St. Louis, Mo., Jun 19, 2019 / 16:49 pm
In a legal battle over the closure of Missouri's last functioning Planned Parenthood, state health department officials cited four botched abortions as part of the reason that they do not want to renew the clinic's license, according to reports from the AP.
The closure of the clinic would mean the closure of the last abortion clinic in the state. Last month, Planned Parenthood sued the state of Missouri after the health department declined to renew the clinic's license.
On Friday, June 14, the state's health department sent the St. Louis clinic and the court "documents, a letter and statement of deficiencies," the AP reported, which included details on the four botched abortions at the heart of the licensure dispute.
The records, which were published by pro-life group Operation Rescue in an expose, were ordered to be sealed by St. Louis Circuit Judge Michael Stelzer on Monday, June 17, after Planned Parenthood voiced concerns that the publication of the documents violated their patients' right to privacy, the AP reported.
William Koebel, a state health department official, told the AP that the records now sealed by the court documented the failed abortions of three patients, whose babies survived after the botched abortions, and required additional surgical or medical abortions to end the pregnancies. Koebel noted that one of the patients with a failed abortion developed sepsis, a serious bacterial infection of the blood stream.
A fourth patient's abortion at 21 weeks of pregnancy was completed at the clinic, but the patient was hospitalized afterward with "life threatening complications," Koebel told the AP. He also noted his concerns that some of the botched abortions were done by resident doctors, who have failed to comply with the state health department's investigation of the clinic.
In early June, Stelzer ruled that doctors, including doctors in residence, who were not currently employed by the St. Louis Planned Parenthood did not have to testify in the state's investigation of the clinic. Stelzer dismissed the subpoena for their interviews as an "undue burden" on those doctors.
Koebel told the AP that their cooperation is "imperative" for a full investigation.
"Refusal of health care providers to cooperate in the Department's investigations thwarts the Department's ability to conduct meaningful review of troubling instances of patient care, and obstructs the Department's ability to ensure that problems will not be repeated," Koebel said.
Lawyers representing the Planned Parenthood affiliate secured a restraining order in late May from Stelzer, which allows the clinic to continue operating while its licensure is disputed in court. The clinic's ability to operate is up for review again on June 21.
In a separate case, on Friday, June 14, St. Louis Circuit Court Judge David Dowd ruled that Missouri's legislature cannot cut funding from the Planned Parenthood clinic, after the clinic argued that it not only provided abortions, but other health care services, according to a local Fox News affiliate. Missouri Governor Mike Parson said the decision will be appealed.
Parson also recently signed a bill that punishes abortion doctors who perform abortions on a woman who is past eight weeks of pregnancy, with exceptions for medical emergencies which seriously threaten the life or quality of life of the mother. The law does not penalize women who obtain abortions.
Archbishop Robert Carlson of St. Louis called the eight-week abortion ban "a giant step forward for the pro-life movement."