Los Angeles fetus disposal scandal

Last updated

The Los Angeles fetus disposal scandal was the 1982 discovery of over 16,000 aborted fetuses being improperly stored at Malvin Weisberg's Woodland Hills, California, home and the ensuing legal battle regarding their disposal. It was called a "national tragedy" by then-president Ronald Reagan and inspired a song by pop singer Pat Boone, with the fetuses finally buried in 1985. No criminal charges were filed against any of the parties involved. [1] Weisberg had stored the specimens properly but had not disposed of them due to financial difficulties. [1]

Contents

Discovery

Malvin Weisberg had operated Medical Analytic Laboratories in Santa Monica from 1976 until March 1981. [2] [3] He purchased a 20-foot (6.1 m) storage container in 1980, delivering it to his Woodland Hills home and paying for it with a bounced check for $1700. [2] [4] The container was repossessed on February 3, 1982, by the Martin Container Company, based in the Wilmington area of Los Angeles. [4] The company opened the container on the following day, discovering the fetuses, which were stored in formaldehyde. [4]

The initial press conference, on February 5, 1982, by the Los Angeles County Health Department said up to 500 fetuses were found. [4] On February 24, 1982, the count of fetuses was raised to approximately 2000, with the majority of them being from the storage container and 200–300 from Weisberg's garage. [5] [6] [7]

The tally of fetuses was estimated at "up to 17,000" in May 1982, [8] and was later finally set at 16,431. [9] A count of 193 fetuses were evidently over 20 weeks' gestation, with the oldest almost 30 weeks. [9]

State law required the fetuses to be cremated or buried "within a reasonable time". [10]

Source and age of the fetuses

The fetuses resulted from pregnancies terminated by licensed physicians, clinics and hospitals who contracted with Medical Analytic Laboratories for pathology testing and disposal of the fetuses. [9] [11]

The Los Angeles County District Attorney, John Van de Kamp, said the fetuses would be individually examined and charges would be filed against the doctors if fetuses were over the 20-week gestation limit allowed by California law at the time. [9] [12] Officials found 193 fetuses that appeared to be over the 20-week limit. [9] Van de Kamp wanted to turn the remaining fetuses over to groups who would perform memorial services for them. [9]

In May 1982, California Attorney General George Deukmejian stated the gestation limit of the 1967 California abortion law was considered unenforceable because of conflicts with the 23-week Roe v. Wade ruling in 1973, but fetuses could be individually examined to determine viability, which was the legal limit. [9] [12] [13] In late May, Van de Kamp stated every fetus would be examined to determine if the fetus was aborted illegally. [8]

In 1982 President Ronald Reagan wrote a letter advocating for memorial services "for these children", referring to it as "this national tragedy". [11]

The matter came in front of the judge because of a lawsuit filed against Van de Kamp by Carol Downer of the Los Angeles Feminist Women's Health Center and the American Civil Liberties Union. John Lynch, the chief deputy county counsel stated it was inappropriate to enjoin Van de Kamp, who was simply a "man in the middle", and that the lawsuit should be filed against abortion rights groups instead. [14] In June 1982, Los Angeles County Superior Court judge Dickran Tevrizian issued a temporary restraining order against Van de Kamp to prevent the unconstitutional release of the fetuses to groups for burial, but allowed him to legally dispose of the fetuses, called "vague" by John Lynch, the chief deputy county counsel. [10] [14]

In October 1982, Van de Kamp petitioned the court to allow the burial of all but the 193 late-term fetuses in common graves at Valhalla Memorial Park Cemetery, which offered free burial. [9] [15] The fetuses were not buried at Valhalla, which later stated it offered the burial plot because "the right-to-life groups came to us, and we said we wouldn't endorse any political viewpoint, but we thought that interring the bodies was a proper thing to do as a service". [16]

In December 1982, Los Angeles Superior Court judge Eli Chernow ruled the 20-week limit was unconstitutional, also ruling that Van de Kamp could bury the fetuses and anti-abortion groups could hold onsite memorial services. [17]

By July 1983, the district attorney was Robert Philibosian, who stated he preferred a "dignified burial" and would not file charges. [9] [12]

In July 1984, the California Courts of Appeal overturned Superior Court of Los Angeles County judge Eli Chernow, ruling the fetuses could not be buried as human remains, which was a win for abortion rights groups and feminists. The case had been appealed by Carol Downer of the Los Angeles Feminist Women's Health Center and the American Civil Liberties Union and was denounced by the California Pro-Life Medical Association, the Catholic League. The appealing parties argued that allowing anti-abortion groups to bury the remains violated the separation of church and state. The Court's opinion stated "it is clear from the record that the Catholic League is a religious organization which regards a fetus as a human being and abortion as murder. While this specific belief may well cross sectarian lines... any state action showing a preference for this belief will be strictly scrutinized and must be invalidated". Since fetal remains are normally incinerated without ceremony, there was no reason to do otherwise with these fetuses, stating "We perceive that the intended burial ceremony will enlist the prestige and power of the state. This is constitutionally forbidden." However, religious services could hold concurrent onsite memorial services, which was praised by U.S. President Ronald Reagan in a letter to the California Pro-Life Medical Association, admiring their decision "to hold a memorial service for these children". [12] [18] [19] Philibosian announced he would appeal the ruling allowing onsite memorial services. [20] [21] In October 1984, U.S. Supreme Court justice William Rehnquist refused to overturn the state appeals court ruling allowing the religious ceremonies. [19] This was officially upheld by the Supreme Court in March 1985. [22] [23]

Anti-abortion service

In May 1985, singer Pat Boone announced he recorded a song titled "Sixteen Thousand Faces" about the incident, first played at an anti-abortion memorial service for the fetuses at Live Oak Memorial Park in Monrovia, where a granite tombstone was left with the inscription "For all those deprived of life and human love through abortion". In response, the California Abortion Rights Action League director said the service and marker "[humanized] fetuses when they deny the humanity of women already born". [24] [25] The ceremony was attended by "several hundred anti-abortionists", including Representative Bob Dornan and the Feminists for Life group. At the time, the fetuses had not been disposed of. [26]

Disposition

In August 1985, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors ordered the fetuses be turned over to the Guerra-Gutirrez-Alexander Mortuary for burial. [27] Per the court's order, the mortuary was selected because they did not have a religious affiliation. [28] At the time, it was noted by the Los Angeles County Department of Health Services that the fetuses had been kept in "five pine boxes". The department assured ACLU that there were no identifying marks on canisters containing the fetuses, and ACLU stated they would not object to a secular burial. [27] While ACLU would not object, the Feminist Women's Health Center petitioned the Los Angeles Superior Court to block the burial, but the courts refused. [28]

The disposition occurred on October 6, 1985, with the fetuses in six pine boxes, which were buried at the Odd Fellows Cemetery in Boyle Heights. The anti-abortion group Feminists for Life didn't plan a full memorial service since they held a service in May, but the Americans Committed to Loving the Unwanted held a service. The Feminist Women's Health Center was dismayed over the public burial. [29] About 250 individuals attended the service, including County Supervisor Michael D. Antonovich, who read a message from Ronald Reagan but stressed his attendance was in an unofficial capacity. Reagan's message stated "Just as the terrible toll of Gettysburg can be traced to a tragic decision of a divided Supreme Court, so also can these deaths we mourn. Once again a whole category of human beings has been ruled outside the protection of the law by a court ruling which clashed with our deepest moral convictions." Others in attendance were Representative Bob Dornan, state Senate President David A. Roberti, and state Representative Joseph Montoya. The anti-abortion group Americans Committed to Loving the Unwanted organized the service, including requesting a three-man Marine Corps color guard, who placed an American flag on a box and stood at attention throughout the service. [30] [31]

Financial fallout

Weisberg's Medical Analytical Laboratories received nearly $175,000 in Medi-Cal payments, with $88,000 coming from pathology tests on aborted fetuses. Of this, half of it ($44,000) was paid federally through the United States Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). By the Hyde Amendment, this money was ineligible for testing on pre-abortion or post-abortion tissue, which meant the state of California would need to pay back federal funds claimed by Weisberg and by any other laboratories, according to HHS inspector Richard P. Kusserow. Kusserow also stated "prior to its closing in April, 1981, [Medical Analytical Laboratories] had routinely submitted questionable billings under the Medi-Cal program, using an erroneous billing code.... the case lacked criminal prosecutive merit due to a lack of proof that the false billings were intentional. Because the laboratory was out of business, and its owner had declared bankruptcy, there were no assets against which to proceed for civil recovery". [32]

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Michael Reagan</span> American television personality and journalist

Michael Edward Reagan is an American conservative political commentator, Republican strategist, and former radio talk show host. He is the adopted son of former U.S. president Ronald Reagan and his first wife, actress Jane Wyman. He works as a columnist for Newsmax.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ronald Reagan Presidential Library</span> Presidential library in Simi Valley, California

The Ronald Reagan Presidential Library is the presidential library and burial site of Ronald Reagan, the 40th president of the United States (1981–1989), and his wife Nancy Reagan. Located in Simi Valley, California, the library is administered by the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">William P. Clark Jr.</span> American judge

William Patrick Clark Jr. was an American rancher, judge, and public servant who served under President Ronald Reagan as the Deputy Secretary of State from 1981 to 1982, United States National Security Advisor from 1982 to 1983, and the Secretary of the Interior from 1983 to 1985.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ronald M. George</span> American judge

Ronald Marc George is an American jurist. He previously served as the 27th Chief Justice of California from 1996 to 2011. Governor Pete Wilson appointed George as an associate justice of the Supreme Court in 1991 and elevated George to Chief Justice in 1996.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Grand View Memorial Park Cemetery</span> Cemetery in Glendale, California

Grand View Memorial Park and Crematory is a historic cemetery located in Glendale, California, in the United States. Established in 1884 as Glendale Cemetery, it changed its name to Grand View Memorial Park in 1919. The cemetery was the focus of a scandal that began in 2005, during which the operators were accused of leaving thousands of cremated remains unburied. New owners changed the name to Grand View Memorial Park and Crematory in 2015 and began a restoration of the property.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Evergreen Cemetery (Los Angeles)</span> Cemetery in Boyle Heights, California

Evergreen Memorial Park & Crematory is a cemetery in the East Side neighborhood of Boyle Heights, Los Angeles, California.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">John Van de Kamp</span> American politician

John Kalar Van de Kamp was an American politician and lawyer who served as Los Angeles County District Attorney from 1975 until 1981, and then as the 28th Attorney General of California from 1983 until 1991.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anthony Beilenson</span> American attorney and politician

Anthony Charles Beilenson was an American lawyer and politician who served as a Democratic Congressman from Southern California. He served ten terms in the United States House of Representatives from 1977 until 1997.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Carol Downer</span> American feminist lawyer and non-fiction author

Carol Downer is an American feminist lawyer and non-fiction author who focused her career on abortion rights and women's health around the world. She was involved in the creation of the self-help movement and the first self-help clinic in LA, which later became a model and inspiration for dozens of self-help clinics across the United States.

<i>The Silent Scream</i> 1984 film

The Silent Scream is a 1984 anti-abortion film created and narrated by Bernard Nathanson, a former abortion provider who had become an anti-abortion activist. It was produced by Crusade for Life, Inc., an evangelical anti-abortion organization, and has been described as a pro-life propaganda film. The film depicts the abortion process via ultrasound and shows an abortion taking place in the uterus. During the abortion process, the fetus is described as appearing to make outcries of pain and discomfort. The video has been a popular tool used by the anti-abortion campaign in arguing against abortion, but it has been criticized as misleading by members of the medical community.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Lorraine Rothman</span> American activist

Evelyn Lorraine Rothman was an American activist. She was a founding member of the feminist self-help clinic movement. In 1971, she invented the Del-Em menstrual extraction kit to make abortions available to women before Roe v. Wade. She was an advocate of self-induced abortions.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">National Organization for Women</span> American feminist organization

The National Organization for Women (NOW) is an American feminist organization. Founded in 1966, it is legally a 501(c)(4) social welfare organization. The organization consists of 550 chapters in all 50 U.S. states and in Washington, D.C. It is the largest feminist organization in the United States with around 500,000 members. NOW is regarded as one of the main liberal feminist organizations in the US, and primarily lobbies for gender equality within the existing political system. NOW campaigns for constitutional equality, economic justice, reproductive rights, LGBTQIA+ rights and racial justice, and against violence against women.

Ronald Reagan was the 40th president of the United States from 1981 to 1989. Previously, he was the 33rd governor of California from 1967 to 1975 and acted in Hollywood films from 1937 to 1964, the same year he energized the American conservative movement. Reagan's basic foreign policy was to equal and surpass the Soviet Union in military strength, and put it on the road to what he called "the ash heap of history". By 1985, he began to cooperate closely with Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev, with whom he became friends and negotiated large-scale disarmament projects. The Cold War was fading away and suddenly ended as the Soviets lost control of Eastern Europe almost overnight in October 1989, nine months after Reagan was replaced in the White House by his vice president, George H. W. Bush, who was following Reagan's policies. The dissolution of the Soviet Union took place in December 1991. In terms of the Reagan Doctrine, he promoted military, financial, and diplomatic support for anti-communist insurgencies in Afghanistan, Nicaragua, and numerous other countries. For the most part, local communist power collapsed when the Soviet Union collapsed.

Odd Fellows Cemetery is a cemetery in the Boyle Heights neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. It is notable for specializing in cremation of obese individuals, especially those over 400 pounds (180 kg).

Albin Rhomberg is an American anti-abortion activist and physicist based in Sacramento, California.

In 2015, an anti-abortion organization named the Center for Medical Progress (CMP) released several videos that had been secretly recorded. Members of the CMP posed as representatives of a biotechnology company in order to gain access to both meetings with abortion providers and abortion facilities. The videos showed how abortion providers made fetal tissue available to researchers, although no problems were found with the legality of the process. All of the videos were found to be altered, according to analysis by Fusion GPS and its co-founder Glenn R. Simpson, a former investigative reporter for The Wall Street Journal. The CMP disputed this finding, attributing the alterations to the editing out of "bathroom breaks and waiting periods". CMP had represented a longer version of the tapes as being "complete", as well as a shorter, edited version. The analysis by Fusion GPS concluded that the longer version was also edited, with skips and missing footage. Nonetheless, the videos attracted widespread media coverage; after the release of the first video, conservative lawmakers in Congress singled out Planned Parenthood and began to push bills that would strip the organization of federal family planning funding. No such attempts by Congress to cut federal family planning money from Planned Parenthood have become law. Conservative politicians in several states have also used this as an opportunity to cut or attempt to cut family planning funding at the state level.

Fran Avallone (1937–2003), born Frances Janet Weinstein, was an American abortion rights advocate. She was director of New Jersey Right to Choose as well as Choice New Jersey, a coalition of 30 abortion rights groups.

Abortion in California is legal up to the point of fetal viability. An abortion ban was in place by 1900, and by 1950, it was a criminal offense for a woman to have an abortion. In 1962, the American Law Institute published their model penal code, as it applied to abortions, with three circumstances where they believed a physician could justifiably perform an abortion, and California adopted a version of this code. In 2002, the California State Legislature passed a law guaranteeing women the right to have an abortion "prior to viability of the fetus, or when the abortion is necessary to protect the life or health of the woman". In 2022, California voters overwhelmingly approved Proposition 1, which amended the Constitution of California to explicitly protect the right to abortion and contraception by a margin of 33.76%.

Box v. Planned Parenthood of Indiana and Kentucky, Inc., No. 18-483, 587 U.S. ___, 139 S.Ct. 1780 (2019), was a United States Supreme Court case dealing with the constitutionality of a 2016 anti-abortion law passed in the state of Indiana. Indiana's law sought to ban abortions performed solely on the basis of the fetus' gender, race, ethnicity, or disabilities. Lower courts had blocked enforcement of the law for violating a woman's right to abortion under privacy concerns within the Fourteenth Amendment, as previously found in the landmark cases Roe v. Wade and Planned Parenthood v. Casey. The lower courts also blocked enforcement of another portion of the law that required the disposal of aborted fetuses through burial or cremation. The per curiam decision by the Supreme Court overturned the injunction on the fetal disposal portion of the law, but otherwise did not challenge or confirm the lower courts' ruling on the non-discrimination clauses, leaving these in place.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">1982 California Attorney General election</span>

The 1982 California Attorney General election was held on November 2, 1982. Democratic nominee John Van de Kamp defeated Republican nominee George Nicholson with 52.83% of the vote.

References

  1. 1 2 Raimundo, Jeff (March 19, 1985). "High court stymies LA burial of fetuses".
  2. 1 2 Blake, Gene (11 February 1982). "Secret Meeting Set in Fetus Discovery Case". Los Angeles Times . p. SD_A13.
  3. "Meeting on Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . 18 February 1982. p. D4.
  4. 1 2 3 4 Michaelson, Judith (6 February 1982). "500 Fetuses Found in Storage". Los Angeles Times . p. B6.
  5. "Officials Find 200 to 400 More Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . 24 February 1982. p. A3.
  6. Jacobs, Paul (26 February 1982). "Legality of State Abortion Law Doubted: Discovery of 2,000 Fetuses Raises Issue of Validity of Prohibitions". Los Angeles Times . p. B1.
  7. "2,000 fetuses linked to out-of-business laboratory". Lakeland Ledger . Associated Press. 25 February 1982. p. 19.
  8. 1 2 Jones, Jack (27 May 1982). "Each Stored Fetus to Be Examined: L.A. District Attorney to Decide Whether to File Charges". Los Angeles Times . p. OC4.
  9. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Rohrlich, Ted (20 August 1983). "D.A. Will Not File Charges in Deaths of 16,431 Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . p. 1.
  10. 1 2 "Depoliticizing the Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . 11 June 1982. p. D6.
  11. 1 2 Hager, Philip (19 March 1985). "Court Clears the Way for Disposal of Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . p. SD3.
  12. 1 2 3 4 Rohrlich, Ted (20 August 1983). "L.A. County Won't Prosecute in Abortions: Court Fight Still Being Waged on How to Dispose of 16,431 Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . p. A6.
  13. Ingram, Carl; Jacobs, Paul (11 May 1982). "Abortion Prosecution Possible-Deukmejian: Opinion Clears Way for Van de Kamp to File Charges in Woodland Hills Case". Los Angeles Times . p. OC_A1.
  14. 1 2 Oliver, Myrna (23 June 1982). "Release of Fetuses for Rites Prohibited: Judge's Injunction Forbids Van de Kamp to Allow Their Use in Religious Services". Los Angeles Times . p. B3.
  15. Rohrlich, Ted (1 October 1982). "Permission Sought for Burial of Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . p. OC_A4.
  16. Bloom, Stephen (2 September 1985). "Valhalla Cemetery Records History of Famous, Forgotten". Los Angeles Times . p. V_A6.
  17. Oliver, Myrna (22 December 1982). "Judge Rejects Abortion Bar at 20 Weeks". Los Angeles Times . p. A1.
  18. Blake, Gene (3 July 1984). "Appeal Court Bars Disputed Plan to Bury 16,000 Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . p. C1.
  19. 1 2 "The Region: U.S. Supreme Court...". Los Angeles Times . 12 October 1984. p. OC2.
  20. "The Region". Los Angeles Times . 10 July 1984. p. SD2.
  21. Hernandez, Marita (28 September 1984). "County Will Take Fetus Issue to U.S. High Court". Los Angeles Times . p. D1.
  22. "L.A. County Loses Plea to Bury 16,500 Fetuses (UPI)". Los Angeles Times . 18 March 1985. p. A2.
  23. Hager, Philip (19 March 1985). "Court Clears the Way for Disposal of Fetuses". Los Angeles Times .
  24. "Boone Song Inspired by Fetus Protest". Los Angeles Times . 14 May 1985. p. OC17.
  25. Jalon, Allan (14 May 1985). "Fetuses Left Unburied Prompt Song by Pat Boone". Los Angeles Times . p. V_A6.
  26. Baker, Bob (20 May 1985). "Several Hundred Anti-Abortionists Attend Service for Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . p. C2.
  27. 1 2 McGarry, T.W. (28 August 1985). "County Orders Burial of Controversial Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . p. V_A6.
  28. 1 2 Townsend, Dorothy (14 September 1985). "Feminist Center Challenges Planned Burial of Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . p. V_A8.
  29. Jalon, Allan (29 September 1985). "Controversial Fetuses to Be Buried Oct. 6: 3-Year Battle Over Interment to End in East L.A. Cemetery". Los Angeles Times . p. SD25.
  30. McGarry, TW (7 October 1985). "Fetuses Buried-With Hymns, Prayers". Los Angeles Times . p. A3.
  31. "Aborted Fetuses Get Religious Burial Reagan Sends Message To Ceremony In Los Angeles". Orlando Sentinel . 7 October 1985. Retrieved 7 June 2011.
  32. Jackson, Robert (29 May 1983). "State May Owe U.S. Millions for Tests on Fetuses". Los Angeles Times . p. A12.