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A pro-life father whose home was dramatically raided by the FBI in 2022 has reached a major legal victory, securing a settlement of more than $1 million from the Department of Justice after a years-long battle.

Mark Houck, a Catholic pro-life activist and father, filed a lawsuit in 2023 after what he described as a traumatic and unjust arrest. According to the original report, a SWAT team of roughly 25 agents showed up at his home on September 23, 2022, “allegedly with guns drawn,” arresting him in front of his wife and children.

Houck’s case quickly gained national attention, with critics arguing the federal government had overstepped—particularly in its handling of pro-life activists.

The incident stemmed from a 2021 encounter outside a Planned Parenthood clinic in Philadelphia, where Houck had been praying. During that time, a volunteer allegedly confronted and harassed his son. Houck was later accused of pushing the volunteer and was charged under the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances (FACE) Act.

That law makes it a federal crime to use force or obstruction to interfere with someone seeking or providing reproductive health services. If convicted, Houck could have faced up to 11 years in prison.

But the case didn’t end the way prosecutors hoped. Houck was ultimately acquitted by a Philadelphia jury, clearing him of all charges.

Following that acquittal, Houck turned his attention to the Justice Department, accusing officials of conducting “a faulty investigation” and using “excessive force” during the arrest.

After three years of legal back-and-forth, a resolution has finally been reached. Shawn Carney, president of the pro-life organization 40 Days for Life, announced on April 9 that Houck had secured a settlement exceeding $1 million.

Houck’s attorney, Steve Crampton of the Thomas More Society, called the outcome long overdue.

“We are very pleased with a Department of Justice that seems to be genuinely interested in doing justice,” Crampton said. “That’s rare enough these days, and we look forward to Mark not being the only wrongfully accused defendant to receive some kind of remuneration and recognition for the wrongs that were done to him.”

Crampton also praised the current administration’s role in resolving the case, saying officials should be commended for “attempting to at least acknowledge, if not completely right, the wrongs that were done.”

The settlement comes at the same time as a newly released DOJ report that raises serious concerns about how pro-life activists were treated in recent years. According to the report, which reviewed more than 700,000 internal records, officials under the previous administration may have “selectively prosecuted pro-life activists under the FACE Act.”

The findings allege that prosecutors coordinated with abortion-rights organizations, pursued harsher penalties for pro-life defendants, and in some cases even withheld evidence.

“The Biden DOJ prosecutors knowingly withheld evidence that defense counsel requested to prepare an affirmative defense,” the report stated.

Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche responded strongly to those findings, emphasizing a shift in direction.

“This Department will not tolerate a two-tiered system of justice,” Blanche said. “No Department should conduct selective prosecution based on beliefs. The weaponization that happened under the Biden Administration will not happen again, as we restore integrity to our prosecutorial system.”

For Houck and his family, the settlement marks the end of a painful chapter—and, for many watching, raises larger questions about justice, government power, and the protection of religious and pro-life expression in America.

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