Closing arguments leave questions about clinics elsewhere in America.
By Kirsten Powers
"If I talk, maybe people will make sure it won't happen again."
That's
what 20-year-old Desiree Hawkins told me last week as she recounted the
horror of visiting abortion doctor Kermit Gosnell in December 2009. The
jury in Gosnell's trial
for the alleged murders of multiple babies and one woman heard closing
arguments Monday afternoon, but they won't hear from Hawkins.
Hawkins
was forced to relive the nightmare of Gosnell's house of horrors when
she was contacted by a Drug Enforcement Administration agent this year.
The agent told her that one of the severed feet found in jars at the clinic belonged to her aborted baby. She was set to testify as a rebuttal witness against Gosnell until he chose to not take the stand.
When she was 16, Hawkins sought an abortion at a National Abortion Federation-certified abortion clinic, Hagerstown (Md.) Reproductive Health Services.
The clinic told her she was 19 weeks pregnant and referred her to
Gosnell. When she recently retrieved her file in anticipation of
testifying, she was shocked that her sonogram showed she had in fact
been at 21 weeks, which meant she would have been 23 weeks pregnant by
the time Gosnell performed the abortion. "I was so overwhelmed and
hurt," said Hawkins. "If I had known I was 23 weeks, I would have
(chosen) adoption."
She also would have avoided the trauma visited
upon her by Gosnell. Hawkins described the licensed medical
professional as laughing at her during the procedure as she cried and
begged him to stop because of the pain. "Stop being a baby," he said.
Hawkins experienced betrayal anew when she read the grand jury report replete with testimony of government officials admitting they ignored repeated complaints about Gosnell because they didn't want to limit access to abortion.
'People die'
Said
Hawkins, "What really got me was when the (health department official)
just said, 'People die.' They just decided to look the other way." She
is passionate that "someone needs to make sure all states' departments
of health ... are preventing this from happening."
Abortion rights advocates have asserted that Gosnell was an "extreme outlier" and opposed legislation
to increase regulation of Pennsylvania abortion clinics as they have in
other states. But how could they possibly know that this is an
aberration?
Last week, Ohio officials shut down an abortion clinic after inspectors found
that a medical assistant administered narcotics to five patients, that
narcotics and powerful sedatives weren't properly accounted for, that
pharmacy licenses had expired and that four staff members hadn't been
screened for a communicable disease.
This month, a Delaware TV
station reported that two Planned Parenthood nurses resigned in protest
over conditions at a clinic there. One nurse, Jayne Mitchell-Werbrich, said, "It was just unsafe. I couldn't tell you how ridiculously unsafe it was."
Clinic closure drumbeat
Last month, Maryland officials shut down three abortion clinics, two for failings in their equipment and training to deal with life-threatening complications.
Last
year, an Associated Press investigation found that Illinois hadn't
inspected some abortion clinics for 10 to 15 years. After state health
officials reinvigorated their clinic inspections in the wake of Gosnell,
inspectors closed two clinics, including one fined for "failure to perform CPR on a patient who died after a procedure," according to AP.
Such problems wouldn't be a shock to Pennsylvania state Rep. Margo Davidson, the only member of the Democratic black caucus
to vote for the abortion-regulation bill passed there. She told me, "We
don't know how many (Gosnells) there are. I'm not trying to overturn Roe v. Wade,
but if a woman makes this difficult choice, she should at least be
afforded the highest level of care." She said the choice community knew
what was going on and did nothing.
Indeed, the grand jury
found that the National Abortion Federation inspected Gosnell's clinic,
refused to certify him, but didn't tell anyone. Pennsylvania Planned
Parenthood representative Dayle Steinberg has admitted that its
officials knew the clinic was unsafe after women complained. What did they do? "We would always encourage them to report it to the Department of Health."
Davidson
concluded that for the choice community, "the institution was more
important than the individual lives." Davidson knows firsthand what can
happen when people choose to look the other way: Her 22-year-old cousin died after an abortion at Gosnell's clinic.
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