Vernica Cruz Snchez watched something remarkable happen from the office of her womens rights organization in Guanajuato, the capital city of one of this countrys most conservative Catholic states.
Founder of Las Libres the free in English she had built an underground abortion-pill network in a country where having the procedure could have meant going to jail.
In September 2021, the Mexican Supreme Court issued a surprise ruling that abortion was no longer a crime not even in places like Guanajuato, where it continues to be outlawed by the state.
That same month across the border in the U.S., Texas instituted a so-called fetal heartbeat bill that effectively outlawed abortion.
And the Dobbs v. Jackson Womens Health Organization case was before the U.S. Supreme Court, with the potential to reverse Roe v. Wade and end almost 50 years of abortion rights in America.
It was crazy, Cruz Snchez said. For those of us working in abortion, the example to follow was the United States. All the countries in Latin America wanted a Roe we wanted to have the constitutional right.
Suddenly it was Mexico at the vanguard of abortion access, and activists knew they could help the U.S.
We could give them all the support and training, Cruz Snchez said. How do you find the medication? How do you do the logistics so the pills get into the hands that need them? How do you guarantee security for everyone?
She reached out to other groups that distributed abortion medication in Mexico, as well as abortion rights organizations in the United States, and started to build the red transfronteriza the cross-border network.
And she had a specific U.S. population in mind.
We knew there was a large proportion of undocumented Hispanic immigrant women from Central America who cross through Mexico all the time, Cruz Snchez said. And that was one of our motivations for why we wanted to support Texas not only for all women but especially for undocumented immigrant women.
Networks of pills
In a residential neighborhood with a full view of the Cerro de la Silla, Monterreys iconic mountain peak, Vanessa Jimnez runs Necesito Abortar out of her spouses family home.
There, she stuffs manila envelopes to create at-home abortion kits for delivery. Each includes small bags containing a single mifepristone, four misoprostol pills, two ibuprofens and four sanitary napkins.
In the U.S., the Food and Drug Administration has approved a regimen of mifepristone and misoprostol to terminate pregnancies up to 10 weeks and says it is both safe and effective.
Jimnez has an informal network of family and friends who take these kits and vials of pills into the United States during visits over the border.
Once the pills arrive, Jimnez accompanies patients through the abortion process by phone.
Theres nothing illegal about carrying medication over the border; Americans cross into Mexican border towns all the time to buy drugs that would otherwise require a prescription in the U.S.
But giving pills to someone in Texas to end a pregnancy could land you in jail.
Someone could be charged with a crime in Texas for providing those abortion pills to someone else in Texas to self-manage their abortion, said Blake Rocap, legislative counsel for Avow, an abortion advocacy group based in Austin, Texas.
Despite this, volunteers have stepped up to work with the cross-border network as acompaantes, people who not only provide abortion medication but stay through the process by telephone, using guidelines from the World Health Organization.
We had to explain things. What is misoprostol? What does it do? Can you detect it in the body? How does it function? Jimnez said. In the end, I believe, the purpose was not to solve the problem in the United States but rather to share the experience that we have so that there, in their own context, they can form the networks that exist here.
News21 interviewed a Mexican woman who volunteers as an acompaante, carrying pills into the U.S. She gets her supply from Las Libres, and pregnant people in the U.S. reach her via social media.
I do it out of passion, she said, with the conviction that Im not doing anything wrong. The laws are what need to change.
One recent weekend, she drove to El Paso, Texas, to drop medication with her U.S. distributor.
The distributor gets two to three requests a month for pills in states like Texas, Kansas and Arizona. She mails the pills using the U.S. Postal Service, because private carriers require personal information.
I am not the only one, said the distributor, who along with the acompaante requested anonymity out of fear of legal repercussions in Texas.
Since its birth last year, the cross-border network has earned significant news coverage in U.S. media outlets, and with it, more clients. Post-Roe, Las Libres has seen requests for abortion pills from the U.S. explode from 10 a day to 300 in some instances, Cruz Snchez said.
But the network has fallen short in one area.
Everyone thought that since we were a Spanish-speaking organization in Mexico, most of the people in the United States who were going to look for us would be Spanish-speaking, undocumented immigrants, Cruz Snchez said, adding: The majority only speak English.
Cut off from care
People living in the country illegally have always been cut off from health care services because of poverty, language barriers and fear. They are ineligible for federal health care programs and are often hesitant to sign up for state benefits or seek health care because of concerns over deportation.
Cathy Torres, with the Frontera Fund abortion fund, works in Texas Rio Grande Valley, where at least 10 percent of 1.4 million people are in the country illegally. She paid for people to travel out of state to get abortions after Texas fetal heartbeat law took effect. But with the reversal of Roe v. Wade, she had to stop funding travel. She fears civil or criminal liability.
She said immigrants living in the Valley illegally are landlocked. Even if they travel for services, they must pass through Customs and Border Protection checkpoints.
So theyre having to grapple with, God, I either really, really risk it or I just stay pregnant, Torres said.
The obvious option for people who cant travel is self-managed abortion at home.
As of 2020, medication was used in more than half of abortions in the U.S., according to the Guttmacher Institute, an abortion-rights organization. But with restrictive abortion laws, 14 states now outlaw taking medication to end a pregnancy, according to the health policy group KFF.
People are taking their health into their own hands, said Texas Civil Rights Project President Rochelle Garza. Self-managed abortion is something that is rising as a response to the lack of health care.
The cross-border network works in the Rio Grande Valley. Couriers from Jimnezs Necesito Abortar in Monterrey cross into McAllen, one of the main cities.
But ask anyone on the U.S. side about the network, and they go silent.
Its this confusion of what is legal, said Nancy Crdenas Pea, campaign director for Abortion on Our Own Terms, which advocates for self-managed abortion through medication.
In one case, a Rio Grande Valley woman was arrested for murder over an alleged self-induced abortion. After protests by activists, the charges were dropped.
New efforts
Cruz Snchez is thinking of new ways to reach people who might need the services of Las Libres or the cross-border network, like asking Texas-based volunteers to place stickers with Las Libres social media accounts in bathrooms, bars, restaurants, parks and other public spaces.
But the effort is slow-going.
In terms of abortion, Texas has a lot of complexities. The people there are paralyzed right now by the legal situation, Cruz Snchez said.
In the end, it requires going door to door, person to person, like the organization did in Mexico, and getting people in the U.S. to organize and form their own networks.
If Mexico could organize without a single peso, just by organizing the people, obviously the U.S., with more money, can do it, she said. But the big question is: Whos going to do the groundwork?