PHOENIX (AP) — A woman accused of faking cancer in 2010 to get the state of Arizona to pay for her midterm abortion wants to bar prosecutors from using her medical records and doctor against her in the case. Prosecutors said she fraudulently obtained the personal information of the founder of Veterans Hope charities and his family in July 2012 than used it to open a credit card account under their names without their consent and charged about $25,000. Schwartz wrote in a court filing that the grand jury subpoena used to get records in the case from the Mayo Clinic was faulty to begin with because the Arizona attorney general's office didn't follow the law and report the issuance of the subpoena to the grand jury foreman.