Los Angeles Times

As Roe v. Wade falls, New Mexico braces for a steep rise of abortion seekers

Lisa Hofler discusses the procedure for having a medication abortion with Autumn Brown as Brown’ s 3- year-old daughter plays on the floor Tuesday, June 21, 2022 at the Center for Reproductive Health in Albuquerque, N.M. Brown has five children, ages 2 to 14..

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — The parking lot to the abortion clinic in this desert city was crowded recently with cars from out of state: four from Texas. Two from Oklahoma and others from Arizona, Louisiana and Iowa. Pillows and blankets were scattered across backseats to ease the journey home, which for most would come by day's end.

In one car, a young man in a Nirvana T-shirt rubbed his palms together and stared off into the sky. In another, a pregnant woman handed an infant to her partner and climbed out into the dry 103-degree heat. She walked past four security cameras, around a wrought-iron fence and through a double-deadbolt door.

They had driven here — others arrive by plane and Greyhound bus — like many before them. New Mexico, one of six states that allows late-term abortions, has for years been overwhelmed by travelers coming from large swaths of the country where the procedure is forbidden. But on a Mississippi law to ban most abortions after 15 has New Mexico's abortion providers bracing for a new influx of patients from conservative states.

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