If a woman takes a morning-after pill, should she be indicted?
If that is illegal to do, yes.
A person who tried to indict a woman for using the morning-after pill would be laughed out of court. For someone asking that question shows complete ignorance of today's medical science.
The morning-after pill, also called emergency contraception, is a method for preventing the sperm from meeting with the ovum (egg). It works for five days after unprotected sex. Another method of emergency contraception is the use of an IUD, which prevents the implantation of the fertilized ovum into the lining of the uterus. The use of the IUD, by the way, is common method of birth control.
Another way to prevent the sperm from meeting the ovum is a spermicide which kills the sperm.
Another way is the use of a birth control pill with prevents the ovum from being released from the ovaries. If there is no ovum to meet with the sperm, there is no pregnancy.
One very will known method for preventing the sperm from meeting the ovum is the condom. Condoms have an additional advantage of preventing sexually transmitted diseases such as chlamydia, gonorrhea, trichomoniasis, HIV and syphilis. The condom not only separates the sperm from the ovum but it also separates the human from the disease. Of course, an ignorant Person would say that the use of a condom was the same as having an abortion.