Bio
Alexa Kolbi-Molinas is a deputy director of the Reproductive Freedom Project of the ACLU, where she has worked since 2007. In 2021, Alexa argued before the U.S. Supreme Court in Cameron v. EMW et al., a case concerning an eleventh-hour attempt by Kentucky’s Attorney General to reinstate a prohibition on the standard abortion procedure after 15 weeks. Alexa is also currently lead counsel in Robinson et al. v. Marshall, a challenge to Alabama’s total abortion ban, and Raidoo et al. v. Camacho et al., a lawsuit to restore abortion access to people in Guam. She has also litigated a range of other reproductive rights issues in state and federal court from trial through appeal, from bans on abortions based on gestational age, method, or reason for seeking the abortion to minors’ access to abortion, so-called “fetal personhood” ballot initiatives, restrictions on Medicaid coverage for abortion, and religious refusals to provide health care. In addition, she directs the Project’s efforts to improve access to reproductive health services for people who are incarcerated, to defend pregnant persons accused of fetal harm or self-abortion, and to prevent forced or coerced reproductive health care. Prior to joining RFP, Alexa was an attorney in the ACLU’s National Security Project.
Featured work
Dec 22, 2010
The Obama Administration Must Ensure That Hospitals Provide Emergency Abortion Care
Dec 21, 2010
The Senate Gives Up on Military Women's Access to Health Care
Dec 16, 2010
Don't Let Her Die: Emergency Abortions Must Be Performed At All Hospitals
Sep 27, 2010
"They Treat Us Just Like Guinea Pigs."
Jul 6, 2010
A Pregnant Woman Is Not a Meth Lab
Jun 24, 2010
Clarification On Facts vs. Fiction
Jun 17, 2010
Kentucky Court Blocks Unconstitutional Prosecutions of Pregnant Women
May 28, 2010
In Memory of Dr. George Tiller
May 20, 2010
Religious Liberty and Women's Health
Apr 7, 2010
Incarcerating Pregnant Women Who Are Struggling With Addiction Makes for Bad Law and Even Worse Public Policy