NEW YORK {WOMENSENEWS}-- On March 26, over a dozen women joined a flash mob at a pharmacy in Union Square here to dramatize their support for unrestricted, over-the-counter access to the morning-after pill. The protesters, associated with the organization National Women's Liberation, discretely entered the store on 7th avenue and East 14th street, one-by-one, at approximately 6:30 p.m. and began yelling chants such as, "Out of the shadows and over the counter, " and "Women will be irrepressible unless the morning-after pill is made accessible." The goal was not to protest the store—one of those in the city 's Duane Reade chain --but to make a video to send to President Barack Obama, the Food and Drug Administration and the Department of Health and Human Services. During the 10-minute episode--as a couple of women with cell phones and flip cameras filmed--each protester placed a mock package of Plan B, a brand name emergency contraception, in the condoms section of the "feminine care" aisle. Plan B costs approximately $44. See the National Women's Liberation video of the action here. The stunt was organized by the National Women's Liberation, a Gainesville, Fla.-based group that began in the 1960s and has been involved in a lawsuit to win non-restricted access to the morning-after pill since 2005. U.S. District Judge Edward Korman, for the Eastern District of New York, the presiding judge in the case, is expected to file a decision by the end of March. Tummino v. Hamburg began in January 2005 when the lawsuit claimed the plaintiffs had evidence that the Bush administration had pressured scientists at the Food and Drug Administration, based in Silver Spring, Md., right outside Washington, D.C., to enact an age limit on the pill for political reasons.