Abortion Pill NIGHTMARE: Doctor’s Heinous Act Exposed

An Ohio surgeon’s alleged attempt to secretly abort his girlfriend’s baby with crushed abortion pills exposes how far the culture of disposable life has gone—and why real accountability matters.

Story Snapshot

  • A Toledo surgical resident is indicted for allegedly force-feeding abortion pills to his pregnant girlfriend while she slept.
  • Prosecutors say he used his estranged wife’s identity to obtain mifepristone and misoprostol, then physically restrained the girlfriend.
  • The baby reportedly died after the girlfriend fled and sought hospital care, turning a “choice” narrative into a violent crime scene.
  • Ohio’s medical board summarily suspended his license, raising hard questions about institutional delays and protection of women and unborn children.

Alleged Midnight Assault That Ended a Pregnancy

According to investigators, 32‑year‑old surgical resident Dr. Hassan‑James Abbas began a relationship with a woman in 2024 after separating from his wife, only to see that relationship shattered once she told him she was pregnant and refused an abortion. Reports say that after she went to sleep one December night, she briefly awoke around 4 a.m. to find him still up, then later woke again with him allegedly on top of her, holding her down and shoving crushed pills into her mouth and gum line. When she tried to call 911, he allegedly seized her phone, cutting off her access to emergency help.

Shaken and realizing something was terribly wrong, the woman reportedly escaped and went to a hospital, where she learned the medication had ended the pregnancy. For readers who value life and basic human decency, the alleged sequence is chilling: a mother saying she wanted to keep her baby, a trained physician insisting on abortion, then resorting—if the charges are proven—to physical force and secret drugs. This is not “health care”; it is the opposite of consent, autonomy, and the duty to protect vulnerable life.

Six Felony Counts and an Emergency License Suspension

A Lucas County grand jury has now indicted Abbas on six felony charges: abduction, tampering with evidence, unlawful distribution of an abortion-inducing drug, disrupting public services, identity fraud, and deception to obtain a dangerous drug. Prosecutors allege he ordered abortion pills mifepristone and misoprostol using his estranged wife’s identity and a false prescription, abusing the privileged access that comes with a medical license. Ohio law tightly regulates abortion-inducing drugs, and it criminalizes unlawful distribution—especially when consent is removed from the equation.

Even before the indictment, the State Medical Board of Ohio moved faster than the criminal system, issuing a summary suspension on November 5, 2025. That emergency step effectively stated that allowing him to continue practicing medicine posed an “immediate and serious harm to the public.” The University of Toledo Medical Center placed him on administrative leave, emphasizing public statements about high professional standards while distancing the allegations from his official duties. For many families, the real question remains why a man entrusted with life-and-death decisions was not cut off sooner.

Reproductive Coercion and the Culture That Enables It

Public‑health experts now use the term “reproductive coercion” to describe patterns where abusers manipulate pregnancy—either forcing it or forcing abortion—without a woman’s consent. This case fits that pattern precisely: the woman reportedly said she wanted to carry the child, and the man allegedly acted in secret to terminate that life. When abortion is framed purely as a unilateral “choice” detached from responsibility, some men inevitably weaponize that mindset, turning a slogan about freedom into a tool for control and violence.

Conservatives have long warned that treating unborn children as disposable and treating abortion pills like casual pharmaceuticals would erode respect for both mothers and babies. Here, the alleged misuse of FDA‑approved abortion drugs is not a tragic complication of lawful care; it is the use of powerful medication as a weapon against a sleeping woman and her unborn child. Whatever one’s politics, there should be agreement that no medical system, no legal framework, and no university should ever tolerate that kind of abuse from a credentialed doctor.

Institutional Delays, Accountability, and What Comes Next

The victim’s attorney has criticized the Lucas County Prosecutor’s Office, saying the case sat “under review” for nearly a year before the grand jury finally acted, even as the medical board moved decisively to suspend Abbas’s license. That delay raises concerns that, once again, bureaucratic caution outweighed swift protection of women and the public. When institutions hesitate to confront wrongdoing on their own, they send a dangerous signal that professional status can shield even the most vulnerable‑life violations from timely justice.

As the criminal case proceeds and a 2026 medical board hearing looms, conservatives will be watching closely for real accountability—long prison time if the allegations are proven, permanent loss of medical privileges, and honest scrutiny of every institution that knew enough to act sooner. For a movement that believes every life has value and that law should defend the weak, this case is not just about one Ohio doctor. It is a test of whether our justice system still recognizes forced abortion as the grave violence it is.

Sources:

Ohio surgeon accused of forcing abortion pills on sleeping girlfriend