When a man claiming to be from Texas walked into an Albuquerque abortion clinic and inquired about how his 14-year-old niece could schedule an abortion, the representative nonchalantly discussed options.

The undercover video, filmed at Valley Abortion Group, or VAG Clinic, on Nov. 26, 2025, and obtained by NM Sentinel, highlights how clinics in New Mexico, a state with no limits on abortion, are helping Texas circumvent state law.

Further, the Land of Enchantment allows minors to consent to an abortion. As a result, anyone, no matter how young, can cross state lines for an abortion — and girls under 18 do not have to even inform their parents about the procedure.

“My niece — she’s in Texas. She’s going through a really hard time right now,” the man in the video asks the clinic worker. “She’s pregnant; she doesn’t, she doesn’t feel comfortable with it. She wants to terminate. She can’t do it in Texas. And so how does it work? Can she come here?”

“Yeah, she can come here; in New Mexico, there’s no parental controls,” a worker at the clinic, which identifies itself as “the first Queer and BIPOC-led abortion clinic in the country,” responds.

“We don’t need to notify her parents,” the worker told the man later. “It’s all her private information.”

Texas has a near-total ban on abortion following the passage of the Human Life Protection Act of 2021. The law, which took effect in August 2022, includes exceptions, including “if the life or health of the patient is at risk,” but does not have an exception for cases of rape or incest.

New Mexico has no restrictions, and neighboring Texas does not have any state law criminalizing the crossing of state lines for an abortion. However, at least one proposal, Texas’s Senate Bill 2352, introduced in 2025, would have made it a second-degree felony to cross state lines for an abortion.

“We go up to 34 weeks clinic at this clinic, so technically, there’s like almost no deadline,” the staff member tells the man later in the video.

The Texas prohibition, made possible by the U.S. Supreme Court’s 2021 ruling in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization, has been a boon for clinics in New Mexico.

“Have you seen a lot of people from Texas coming? It’s been really hard,” the man says to the clinic staff.

“90% of our patients are from Texas. It’s like, rare to see even New Mexicans here,” the staff member responds. “So it’s a majority, because it’s like a whole country over there.

“We see patients from all over the US here,” the clinic rep adds.

The clinic told the man it had resources it could refer him to for counseling, and the staff member indicated that some services are specifically catering to Texas residents.

“A lot of them are free,” the staff member told the man. “A lot of them sound too good to be true because they have a lot of really awesome things that they’re doing to help patients in Texas.”

Additionally, when asked about funding the procedure, the clinic noted that an outside group could even cover its cost.

“I think once you call to make the appointment with the person that you spoke to yesterday, let them know that you need help with funding for either travel, or hotel or anything that you need, and we’ll help arrange it,” the staff member said. “We don’t promise 100% that they will cover it, but most of the time they do.”

“And there are, like, a few funds in Texas specifically that we can send you a link to have her apply for them,” a second staff member said. “And nine out of 10 they do approve.”

The video follows a separate undercover video filmed in November 2025 at Health Leadership High School and published by Townhall Media. That video shows how left-wing gender theory has become standard practice in New Mexico’s schools and is perpetuated by federal tax dollars.