Abortion Provider: Richard Ragsdale

Richard Ragsdale has a number of outstanding malpractice suits, and also is known for having a foster child removed from his home after he tried to have pornographic photos of her developed.

Here is the story.

National Abortion Federation member Richard Ragsdale and his wife were indicted in 1994 on four counts of child pornography involving their three-year-old foster daughter.

One of the photographs showed the child dressed in black lace thong panties, with her genitalia and buttocks exposed.

The charges against both Ragsdale and his wife were dropped after his wife signed a “statement of fact” admitting that the photographs “were of an inappropriate nature and could constitute a violation of state law.” But she also maintained that she herself did not consider them inappropriate, that she was “an artist” and the photos were a “keepsake” for the child.

Ragsdale was charged with possession of the photographs, which he picked up after they were developed. Ragsdale told reporters that the situation was a “minor family matter … blown totally out of proportion.” He insisted that the prosecution was motivated by opposition to his abortion practice.

Police pointed out that they had merely had the photo lab where Ragsdale had dropped off the film call the number provided with the film, and they then arrested him when he picked the photos up. It had been the technician at the lab who had contacted the police.

The child was placed in another foster home by child protective services upon the Ragsdales’ arrest, and was later adopted by an out-of-state family.

Sources: Chicago Tribune 9-24-94, 11-17-94; Courier-News 11-17-94; New York Times 9-24-94; Chicago Sun-Times 9-24-94, 10-16-94; Rockford Register-Star 9-23-94, 9-24-94, 10-13-94, 11-16-94, 11-18-94, 11-19-94; The Oregonian 11-17-94)

Now on to the malpractice suits:

Kelli W. sued after an abortion performed by Ragsdale at Northern Illinois Women’s Center on March 10, 1989. Kelli had sought an abortion due to complications with previous pregnancies, and had selected Ragsdale because he “had been publicized as a promoter of safety and proper procedure through abortion clinics.” Within 24 hours after the abortion, Kelli suffered severe pain and blood loss. She called Ragsdale, and was assured this was normal and would dissipate. She was later admitted to a hospital where physicians found “a large percentage of the fetus” still in her uterus. Kelli required additional surgery. (Exhibit A, Wilson v. Ragsdale; Rockford Register Star 10-27-89; Winnebago County Circuit Court Case No. 89L580)

Trace O. sued after an abortion performed by Ragsdale at Northern Illinois Women’s Center on February 24, 1983. Trace said that the abortion failed to terminate the pregnancy, and she underwent an additional abortion. She sued for the loss of her right ovary and fallopian tube, continuing pain, and medical expenses. (Winnebago County Circuit Court Case No. 85 L 101)

Cindy W., age 19, alleged that she underwent an abortion by Ragsdale at Northern Illinois Women’s Center on June 17, 1981. There, a counselor noted that Cindy was “new to pelvic exams – extremely immature, will go along with this without much thought as she is very dependent on male.” Cindy’s attorney faulted Ragsdale with failure to diagnose a tubo-ovarian abscess, and said that Ragsdale did not wash Cindy prior to initiating the abortion. Cindy returned to the clinic on June 29, with severe pains in her side beginning a week and a half after the abortion. Ragsdale diagnosed “her left ovary had blood clots,” and prescribed ampicillin and Empirin, After 2 weeks, the medication ran out and the pain returned, but Cindy tolerated the continued pain for 2 more weeks. On July 16, Cindy’s father took her to the ER because she was doubled over in pain. The hospital referred her to her family doctor, who gave Cindy medication. On July 17 the family doctor prescribed medication, and told Cindy to return in 10 days. She returned on July 27 per instructions, with such severe abdominal pain that her doctor admitted her to a hospital, where she was diagnosed with pelvic inflammatory disease (PID) with bilateral tubal ovarian abscesses, diverticulum, and periappendicitis related to the PID. Cindy underwent a laparoscopy, lysis of pelvic adhesions, a right salpingo-oophorectomy, an appendectomy, and a diverticulectomy. She had been admitted on July 27, and remained hospitalized until August 8. Her operative report indicated “right adnexal inflammatory mass completely filled the pelvis, was intimately adherent to the posterior leaf of the right broad ligament and to the peritoneum of the right lateral pelvic wall…. There were several loops of small bowel adherent to the inflammatory mass.” The operative report also noted a smaller adherent mass on the left side. Cindy was subsequently re-hospitalized with recurring pelvic infection. The case was dismissed. (Winnebago County Circuit Court Case No. 82-2-319)

Linda M. alleged that she underwent an abortion by Ragsdale at Northern Illinois Women’s Center on October 9, 1979. The suit charged Ragsdale with failure to properly examine Linda prior to discharging her from the facility. She suffered pain and infection due to Ragsdale’s failure to remove all fetal parts. Linda required a total hysterectomy. (Winnebago County Circuit Court No. 81 L 116)

Rita C. alleged failure to provide adequate care for a tubal ligation done May 13, 1980 by R. M. Ragsdale, and his refusal to provide follow-up. Rita required hospitalization. (DeKalb County Circuit Court Case No. 82-L37)

Kevin Sherlock uncovered another case of malpractice. Naomi N was 23 weeks pregnant when her membranes ruptured. She may have been suffering from a pelvic infection. Ragsdale decided to perform a C-section. After opening her uterus, he changed his mind and did a hysterectomy. The baby died. Naomi accused Ragsdale of performing an unwanted hysterectomy. She also said she suffered hemorrhaging, a hernia, and other complications and required emergency corrective surgery.
(Source: Winnebago County Circuit Court Case No. 87 – L – 224)

Ragsdale, a National Abortion Federation member, successfully filed suit against the state of Illinois, claiming that standards of care laws, passed in the wake of the Chicago Sun-Times investigation of abortion mills, were too restrictive. (New York Times 9-24-94; Chicago Sun-Times 9-24-94; The Oregonian 11-17-94; Chicago Tribune 9-24-94)

Of the actions against Ragsdale, pro-choice Martha Pulido Logemann, a member of the ‘Religious’ Coalition for Reproductive Choice (RCRC), said that “I am in complete shock. What I’m concerned about is the long term. The religious right and anti-choice factions have scared every doctor around. To find another doctor to take over would be very difficult.”

She showed no concern for the three year old child or for the woman who suffered at Ragsdale’s hands.

Credit: Christina Dunigan

Update: Dr. Ragsdale passed away in 2004

 

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Abortion Provider: Ronachai Banchongmanie

Abortion proponents assure us that current government oversight of abortion is sufficient to ensure that women are given safe abortions in a clean, caring, sanitary environment. The example of Ronachai Banchongmanie blows this little myth out of the water. Let’s follow his facility over years of inspections. Watch for continued violations in the following areas:

— Infection control (keeping the facility and equipment clean)
— Staffing (having adequately trained, qualified staff)
— Preparation for complications (emergency supplies, arrangements for ambulance and hospital)
— Other medical safety issues (maintaining proper medications, properly monitoring patients, adequate documentation of patient care/condition)

And an autoclave is a piece of equipment used to sterilize medical instruments before surgery or other treatment. Pay attention to how RELSCO cared for the autoclave.

Among the deficiencies cited in May 1979 inspections:

* no lavatory or hand-washing sinks in exam rooms
* sinks in patient care areas not able to be shut off without using hands
* no tracheotomy set available
* no transfer agreement with hospital
* no job descriptions for nursing staff
* employee files lacking resumes of training and experience
* urinalysis not performed prior to surgery
* no written infection control measures
* scrub sink area “in need of a thorough cleaning”
* no system for patients to summon attendant
* drugs not stored safely
* excessive temperature in area where oxygen and nitrous oxide tanks were stored
* 24-hour waiting period for abortions not adhered to

Banchongmanie’s corporation which owned the clinic, RELSCO, did not make the corrections required by the state, but instead asked for a waiver that would allow the facility to operate as-is. (Statement of Deficiencies and Plan of Correction 3-3-79, 3-7-79)

Banchongmanie wasn’t given his waiver to simply operate his abortion facility any which way he pleased. But he wasn’t shut down either. He continued to operate.

Among the deficiencies cited in 1980 inspection:

* no documentation of physician with hospital privileges
* inadequate housekeeping in scrub sink area
* “Written procedures which govern the use of the aseptic technique of scrubbing for performing a surgical procedure was incorrect”
* expired sterile supplies stored on dirty shelf
* no evidence of continuing infection control training
* inadequate documentation in operating room
* emergency drugs outdated
* improper storing of drugs
* illegible entries in medical records
* legal documents in medical records did not identify facility by name or address

(Statement of Deficiencies and Plan of Correction 7-14-80)

Suit by “Sharlee” alleged: abortion at Relsco October 7, 1981; tissues left in uterus, resulting in endometritis; further medical expenses and pain. (Jefferson Circuit Court Case No. 81CI-00963)

In 1982, a hearing officer reported that Relsco’s assistant administrator “stated that all equipment needed to place the applicant in compliance with licensure standards have been installed or put on order.” Relsco, which had been operating with the violations cited above, finally got a license. (Hearing Officer’s Report 12-29-82)

Deficiencies cited in 1983 inspection included: “no evidence of infection control inservice since 11/11/80.” (Statement of Deficiencies and Plan of Correction 5-3-83)

So we see that despite years of violations, Banchongmanie was permitted to keep operating his unsanitary abortion facility. He was finally given a license. And he continued to rack up violations.

So Banchongmanie got his license — and promptly ran up another list of violations at the next inspection. Did he do any better in 1984?

Deficiencies cited in the first 1984 inspection, in May, included:

* counselor, office clerk, receptionist, and bookkeeper performing pregnancy tests
* sterile supplies outdated or not dated
* sterilized equipment stored in dirty, dusty areas
* gas sterilization equipment needed cleaning and it could not be determined to be functioning effectively
* outdated laboratory supplies
* lab equipment needed cleaning and monitored for proper calibration
* outdated medications throughout facility
* infection control minutes noted growth of culture on abortion instrument pan
* procedures did not specify what solutions were being used as disinfectants
* infection control meetings sporadic, no physician documented as attending
* unqualified administrator
* incomplete employee records
* physician not remaining at the facility until all patients are discharged; one document noted physician left at 4:15 but was called back, arriving at 5:15, to attend to patient with complications
* no agreement for ambulance service
* not all medical records legible
* no documentation of medications administered or ordered
* lack of pre- and post-operative nurses’ noted including vital signs
* one RN on duty to supervise both surgery and recovery
* no arrangements for adequate blood supply
* unidentified cups of pills in recovery room

(Statement of Deficiencies and Plan of Correction 5-1-84)

Violations galore. Is anybody surprised? Does anybody think that when the inspectors returned in June, they’d find any substantial improvement in the way Banchongmanie was running his business? Well, evidently hope springs eternal among Kentucky abortion clinic inspectors, who kept expecting Banchongmanie to clean up his act. But, of course, he did no such thing. Deficiencies noted in the June 1984 non-compliance revisit included:

* 6 of 10 patient recliners did not have protective covering
* autoclave room cluttered with boxes, equipment, tissue specimens
* autoclave room sink had loose linoleum around top and sides
* specimens prepared by assistant without gloves
* surgeon did not perform total scrub between patients
* date anesthetic vials opened not noted
* no full-time nurses for operating room and recovery room
* incomplete and/or illegible medical records; records show patients administered Sublimaze but did not document orders
* 5 of 5 records reviewed by the inspectors had been signed by RN, not MD, for medications

(Statement of Deficiencies and Plan of Correction 6-29-84)

Next, we see if things got any better after Banchongmanie was slapped with two inspections in one year.

After one routine inspection, and a follow-up visit that found that Banchongmanie’s facility was still dirty and unsanitary, the abortuary remained open for business.

Among the deficiencies found in an inspection performed on April 12, 1985:

* unlabeled medications stored in open containers on top of recovery room medicine cabinet
* surgeon performing surgery without gown
* uncovered tubing on suction machines
* single-use inhalation mask and tubing re-used, once after falling to the floor
* dates injectables vials opened not noted
* surgery performed on patient with elevated white blood count without documentation of rationale for proceeding with an abortion before investigating the cause of the abnormal blood test
* “floor of clean linen storage room was in need of a thorough cleaning and sweeping”
* soiled item bag next to autoclave stained and full of holes
* dirty ash tray and cup of what appeared to be coffee found in lab
* post-operative exam records incomplete
* insufficient nursing supervision of OR and recovery room

A May 13, 1985 inspection found, among other violations:

* single-use inhalation masks reused, some with lipstick smudges still on them
* medications opened but date not noted
* clean linen room had “lint and other debris” on shelves and dirt build-up around baseboards
* bottle of Brevitol opened and not covered
* autoclave door frames “heavily coated with dust”
* soiled linen container next to autoclaves uncovered and overfilled with soiled surgical linens
* expired or undated sterile supplies including speculum packs and dilators
* patient gowns and linens laundered in staff homes rather than by professional laundry
* OR technician assisted while wearing same gloves he wore when handling radio
* improperly stored medications
* post-operative exam records still incomplete
* two patients documented as having been discharged at 1:30 PM, even though the clock said 1:10 PM and the patients were still present
* still insufficient nursing supervision of OR and recovery room.

A December 1985 hearing recommended another review to see if sufficient progress had been made in correcting deficiencies to warrant re-issue of license. But notice that Relsco continued to operate during this time. (Hearing Officer’s Report 12-5-85)

Next, we see if the state of Kentucky managed to muster any real action regarding Banchongmanie’s unsavory abortion facility.

So a December 1985 hearing recommended another review to see if sufficient progress had been made in correcting deficiencies to warrant re-issue of license. In the mean time, Relsco continued to operate.

The state of Kentucky finally filed for an injunction to halt operations of Relsco in 1987 due to operating in violations of statutes and regulations. (Jefferson Circuit Court Case No. 87CI-08790)

So at last, Relsco was supposedly closed by health inspectors after finding health violations including dirty suction containers in both operating rooms. But closed isn’t closed for an abortion facility. A judge declared the facility free from state oversight because of its status as the private office of Ronachai Banchongmanie. It looked as if the state’s hands were tied. But the decision to declare Banchongmanie’s facility free from oversight was reversed upon another inspection and the discovery that Relsco was using general anesthesia. (Jefferson Circuit Court Action No. 87-CI-0640-MR)

But after all this, Banchongmanie and his Relsco continued to operate.

A suit filed by “Tamika” alleged seeking treatment from Banchongmanie January 14, 1988, at Women’s Health Services, for lower abdominal pain; malpractice resulting in “severe physical and mental pain and suffering, lost time from her regular employment and incurred substantial additional medical expenses.” (Jefferson County District Court Case No. 90C04922)

Suit by “Bianca,” on her own behalf and on behalf of “Kurtis” and “Darrin,” alleged: abortion by Banchongmanie at Women’s Health Services November 30, 1988; patient 22 – 26 weeks pregnant; lack of informed consent (“Had the Defendant Ronachai Banchongmanie or the Defendant Relsco, Inc. or their agents … provided the Plaintiff with the information necessary to give informed consent, the Plaintiff would never have given her consent to the abortion of her twin children.”); failure to inform of twin pregnancy; sent patient home for more money during showing of informed consent video; “the unborn children of [Bianca]…were viable;” “Defendant…intentionally lacerated, crushed, dismembered, killed and aborted the twin children of [Bianca];” December 3, plaintiff passed severed head of fetus; patient contacted Banchongmanie’s office, calls were not returned; patient sought hospital care, passed additional tissues; malpractice, mental distress requiring psychiatric care, , physical injury. (Jefferson Circuit Court Case No. 89CI-06286)

A suit filed by “Randi” alleged: treatment by Banchongmanie at Women’s Health Services July 8, 1989; “serious and painful injuries to her body … and serious and permanent pain and anguish, both mentally and physically.” (Jefferson County Circuit Court Case No. 90CI05439)

Next, we move into the next decade.

The 1980s closed with a string of lawsuits for Banchongmanie and his abortion facility. The ’90s brought a new decade — but apparently no new behavior on anybody’s part.

Investigative findings, 4-17-90, included:

* 8 of 25 abortion patients were prepped, on IV medications, prior to arrival of physician or RN
* suction containers in both ORs dirty
* medications opened and undated
* prep carts dirty, dusty, with open and unlabeled syringes
* dirty disinfectant pans
* instruments not completely submerged in disinfectant
* two shelves of undated autoclaved instrument trays, wrapped in dirty or stained linen
* dirty linens covering equipment
* dirty, filled mop bucket stored in scrub room
* scrub sink dirty, containing two dirty cups, a dirty ashtray
* sink, hopper, and counters extremely dirty and dusty in instrument room
* gauze pads lying open on dirty counter
* box of curettes on floor
* dirty recovery room crash cart
* supplies exposed to dust and dirt in open drawers
* dirty floors in pro-op and post-op rooms, with dirty build up on baseboards and commodes

Banchongmanie reported to investigators that he had plans to remodel his facility to meet minimum state requirements. The question is why anybody would believe him, since he’d been given over a decade already to clean up his act. (Louisville Courier-Journal 6-25-94; Memorandum in Support of Findings ABO#-22113, Investigative Reports ARO-1 Reference No. 21451 & 22113)

Next, did Banchongmanie really turn over a new leaf with the beginning of the new decade?

On June 12, 1990, an investigation verified that Banchongmanie’s abortion facility was operating illegally. “Relsco,” on the first floor of the building, performed pregnancy tests. The receptionist would give each patient an unlabeled paper cup and send her down the hall to a restroom shared by other businesses in the building. Rather than using a lab, the receptionist would do a pregnancy test at her desk and would orally give the patient her results, in the waiting room with no privacy. The receptionist would then dump the urine into a lidless glass coffee jar on her desk. When the jar filled with urine, the receptionist would go down the hallway to the public restroom and dump the urine. She did not wash her hands between tests. Pregnancy tests were performed with kits that were out of date. No counselor saw the patients. If the test was positive, the patient was sent upstairs to “Women’s Health Services.”

The investigation also found out from staff that physicians did not remain on the premises until all patients were discharged. Instead, the doctor left, and instructed staff to page him if there were any complications. The staff also told investigators that patients were not given complete post-operative instructions before discharge. Physicians did not perform any post-operative evaluations of patients unless staff asked him to examine a particular patient. The discharge instructions and medications were given to patients by whatever staff happened to be available, regardless of their qualifications.

The investigation also could not find out if Banchongmanie and his other physicians were washing their hands for examinations or surgery, because they refused to answer any questions about the issue. The pre-operative area was supervised by a registered nurse; the post-operative area had only a licensed practical nurse, and the operating room had only a technician. Staff substantiated that Pitocin was administered intravenously pre-operatively by an LPN without any physician present. Staff also substantiated that improperly trained and supervised staff — including the front desk staff — were participating in all aspects of patient care including surgery.

Staff substantiated that they began preparing patients for their abortions at 7 a.m., but that no physician was scheduled to be in the building until 9 a.m. Staff substantiated that they had no job descriptions, no criteria for performance evaluations, and no formal chain of command for responsibilities within the facility.

During the investigations, patients and their mothers were observed weeping in the hallway and reception area. They were not provided with counseling or even with a private area.

The investigation report described the facility as “dark, dirty, and drafty,” with loose or missing floor tiles in the hallways of both the first and fourth floors. Carpets were littered and filthy. Ceiling tiles were dirty, missing, or water stained. Rooms were cluttered with unused furniture and supplies. The restrooms were dirty, with missing toilet tissue holders or broken. The room for preparing sterile supplies was filthy, “cluttered with unused, discarded equipment and stock supplies.” The walls were chipped, peeling, and dirty. Garbage was overflowing from trash cans onto the floor. Equipment was wrapped for sterilization in stained wrappings, and too much equipment was loaded into the autoclave when it was used. The patient dressing room had brown stains, consistent with blood or Betadine, on the chair. Blankets and recliners in the recovery room were not changed between patients, and staff were not sure if pillow cases were changed between patients. Clean and soiled linens were stored together.

The investigation found that the facility had no policy for how areas were to be cleaned after surgery. Surgical equipment, including forceps and dilators, were expired. Surgical equipment was lying about on dirty, dusty trays. Medications were stored in a dirty, unlocked cabinet in the recovery room. Discharge medications were in packets on a desk. Staff substantiated that whoever happened to be working in recovery would prepare discharge medication packets from bulk jars of medicines. The staff also confirmed that they did not perform many required tests, such as coagulation tests. The equipment used to test for gonorrhea was not working properly. Improperly labeled and out-of-date tissue specimens were found in the refrigerator.

The investigation found that there was no written policy on the examination of abortion tissues. The autoclaves were not checked or tested. Staff handled blood and body fluids without wearing gloves. One registered nurse’s personnel file had no documentation that she was licensed in the state, or that she was trained in CPR. Another nurse, this one an LPN, also had no verification of CPR training, and had an out-of-date verification of license. Yet another LPN was found to not be currently licensed. (Memorandum in Support of Findings ABO#-22113, Investigative Reports ARO-1 Reference No. 21451 & 22113)

Next, surely things must change — right?

So in June of 1990, the state of Kentucky finally did an investigation of Banchongmanie’s practice, and verified appalling misbehavior. In July of 1990, Banchongmanie performed an abortion on “Deann.” She filed suit afterward, saying that Banchongmanie had performed an incomplete abortion, and that on August 2, she required emergency care. She also sued for violation of laws against deceptive trade practices. (Jefferson County Circuit Court File No. 91CI04951)

But Banchongmanie’s facility continued to operate.

Suit by “Arleen” alleged: abortion by Banchongmanie January 23, 1991 at Women’s Health Services; lack of informed consent; Banchongmanie did not secure pathology report or inform plaintiff abortion was incomplete; “Plaintiff carried around in her body the parts of the rotted corpse of her dead baby’s body for approximately two days;” cervix remained dilated; on January 25, patient went to ER, suffering bleeding, cramping, fever; examination revealed “foul discharge” and products of conception, infection; patient hospitalized; D&C and laparoscopy performed May 7; “It was noted during the procedure that the cervical canal was without resistance to the dilator, thereby, causing future problems with carrying a pregnancy successfully.” (Jefferson Circuit Court Case No. 91CI07679)

In a 1991 deposition, Banchongmanie stated that he had read National Abortion Federation standards, and agreed that they “set forth accurately the standards of care for a good abortion clinic” and “ought to be followed,” but that he “don’t know word by word did I follow them or not.” Banchongmanie called his care “good practice…the least complication even nationwide. Why do I have to out of my care, when my care is given with the best result.”

In a 1992 affidavit, Banchongmanie stated that his facility “adheres to all of the Standards for Abortion Care as outlined in the complete manual for National Federation Guidelines.”

In a 1994 deposition, Banchongmanie stated that he had read NAF standards when his clinic was a NAF member, “long time ago,” in the 1970s. He said that he did not read and adhere to NAF standards in 1991, 1992, or 1993. “I don’t adhere to this standard because I don’t read it…I use my own standard.” He also said, “my clinic has been serving the people of Kentucky for long time and we make change, make adaptation and we think our standard is very high and we have great expectations also, we don’t have to go after this standard to follow.”

So decades of inspections, slovenly practices, and lawsuits did not cramp Ronachai Banchongmanie’s style.

By Christina Dunigan

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Abortion Provider: Leroy Carhart

Numerous news articles about Carhart cover allegations raised by his clinic administrator. The allegations included that Carhart:

— Altered a patient chart on February 14, 1991

— Engaged in telephone conversations during procedures in 1991

— Refused to follow proper infection control procedures dealing with a patient with active tuberculosis June 14, 1991

— Fell asleep injecting a patient June 14, 1991.

The clinic administrator who first reported these allegations also alleged that Carhart left an abortion patient on the table to go outside and throw rocks at the procedure room window on October 23, 1990. This was when Carhart was doing abortions at Women’s Medical Center of Nebraska.

Carhart has taken a leadership role in abortion. According to news sources, a semi-retired ophthalmologist and a pathologist have approached Carhart to learn abortion techniques. Carhart was hired to perform abortions at Planned Parenthood in Bloomington, IN. He had been very involved in the debate over Dilation and Extraction (“partial birth”) abortion.

Sources: Chronicle/Examiner 9-19-93; Detroit News 9-5-93; 846 – Omaha World-Herald 7-26-91, 8-11-92, 4-13-93, 5-17-93, 6-3-93; Herald-Times 7-9-92; Letter to health department 6-21-94, Douglas County District Court Doc. 899, Petition for Disciplinary Action

Carhart has also been in trouble for non-abortion issues. News reports state that 4 of his 11 horses, and two dogs, were confiscated by the humane society due to neglect. An officer of the humane society said she had not obtained a warrant because the animals were in danger of death. She also said that the horses were in danger of starvation even though several large bales of inferior-quality hay were outside a fence, just beyond the reach of the horses. Some of the older horses had bite marks on their backs indicating that younger horses had driven them away from what food was available, and that the most skeletal of the horses, a 20 to 30-year-old female, had to be coaxed from a barn that was a foot deep in mud and excrement. The humane society spokesperson also said that Carhart “wasn’t too happy” that she had taken the horses, and that he threatened to file charges against her.

Source: Bellevue Leader 7-25-92

Compiled by Christina Dunigan

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Abortion Provider: Jose Casso

Police busted 71-year-old Jose Casso after he allegedly botched an abortion on a 16-year-old girl at his Hialeah clinic.

The girl said that she bled heavily after her abortion, and had to go to a hospital to be treated for infection. She may never be able to have children due to the damage to her reproductive organs. She said she knew right away that something was wrong after the abortion. “When I woke up,” she said, “I was crying and I gold him ‘Please get me my mom because I feel really bad.’ I told my mom that I felt like I was bleeding a lot. And my mom looked, and she saw a whole bunch of blood.”

Casso had been arrested twice in the previous months for practicing medicine without a license, yet his clinic remained open. News reports say that nearly 40 other women have come forward to say that they were treated by Casso. Police said that along with “multiple pieces of human fetuses,” they found illegal and expired medications at Casso’s office.

Casso had been running the clinic for more than 20 years, treating patients and prescribing medications. His attorney denies all the charges, saying that Casso had licensed physicians on staff who performed the procedures.

Casso was first arrested after a woman reported that he had sexually abused her. She said that she was trying to establish residency, and went to Casso’s clinic when her employer told her to get some vaccinations. She made an appointment to return six months later to be treated for a vaginal infection, and it was on this visit, she said, that Casso abused her.

Credit: Christina Dunigan

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Abortion Provider: Judith Comeau-Samuel

When called before the medical board in 1986, Dr. Judith Comeau-Samuel admitted to practices endangering the health of patients at her abortion clinics, but claimed that she had only done so because she was dominated by her husband and manipulated by him via voodoo.

She told police:

“he [the husband] was very powerful and could cause my death, if he wished to do so, lighting candles, going into trances and be seemingly possessed by spirits . . . My husband would have friends and colleagues at our home to participate in these rituals.”

This quote appeared in the “How Abortion “Con Man” Defied the Law” in NY Newsday May 2, 1993.

The police report indicated that Comeau-Samuel and her husband would charge $75 for a pregnancy test. They would then tell the patient she was pregnant, then offer to apply the $75 pregnancy test fee toward the cost of an abortion. Authorities estimated that 25% of the abortions performed at Comeau-Samuel’s facilities were done on non-pregnant women.

Medical board documents indicate that the Medical Board, Commissioner of Health, Regents Review Committee, and Board of Regents all found Comeau-Samuel guilty of:

* 65 counts of “practicing the profession with gross negligence”
* 29 counts of “Permitting, aiding, or abetting an unlicensed person to perform activities requiring a license”
* 90 counts of “Practicing the profession fraudulently”
* 65 counts of “Practicing the profession with gross incompetence”
* 139 counts of “Unprofessional conduct”

The charges related to the following violations at Comeau-Samuel’s two abortion clinics:

* performing abortions on non-pregnant women
* failure to take medical history or perform examinations
* administering general anesthesia without ascertaining if patients had eaten
* administering general anesthesia without proper resuscitative equipment
* failing to monitor vital signs during general anesthesia
* failure to provide post-anesthesia evaluations
* failure to give adequate aftercare instructions
* failure to obtain informed consent
* failure to supervise recovery
* failure to test for Rh factor hence jeopardizing health and lives of future babies of Rh-negative patients
* allowing her husband Maxen Samuel to practice without a license
* falsely advertising that medical services would be performed by board-certified specialist when they were performed by non-certified Comeau-Samuel and non-licensed Maxen Samuel
* having pregnancy tests performed by untrained individual if they were performed at all

Comeau-Samuel was fined $19,500, and her license was revoked. Her husband was jailed for performing abortions on non-pregnant women and for practicing medicine without a license. Samuel was also disciplined for having food, coffee, and wine available to patients in the waiting room then not warning them of the danger of eating prior to general anesthesia. Samuel’s attorney said that Samuel admitted to operating without a license, but insisted that he had to do so because he needed the money. The judge reviewing the case ordered the couple to surrender their passports to prevent flight to their native Haiti.

News reports indicate that Samuel was found practicing medicine without a license again in 1993.

Sources: Newsday 12-13-93; New York Daily News 11-13-86; Associated Press 12-14-89; New York Post 3-7-85, 3-8-85; University of the State of New York Case No. 4407 2/4/86

Credit: Christina Dunigan and Life Dynamics

 

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Abortion Provider: Harold Hoke

Harold Hoke was investigated for dumping fetuses and medical waste at Colwick Towers dumpster summer of 1992. Hoke claimed that his Hallmark Clinic sent such material out through a disposal firm, but the firm’s records showed no materials received from Hoke for 2 months.

“On August 12 and August 22, a Charlotte Observer reporter saw a considerable amount of fetal tissue removed from the dumpster adjacent to the clinic. The remains, deposited in 10 to 15 large plastic trash bags, included readily identifiable body parts. Among them were a left forearm and hand, a left leg and foot, a right forearm and hand, part of a right foot, and a spinal column and rib cage. In several cases the remains had been dumped in trash bags along with ordinary garbage: coffee grounds, cigarette butts and remnants of chicken dinners.”

Hoke was quoted as responding, “I don’t care what you saw. If you saw a little green monster there, somebody else put it there.” Such dumping would be in violation of state law requiring certain packaging and incineration of such materials.

Note: Hoke’s privileges were denied at one hospital in early 1970s, and rescinded at another in 1983. The second hospital alleged he was unqualified. In 1974 the North Carolina Board of Medical Examiners brought 20 charges of “dishonorable and unprofessional conduct” against Hoke, alleging negligent handling of abortions, performing abortions without adequate pregnancy tests, knowingly performing abortions on non-pregnant women, false representations in his brochure describing Hallmark Clinic, soliciting false accusations against other doctors with whom he had disputes, and mental condition rendering him unfit to practice medicine. Two additional charges the board noted later that year alleged unnecessary surgery and a misdemeanor charge in Georgia.

Source: Charlotte Observer 9-2-92 Gaston County Superior Court File #74CVS5135; Mecklenburg County Superior Court Files #73CVS3081, #82CVS406 and #84CVS8994; Charlotte District Court Case #CC7501; Cumberland County Superior Court File #84CVS1681; Union County Superior Court Case #84CV0148; United States District Court, Western District of North Carolina, Charlotte Division C.C. #85-551-M; United States District Court, South Carolina, Greenville Division C.A. #83-1585-14; and Bartow County Superior Court Civil Action File #10529.

Credit: Christina Dunigan and Abortionviolence.com

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Abortion Provider: P. Scott Ricke

P. Scott Ricke managed to get himself into virtually all the kinds of trouble doctors get themselves into — facing allegations of abortion malpractice, sexual misconduct, substance abuse, sloppy record-keeping, letting unlicensed staff practice medicine, improper disposal of fetuses, and even obstetric malpractice.

Sexual misconduct

Ricke was censured by the medical board of Arizona in November of 1986 for performing an after-hours abortion on a woman while alone with her, and for reportedly having sex with her first. Despite this censure, and the sexual relationship with patient K.L. which Ricke’s attorney confirmed, Ricke went on record as saying, “I believe that if a woman decides to have a termination, it should be done safely, legally and with some dignity.”

The very next year saw Ricke in trouble over a relationship with a 25-year-old patient identified as “K.L.” In 1987, Ricke had sexual intercourse with K.L. in her home four days after he performed her May 2, 1987 abortion and had given her written instructions to abstain from intercourse for a week. He then offered to do a free pap smear during her upcoming follow-up appointment. Ricke reportedly indicated he felt the doctor-patient relationship ended when they had sex, but that’s not consistent with the offer of a free pap smear. K. reportedly said “I felt trusting of him because he was a doctor.” Ricke’s attorney reportedly contended that Ricke did not have sex with K. during the course of treatment and therefore was guilty of poor judgment but not of causing any harm. The attorney is also said to have indicated that Ricke had sex with K. only because of her responses to his questioning about her enjoyment of sex and her receptiveness to his visiting her later at her home. This incident might relate to the action taken by the Medical Board in 1987.

(Sources: Phoenix Gazette 8-13-87, 8-14-87, 8-15-87, 9-12-87 et. al., Arizona Republic, Tucson Citizen 8-13-87; 3158 – Arizona Daily Star 6-21-87 et. al.)

But Ricke faced more than censure for unseemly sexual interest in his abortion patients. Another patient, identified as “A.M.,” reported him to the medical board. I’ll call her “Andi.”

Andi, age 31, said that she had an abortion performed by Ricke at Women’s Surgical Clinic on September 22, 1992. The staff had her fill out and sign papers she did not understand and which were not explained to her. When she requested anesthesia, she said, Ricke told her that it was unnecessary and that it would also cost an additional $15, which Andi didn’t have. The suction machine struck A as dirty and bloody.

Andi was unprepared for the terrible pain of her abortion. She was discharged after 15 minutes in recovery without being examined or given any medications or arrangements for follow-up.

After leaving the facility, Andi became ill, with bleeding, and sought advise of another doctor, who recommended a second procedure to remove retained tissues.

Andi could not afford this procedure, so she contacted Women’s Surgical Clinic and was told Ricke might not be able to see her in upcoming days because of patient load. Andi drove to the clinic, explained her situation to some people outside, and on their recommendation she sought hospital care at their expense. Medical records indicate retained tissues, including necrotic portions, removed during a curretage procedure. The medical board dismissed the matter. (Affidavit, medical records, correspondence with board, and transcript of interview with patient)

(Sources: Phoenix Gazette 8-13-87, 8-14-87, 8-15-87, 9-12-87 et. al., Arizona Republic, Tucson Citizen 8-13-87; 3158 – Arizona Daily Star 6-21-87 et. al.)

Abortion malpractice and more: Shanda’s case

More trouble came down on Ricke regarding his dubious care of a patient I’ll call “Shanda,” identified by the authorities as “S.P.”

Shanda was 25 years old when she went to Ricke for an abortion on February 7, 1987 at his Women’s Surgical Clinic in Arizona.

During the abortion, Shanda said, the head of the fetus became lodged. She was screaming in pain, but Ricke refused her request for painkillers by telling her that he didn’t have any. She asked to be taken to a hospital, but Ricke told her that since her pregnancy was more than 24 weeks along, beyond the 24 week limit most hospitals observed, no hospital would take her.

Ricke made as many as 40 unsuccessful attempts to start an IV, and asked Shanda for advice about how to deal with the lodged head (wanting her to decide if crushing the head would be the right course of action).

After three hours of attempts to remove the head, Ricke wrapped the body of the fetus — which was hanging out of Shanda’s vagina — in a towel, and loaded Shanda into an employee’s car to be transported to the hospital.

The Assistant Arizona Attorney General investigated the case, and asserted that during the three hours he spent trying to dislodge Shanda’s fetus, Ricke left her several times to do other abortions. After packing Shanda into a private car for transport, Ricke remained behind at his clinic to do three more abortions before following Shanda to the hospital and completing her abortion there.

The Assistant Attorney General said that by attempting to abort a 28-week, 2.4-pound fetus in this manner, he failed to minimize risks and jeopardized Shanda’s health. Ricke’s attorney countered that the fetus was only 24 weeks old, and that it had a less than 50% chance of survival. Ricke was disciplined by the medical board.

(Sources: Phoenix Gazette 8-13-87, 8-14-87, 8-15-87, 9-12-87 et. al., Arizona Republic, Tucson Citizen 8-13-87; 3158 – Arizona Daily Star 6-21-87 et. al.)

Assorted other allegations

Melody B., one of Ricke’s obstetric patients, alleged failure to diagnose her pregnancy as high-risk, failure to properly test and monitor mother and fetus, and failure to diagnose and respond to fetal distress. These shortcomings, Melody said, resulted in brain damage and other injuries to infant Jeffrey, born April 6, 1986 under Ricke’s care. (Pima County, AZ Case No. 280629)

A 1988 article in the Arizona Daily Star indicates that in 1988, two analysts recommended that Ricke undergo extensive therapy because of drug and alcohol problems.

Ricke reportedly had an unlicensed person, introduced to patients as Dr. Lopez, examining patients in his office. Ricke also had inadequate records. Ricke’s attorney countered that Lopez, a Mexican medical school graduate, was hired as a nurse.

Ricke was investigated by police when fetal remains were found in the trash receptacle of an apartment complex; such disposal violated state health department regulations and state law.

A search at the Web site of the Arizona medical board found the following list of disciplinary actions against Ricke:

* 11/20/1986: Decree of Censure – Unprofessional Conduct (Failure to maintain adequate patient records; conduct harmful or dangerous to the patient’s health).

* 11/20/1986: Consent Agreement -Practice Restriction (female chaperone; no patient care outside office hours; must be assisted for all surgical procedures; maintain adequate records) 10/22/92-Agreement terminated

* 06/27/1987: Summary Suspension of License – Unprofessional Conduct (conduct or practice harmful or dangerous to the health of the patient/public). 10/15/87 – License reactivated under probationary status.

* 10/15/1987: Probation 5yrs – Unprofessional Conduct (submit to psychiatric examinations; practice restrictions regarding all aspects of abortion practice). 1/14/88 – Amendment. 10/22/92 Probation terminated.

* 11/12/1996: Letter of Reprimand – Unprofessional Conduct (violation of federal/state laws applicable to the practice of medicine; failing to dispense drugs in compliance with article 6 of A.R.S. 32-1401(25)(kk)).

A search of the California medical board site found the following entries on Ricke:

* Licensee Name P SCOTT RICKE
* Primary License Status Code RENEWED/CURRENT | ENFORCEMENT
* Secondary License Status Code SUSPENDED | PROBATION | PUBLIC REP | DISP ST/FED GOV
* License Number C37788
* Address [Redacted by Guide]
* City State Zip TUCSON AZ 85750
* Original License Date 11/23/1977
* License Expiration Date 06/30/2002
* Effective Date of Action 11/03/1989
* Description of Action: FIVE YEARS PROBATION WITH VARIOUS TERMS AND CONDITIONS.***EFFECTIVE 11/03/89-SUSPENDED PENDING PASSING AN EXAMINATION.***
* Effective Date of Action 11/12/1996
* Court Jurisdiction ARIZONA BOARD OF MEDICAL EXAMINERS
* Description of Action: LETTER OF REPRIMAND WAS ISSUED FOR DISPENSING DRUGS (DIET PILLS) WITHOUT HAVING FIRST REGISTERED WITH THE ARIZONA BOARD AS A DISPENSING
* Effective Date of Action 09/05/1997
* Description of Action: PUBLIC LETTER OF REPRIMAND.

(Sources: Phoenix Gazette 8-13-87, 8-14-87, 8-15-87, 9-12-87 et. al., Arizona Republic, Tucson Citizen 8-13-87; 3158 – Arizona Daily Star 6-21-87 et. al.)

Note: Ricke now bills himself as an expert on cosmetic issues, including weight loss (he has written a weight loss book for teens which can be found here. The bio says that he is “board certified in Obstetrics and Gynecology” but does not mention his abortion malpractice suits.

Credit: Christina Dunigan

 

 

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Abortion Provider: Tati Okereke

Abortionist Tati Okereke was arrested after a Christmas Eve party in the Buffalo Hyatt Regency and charged with second-degree assault, first degree sexual abuse, first degree unlawful imprisonment, possession of illegal drugs and hypodermics, resisting arrest, and obstruction of governmental administration.

The abortionist’s former girlfriend was found handcuffed to a bed, with drugs and needles scattered on the floor nearby.

Police had to forcibly subdue Okereke when he was arrested. In 1982, he was charged with two counts of sexual abuse, but was acquitted by a State Supreme Court jury.

The New York State medical board investigated numerous allegations including fondling patient’s breasts, and injecting patients with medication making them groggy, then engaging in sexual intercourse with them against their wills. One of these women testified that she could not move but kept crying “What are you doing?,” and another patient testified that after examining her vagina, the abortionist licked his fingers. She said the doctor tried to pay her off to keep her quiet following the incident.

According to documents obtained by The Buffalo News under the Freedom of Information Act, Okereke was also charged by the State of New York with raping two patients and then trying to bribe them to buy their silence; drugging and then trying to have sex with his receptionist at an office Christmas party at the Hyatt Regency Buffalo Hotel on December 24, 1988; dispensed narcotics to himself and failed to account for very large quantities of controlled substances; prescribed Valium and diet pills to underweight women and women with a history of drug abuse; and lied on staff membership applications to Buffalo General Hospital, Buffalo Children’s Hospital, and a Maryland hospital; and continued to treat patients after his medical license was suspended in March 1988.

New York Health Department attorney Paul R. White said that “Dr. Okereke is a pathological liar. The guy is either incapable or unwilling to tell the truth.”

After more than seven years of legal maneuvering, Okereke’s medical license was finally revoked in 1989.

Later, Okereke he pleaded guilty to soliciting a prostitute on May 3, 1991.

References: Paul Likoudis. “Buffalo Abortionist Arrested on Sex-Abuse Charges.” The Wanderer, January 5, 1989, page 1; California Medical Board Investigation #11593; Michael Beebe. “Gynecologist Has History of Misconduct Charges.” The Buffalo News, December 30, 1990, pages A1 and A11; Matt Gryta. “Doctor Admits Patronizing Prostitute.” The Buffalo News, May 4, 1991.

Credit: Abortionviolence.com

 

 

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Abortion Provider: Bruce Steir

Abortionist Bruce Steir, according to the Associated Press, “with a history of disciplinary actions, was charged with murder after state regulators determined that he punctured a woman’s uterus during an abortion.” Deputy District Attorney Kennis Clark told Riverside County Judge Dennis McConaghy that Sharon Hamplton bled to death after Steir ignored a danger he knew he had created.

Steir was on medical probation at the time of the abortion because of his previous botched abortions, which included uterine perforations. He perforated Hamptlon’s uterus during the December 13, 1996, abortion. After Hamptlon was discharged from A Lady’s Choice Women’s Medical Center, her mother drove to Barstow, where she and her daughter lived. But Doris Hamptlon could not waken her daughter when they arrived at the mother’s home. Hamptlon, 27, was dead before paramedics got her to Barstow Community Hospital. Her son, Curtis Bullorck, was 3 when his mother died.

At the time of the abortion, both Steir and another abortionist, Joseph Durante, who owns the abortion facility, were on medical probation stemming from ethical problems and medical errors in previous abortions. Steir surrendered his medical license in March 1997 amid complaints about negligence during abortions, including three that required surgery to repair injuries. In one case, surgeons had to remove a fetal skull found protruding through a huge tear in a patient’s uterus, according to complaints filed with the Medical Board of California.

Another woman discovered that Steir had left behind a four-inch piece of wire in her abdomen during an abortion. She suffered for 13 years before the wire, and the abscess that surrounded it, were surgically removed.

In 1985, Steir, who at the time was a Naval Reserve physician “moonlighting” as an abortionist, botched a cesarian section by leaving a placenta fragment inside his patient. In response, the Navy revoked his license to practice medicine.

In 1987, the Florida Department of Professional Regulation ordered Steir to relinquish his license to practice medicine in that state and “never again to apply for licensure as a physician in the State of Florida.”

In 1988, while under probation with the California Medical Board, Steir perforated the uterus of an abortion client. An official review found that Steir “made no operative report or post-operative report [of the incident] until approximately eight months later, and this was in response to an investigation.” Steir’s behavior in that case prefigured, in detail, his actions in the death of Sharon Hamptlon.

A 1990 malpractice suit filed by one of Steir’s clients recounted how the abortionist had “informed [the woman] that there was a fetal mass that could be aborted when in fact no such mass was present.” Despite the absence of a child to abort, Steir proceeded with the abortion, causing permanent uterine damage and a condition know as Asherman’s Syndrome.

Steir had, in fact, been found negligent in six abortion cases, including three in which the woman had to undergo a hysterectomy

Attorneys said key testimony during the Hamplton trial came from Nancy Myles, an ultrasound technician who assisted Steir in the abortion. Myles recalled that Steir looked up during the abortion and said, “I think I pulled bowel.” The bowel cannot be reached without perforating the uterus, Clark said. If Steir thought he had grabbed the bowel with a clamp during the procedure, he had to know he had perforated the uterus, she said.

Doris Hampton, Sharon’s mother, made a statement to the medical board where she discussed Sharon’s final moments:

“Maybe around 3:00 pm I took Curtis [Sharon’s son] inside to use the bathroom. I saw a grey haired man dressed in green surgical clothes sitting at a desk. He said, “You know she is far along.” I said, “No. I didn’t know because she didn’t tell me.” Then I saw Sharon in the recovery room about 3:30 or 4:00 pm. She looked so bad that I felt scared. She was laying on a lazyboy style chair with an IV in her left arm and a blood pressure cuff on the other. She looked very pale. Her eyes were partially open and I could see only the whites of her eyes as if she were in shock. She was not speaking and her whole body was shaking real hard in big shivers. Her legs were especially bad. The doctor said, “She doesn’t react to drugs well.” …. A woman came in and said that Sharon didn’t need the blankets that were on her already and pulled the blankets off….I went back to the waiting room and a Spanish lady came out and said that Sharon would be ready in a few minutes as soon as the IV finished.

Sharon was in the recovery for only about 45 minutes, because at 5:00 pm they came out and said she was ready to leave. I heard someone say that the doctor was real busy and he had to rush out like he was going to the airport, something about him having to go to Sacramento or San Francisco. I saw two women struggling to place Sharon in a wheelchair. Sharon could not walk at all and she was not speaking. She looked very, very pale now.

….

On the way home to Barstow, I stopped at Wendy’s to get a sandwich for little Curtis. I tried to wake Sharon but all she said was “Huh, Huh.” Then Curtis said, “Mamma, I love you. Do you need anything? Are you okay?” And Sharon said, “Okay. I’ll take a drink.” Sharon was lying in the backseat of the car and said to Curtis, “Come on back with me Curtis. I love you and so I could hold you and you could go to sleep.” She was silent for about one hour. Near Victorville, she said, “I’m so hot. Please let the window down.” I opened the window a bit. After that, Sharon was silent forever.

We got home to Barstow and I saw that Sharon, still laying in the back seat was naked from the waist up, having removed her shirt, shoes and socks. I started yelling, “Sharon. Sharon. Wake up,” but she didn’t and my husband, Ben Hamptlon, said, “Call 911.”

Despite Sharon’s death, despite all the lawsuits and judgments against Steir for his botched surgeries on other women, pro-choice activists raised money for Steir’s defense on the Internet, encouraged their friends to put pressure on elected officials and the California Medical Board, and urged the Riverside County prosecutor to drop the charges.

Pro-choice activists even set up a professional-looking Web site in Steir’s defense at http://www.steirsdefense.org. (now down)

The Chico Feminist Womens Health Center (FWHC), where Steir was Medical Director, set up the grandly-named “Dr. Bruce Steir Constitutional Litigation Fund.”

An e-mail letter sent out by the “Steir Defense Fund” on March 4, 1998, said, in part, “Dear Pro-Choice Supporter: The nightmare of Dr. Bruce Steir, abortion physician, continues. … On February 18, 1998 Judge Dennis A. McConaghy, an anti-abortion judge in conservative Riverside County, California has held him over for trial. … Dr. Steir’s nightmare could happen to any provider of late abortions, especially one who travels a distance to provide abortions in a conservative community… No one could foresee these outrageous criminal charges….Representatives from abortion clinics have attended all hearings and have examined all the medical records and the chart. We are fully satisfied that Sharon Hamptlon, the patient who died from an undetected perforation that bled into the abdominal cavity, was provided with competent medical treatment that met or exceeded that standard of care…The Dr. Bruce Steir Constitutional Litigation Fund welcomes your questions, your ideas, your participation, and your financial support.”

Shauna Heckert, executive director of the Feminist Women’s Health Centers in Northern California, where Steir worked for 12 years, said “he really did have a bigger goal in mind … to help women.”

Specifically, the national leadership of the National Organization for Women (NOW), the National Abortion Federation (NAF), Refuse and Resist, and the California chapter of the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League (NARRAL, now NARAL Pro-Choice America), argued against filing any charges at all against Steir. The Chico [California] Feminist Women’s Health Center (FWHC) went so far as to set up a “Dr. Bruce Steir Constitutional Litigation Fund.” They blamed the murder charge on pro-lifers, claiming that the charges were “trumped-up” and brought for “political” reasons.

The National Organization for Women (NOW) followed FWHC’s lead. A letter of support from the Sacramento chapter of NOW said that “It is an inequitable tragedy that a doctor, who has dedicated so many years of his practice to providing abortion services, now faces such unjust harassment.”

Refuse & Resist!, a radical group headquartered in New York’s Cathedral of St. John the Divine, designated Steir “a true hero” as it conferred its supposedly coveted “Courageous Resister” award upon Steir during its March 10, 1998 “National Day of Appreciation for Abortion Providers.” Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Dorothy Fadiman, who attended Meanwhile, Steir, like so many other abortionists, blamed the women for their problems when he said that “They were all second-trimester abortions. The patients put themselves at risk by waiting so long.”

In a February 15, 1989 deposition, Steir admitted that he spent an average of seven seconds with each patient before aborting them. He said that his total interaction with the women consisted of the words “Hello, my name is Bruce and I’m here to perform your abortion. How are you?”

In an interview with the publication Inland Empire, Steir said, “My incarceration proved nothing.” He maintained he was guilty only of failing “to make the diagnosis of her (Hamptlon’s) condition.” “I’m absolutely not sorry,” he told the Inland Empire. “I’m sorry I ended up in jail. I’m sorry I had to surrender my license and I’m sorry a woman died. I would like not to have done that abortion that day.” His order of priorities is telling; he apparently sees himself as the primary victim in the matter.

Jack Schuler, the Hamptlon family’s attorney, said “I don’t understand why the pro-choice people want to rally around the cause of a shoddy physician. If I were in their shoes, I would do as much as possible to distance myself from the likes of Steir … rather than having him be the poster boy for my cause.”

At the last possible minute, as jury selection was about to begin, Steir pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter. He entered the plea in Riverside County Superior Court.

Pro-choice activists continued to support him, despite his guilty plea and the overwhelming evidence against him. Despite the crushing weight of evidence, Carol Downer ignored all reality and said “I’m incredibly sad. There was no case. “I’m sure this will give heart to people who want to attack doctors.”

In pretrial hearings, Judge Vilia Sherman said she saw no indication that pro-life pressure led to the charge. A state official denied the selective-prosecution allegation and said abortion opponents hold no sway in any investigation into medical wrongdoing. Candis Cohen, spokeswoman for the Medical Board of California, said that “Mr. Steir’s record … of mispractice speaks for itself.”

Hamptlon’s mother, Doris, said that Steir should go to prison for a “long, long, long, long time. My child’s never coming back.”

Doris Hamptlon and her husband now care for Hamptlon’s son, Curtis Bullorck, who is 7 years old and attends first grade. In 1999, the family agreed to a settlement worth up to $2 million in a civil lawsuit against Steir.

The clinic where the abortion was performed is owned by Dr. Joseph Durante, who was placed on two months’ probation last year for failing to disclose previous disciplinary actions taken against him.

On November 30, 1998, the San Diego Union stated that “The shadow of Dr. Bruce Steir hangs over the Medical Board of California like a cloud – a constant reminder of how an incompetent and dangerous physician slipped through the cracks. … Beginning in 1985, when he was thrown off staff at the Naval Hospital on Camp Pendleton, Steir repeatedly was disciplined for harming California women.”

Steir was spared a prison sentence. His punishment for killing Sharon Hamptlon was a year in the county jail, 60 months of probation, and 1,000 hours of community service. The sentencing judge suspended 180 days of the sentence, thus reducing the term to six months. On September 16, 2000, after serving 114 days, Steir was released. This was done for his ostensible good behavior, which apparently did not require the slightest expression of remorse.

Some last words from Sharon’s mother:

“I cry every day for the terrible loss of my daughter, and I am overwhelmed that 3 year old Curtis had his mother taken away forever. My husband, Ben Hamptlon, (father of Sharon), is sick with grief, has terrible head pain, is under the care of a doctor for this and has been taking strong pain medicine since Sharon’s death. My prayer is that these doctors be stopped immediately so that no other girl will be killed and that no other family will have to suffer as we have.”

References: “Abortion Doctor.” Associated Press, October 24, 1997; “Abortion Practitioner to be Tried for Second-Degree Murder.” The Press-Enterprise [Riverside, California], December 19 anad 21, 1996, and February 19 and July 11, 1998; American Life League’s Communique November 14, 1997; Raymond Smith. “Funds Raised for Abortion Doctor.” The Press-Enterprise, December 1, 1997, pages B1 and B2; “Woman’s Death From Legal Abortion Continues to Cause Concern.” Los Angeles Times, December 1, 1998; “Woman’s Death From Abortion Makes for Explosive Case.” Steven Ertelt’s Pro-Life Infonet at http://www.prolifeinfo.org/infonet.html, July 31, 1998, December 2, 1998 and February 19, 1999; “Legal Abortion Death Continues to Make Headlines,” Sacramento Bee, February 18, 1999; “Abortion Practitioner Who Killed Woman Will Face Murder Trial.” Pro-Life Infonet, April 6, 2000; Raymond Smith, The Press-Enterprise. “Plea Changed to Guilty in Abortion Case: An Agreement to a Lesser Charge is Reached as the Murder Trial was About to Begin.” Inland Empire Online, April 10, 2000; “Abortionist Changes Plea to Guilty in Murder Trial.” Pro-Life Infonet, April 7, 2000; “Abortionist Pleads Guilty: First Such Conviction Ever in State.” San Diego News Notes, May 2000, pages 1 and 3; “News.” Los Angeles Lay Catholic Mission, May 2000, pages 10 and 11; “ACLU Says Bias Led to Prosecution of Bruce Steir.” Riverside Press-Enterprise, May 26, 2000; “ACLU Says Bias Led to Prosecution of Bruce Steir.” Pro-Life Infonet, May 28, 2000; “Steir Gets Only One Year for Abortion-Related Death.” Pro-Life Infonet, May 30, 2000; Maggie Garcia. “Caught Off Guard: Abortionist Sentenced to Jail.” Los Angeles Lay Catholic Mission, July/August 2000, page 1; Julie Foster and Michael P. Ackley. Jailed Abortionist to be Released Early. Doctor Who Botched Procedure: ‘My Incarceration Proved Nothing’.” WorldNetDaily.com, September 16, 2000; William Norman Grigg. “The Abortion Underworld.” The New American, January 15, 2001 [Volume 17, Number 2] “Abortion Practitioner Convicted of Manslaughter in Legal Abortion Death.” Arizona Republic, May 5, 2001; Pro-Life Infonet, May 5, 2001.

 

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Abortion Provider: Edward Allred

Edward Campbell Allred founded a chain of abortion clinics called Family Planning Assciates.

According to Dr. Allred:

“Very commonly, we hear patients say that they feel like they’re on an assembly line. We tell them they’re right. It is an assembly line…We’re trying to be as cost-effective as possible and speed is important…We try to use the physician for his technical skill and reduce the one-to-one relationship with the patient. We usually see the patient for the first time on the operation table and then not again. More contact is just not efficient.”

He also says:

“Population control is too important to be stopped by some right wing pro-life types. Take the new influx of Hispanic immigrants. Their lack of respect for democracy and social order is frightening. I hope I can do something to stem that tide; I’d set up a clinic in Mexico for free if I could … When a sullen black woman of 17 or 18 can decide to have a baby and get welfare and food stamps and become a burden to all of us, it’s time to stop. In parts of South Los Angeles, having babies for welfare is the only industry these people have.”

both quoted in The San Diego Union, October 12, 1980. Also quoted in Anthony Perry. First quote also found in “Doctor’s Abortion Business Is Lucrative.” ALL About Issues December 1980, pages 10, 14, and 15

Some deaths that have occurred in his clinics include:

* Denise Holmes
* Mary Pena
* Patricia Chacon
* Josefina Garcia
* Lanice Dorsey,
* Tami Suematsu,
* Joyce Ortenzio
* Susan Levy
* Deanna Bell
* Christina Mora
* Kimberly Neil
* Chanelle Bryant

Some lawsuits that Allred is directly involved in include:

L.V., alleged: abortion by Allred and/or Kenneth Wright and/or Morton Sacks and/or Soon G. Sohn and/or D. Cannon October 28, 1989 at FPA facility; transported Linda to San Vicente for treatment October 28 – November 6; subsequent cramps, hemorrhage, emergency surgery, hospitalization, due to incomplete abortion. (LA County Superior Court Case No. BC008189)

J.V., alleged: abortion at FPA by Edward Allred and/or Wright and/or and/or J. Terrell Crad and/or Soon Sohn July 19, 1983; patient “rendered sick, lame, disabled and suffered injuries which caused and continue to cause pain, suffering, intense anxiety, emotional distress, insecurity, and apprehension;” loss of earnings. (LA County Superior Court Case No. C505315)

A.A., alleged: abortion by Edward Allred and/or Wright October 28, 1980; admitted to hospital November 1 for gynecological infection; A. suffered “severe and permanent injury, disability and damages.” (Orange County Superior Court Case No. 370730)

C.W., alleged: abortion by Edward Allred and/or Leslie Orleans and/or Wright at FPA May 10. 1978; incomplete abortion, “massive uterine bleeding necessitating further medical care.” (Orange County Superior Court Case No. 31-79-68)

P.T., alleged abortion by Edward Allred and/or Wright at Pregnancy Control Medical Group August 6, 1976; failure to diagnose ectopic pregnancy; Penny “suffered severe, acute pain, a ruptured tubal pregnancy, hemoperitoneum, shock, and a resulting total abdominal hysterectomy” August 20. (Orange County Superior Court Case No. 32-02-40)

P.C., alleged abortion performed October 5, 1982, when she was not actually pregnant. Suit names as co defendants Edward Allred, Soon Sohn, Wright, and Ruben Marmet. (LA County Superior Court Case No. NCC238673)

V.P., alleged: abortion March 2, 1980; failure to warn of risks; negligence resulting in “disabling injuries to her body and to her small bowel and uterus, requiring surgical repair.” (LA County Superior Court Case No. C347394)

D.B., alleged: abortion at Avalon by Edward Allred and/or Wright June 19, 1976; incomplete abortion; inadequate follow-up instruction and care; hemorrhage several days later necessitating hospitalization to prevent death and repair damage. (LA County Superior Court Case No. C188819)

Other suits include:

S.V., alleged improperly attended coming out of anesthesia following October 21, 1985 tubal ligation by Edward Allred and/or Wright; fell, struck by gurney, injured; post-op infection. (Orange County Superior Court Case No. 50-39-14)

P.B., alleged in 1976 suit failure to diagnose and treat, resulting in damages. (LA County Superior Court Case No. C148914)

L.G., alleged in 1974 suture of left ureter during hysterectomy; patient subsequently required cystouethroscopy, left retrograde pyelogram, and left uretero-neocystotomy, with reimplantation of the left ureter to the bladder, also continuing pain and suffering and need for medical care. (LA County Superior Court Case No. C 109353)

Note that these suits were uncovered in searches in Orange and Los Angeles counties; to my knowledge, nobody has yet done a search for suits against Allred or FPA in Fresno County.

Credit: Christina Dunigan

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