While this week's indictment involving a grisly abortion mill in Philadelphia 
has shocked 
many [1], the grand jury's nearly 300-page report also contains 
a surprising and little-noted revelation: In the mid-1990s, the administration 
of Pennsylvania governor Tom Ridge, a pro-choice Republican, ended regular 
inspections of abortion clinics--a policy that continued until just last 
year.
According to the grand 
jury report [2][PDF] released this week by Philadelphia 
prosecutors, Pennsylvania health officials deliberately chose not to enforce 
laws to ensure that abortion clinics provide the same level of care as other 
medical service providers.
The District Attorney's office this week charged an abortion doctor, Kermit 
Gosnell, with murder and infanticide. Nine other workers at the abortion clinic, 
the Women's Medical Society, also face charges. According to the prosecutors, 
Gosnell and his associates not only broke state law by performing abortions 
after 24 weeks--they also killed live babies by stabbing them with scissors and 
cutting their spinal cords. Law enforcement officials found blood-stained 
furniture, unsterilized instruments and fetal remains scattered about the 
clinic. At least one woman, a refugee from Nepal, had died under Gosnell's care 
after being given repeated injections of a dangerous sedative. Prosecutors said 
Gosnell made millions from treating and sometimes maiming his patients, who were 
mostly low-income, 
minority women [3].
But perhaps most frightening of all? The atrocities were discovered 
by accident [4], as the Philadelphia Inquirer points out. 
Warnings--from patients and their attorneys, a doctor at a Philadelphia 
hospital, women's health groups, pro-choice groups, and even an employee of the 
Philadelphia Department of Public Health--failed to prompt state and local 
authorities to investigate or take action against the clinic.
The grand jury report said that one look at the place would have detected the 
problems, but the Pennsylvania Department of Health hadn't inspected the place 
since 1993. Here's the grand jury report, in surprisingly strong language:
The Pennsylvania Department of Health abruptly decided, for political 
reasons, to stop inspecting abortion clinics at all. The politics in question 
were not anti-abortion, but pro. With the change of administration from Governor 
Casey to Governor Ridge, officials concluded that inspections would be "putting 
a barrier up to women" seeking abortions.
Reported by Huffington Post
No comments:
Post a Comment