Florida Judge Orders Black Woman to Undergo Forced C-Section During Labor


A shocking legal case in Jacksonville, Florida, has sparked a national debate over "fetal personhood" and a patient's right to refuse medical care.
On Monday, March 23, 2026, ProPublica released a report and video showing Cherise Doyley, a mother and doula, being forced into a major surgery against her will. While Doyley was in active labor, hospital staff brought a tablet to her bedside for an emergency virtual hearing.
Without her own lawyer present, Doyley had to face a judge and hospital attorneys who ultimately stripped her of the right to choose how to give birth.
The legal ruling currently stands as a primary example of "fetal rights" overriding a mother's bodily autonomy.
Its primary mandate involves the court's power to order a Cesarean section (C-section) if they believe it is in the "best interest" of the unborn child.
Doyley had previously had three C-sections and wanted a vaginal birth to avoid the risk of heavy bleeding she had experienced before.
“This is the craziest thing I’ve ever seen,” Doyley said as Judge Michael Kalil appeared on her hospital tablet screen while she was covered only by a bedsheet.
The forced surgery will also absorb and expand upon the statistics regarding racial bias in maternal healthcare.
A critical component of the "spicy" and troubling details is that Black women are 25 percent more likely than white women to be pushed into unnecessary C-sections. Doyley, a Black woman, told the group of mostly white officials that she felt her body was being taken over by the state.
One legal expert cited the "fetal personhood" movement as the primary reason judges are now ordering forced bed rest and surgery in pregnancy cases.
One of the most immediate challenges for patients in Florida is that while most adults can refuse any medical treatment, pregnancy has become an exception to the law.
Observers cited the risk of uterine rupture claimed by the hospital as the primary reason the judge ruled in favor of the surgery.
“When we use the courts to... bully someone into an unnecessary medical procedure... it’s akin to torture,” Doyley told reporters. She argued that the hospital and the court treated her like a "vessel" rather than a person with the right to make her own health decisions.
The establishment of this legal precedent follows several other cases in Florida where doctors have used the court system to take control of a patient’s delivery room.
While the hospital argued they were saving the life of the baby, the emphasis from civil rights groups remains on the "traumatic" nature of being forced into surgery via a video call.
Director-level advocates at maternal health organizations are calling for new laws to protect pregnant people from "court-ordered" births.
As the video of Doyley’s hearing continues to go viral, the question remains: “Does a person lose their constitutional right to control their own body the moment they go into labor, or will the higher courts step in to stop judges from entering the delivery room through a tablet?” a question that will be central to the legal appeals following this case.