FDA-approved drug,” Eagles wrote. “While this case concerns the distribution of a drug used to terminate a pregnancy, a similar case could arise over any drug, from FDA-approved thyroid or diabetes medications, drugs for cancer treatment, vaccinations, contraceptives, or opioids for pain management.”
“The Court finds and concludes that to the extent North Carolina law imposes safety restrictions on the distribution of the drug that the FDA has implemented and then later affirmatively rejected and removed, those laws frustrate the congressional goal of establishing a comprehensive regulatory framework under which the FDA determines conditions for safe drug distribution that do not create unnecessary burdens on the health care system or patient access,” Eagles continued.
“The provisions of the North Carolina law that prohibit health care providers other than physicians from prescribing the drug, require in-person prescribing, dispensing, and administering, mandate the scheduling of an in-person follow-up appointment, and require non-fatal adverse event reporting to the FDA stand as obstacles to Congress’ purpose and are preempted,” the judge wrote.
“But to the extent North Carolina law imposes requirements that have not been expressly considered and rejected by the FDA or that focus more on the practice of medicine and a patient’s informed consent, these provisions do not interfere with Congress’ purpose and are not preempted,” Eagles explained. “This includes the state’s requirements for an in-person advance consultation, use of an ultrasound, an in-person examination, blood type testing, and adverse event reporting to state health authorities.”
Lawyers representing state Senate Leader Phil Berger, R-Rockingham, and House Speaker Tim Moore, R-Cleveland, intervened in the federal suit to defend North Carolina’s law. Berger and Moore were not initially named as defendants. Along with Stein, the list of defendants featured the state Health and Human Services secretary, Orange-Chatham district attorney, and members of the state Medical Board.
Eagles also presided over a separate lawsuit challenging North Carolina’s 2023 abortion law. She upheld most of that law’s provisions, including its ban on most abortions after 12 weeks of pregnancy. Eagles struck down a requirement for abortion providers to document the location of an intrauterine pregnancy before administering abortion drugs.
“Appeals Court urged to restart NC abortion drug case” was originally published on www.carolinajournal.com.