Pubdate: Sat, 16 Jun 2001 Source: Charlotte Observer (NC) Copyright: 2001 The Charlotte Observer Contact: http://www.charlotte.com/observer/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/78 Author: Jeffrey Collins, Associated Press PREGNANCY AND COCAINE Mom Fights Drug-Abuse Law In Court After Conviction In Death Of Unborn Child, Ex-Addict Wants To See Policy Change GREENWOOD -- Brenda Peppers had already lost her daughter, born dead. In a coma after her labor, a crack-addicted Peppers struggled to live and doctors had to revive her four times in six weeks. Peppers never smoked crack again after her miracle recovery. But nearly two years later, prosecutors charged her with abusing her unborn child by taking cocaine while pregnant. She didn't think it was fair to punish her further, but Peppers accepted a plea agreement at the time because she would only get two years' probation and could avoid the media attention of a trial. Now the 35-year-old Greenwood County woman is fighting the law because she thinks her battle can help other women. Peppers' lawyer, C. Rauch Wise, will go before the state Supreme Court on Wednesday to ask justices to overturn their previous decision allowing prosecutors to charge women who take cocaine when their fetuses can live outside the womb. He plans to point out no other state has followed the state's lead. The attorney general's office will argue the same reasoning still applies from the court's 1997 decision saying a viable fetus is considered a child and mothers could be charged with abuse if they took drugs once their unborn child could live outside the womb. Punishing pregnant women for illegal drug use has been a sticky issue in South Carolina for more than a decade. In March 2000, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled hospitals cannot test pregnant women for drugs without the women's consent and then turn the results over to police. "The South Carolina Supreme Court stands alone among the 50 states in permitting the prosecution, conviction and punishment for child endangerment of pregnant drug users for ingesting substances on which they are dependent," San Francisco lawyer Daniel Abrahamson wrote in a friend of the court brief on behalf of seven medical associations. Supporters, including state Attorney General Charlie Condon, say the law is part of the state's efforts to protect unborn children. "I am proud of having started this fight on behalf of innocent, unborn children killed through the mother's use of illegal drugs," Condon said when 24-year-old Regina McKnight was sentenced to serve 12 years in prison after giving birth to a stillborn baby who tested positive for a cocaine byproduct. Horry County's chief prosecutor said he tried McKnight, a mother of three, on homicide by child abuse charges because she should have known better than to take drugs while pregnant. "Why should a viable fetus, able to live outside the womb, be treated any different than a month-old infant?" prosecutor Greg Hembree asked. "If you contribute to killing a child that can live, you should face the consequences." After McKnight was sentenced, the phone started ringing at the office of Wyndi Anderson, the executive director of the S.C. Advocates for Pregnant Women. "People across the country can't believe South Carolina can do this without providing a better network of drug treatment," Anderson said. McKnight, who Anderson said has the equivalent of a sixth-grade education, first smoked crack cocaine the day of her mother's funeral. "She had no mechanism to cope with her grief," Anderson said. Anderson and other opponents of the S.C. law wonder if prosecutors would be as tough on a middle class woman who smokes cigarettes or drinks heavily. Dr. Deborah Frank, an author of a recent study on the topic in the Journal of the American Medical Association, calls the state's prosecution of mothers who abuse drugs "irresponsible public health policy" and said it could mean an increase in infant mortality as addicted women avoid prenatal care because they fear prosecution. Peppers does not think the cocaine she used for more than a year to fight depression killed her daughter, Kayla Marie Odell. Peppers had HELLP syndrome, a rare condition that threatens the life of the mother and child, according to the HELLP Syndrome Society. Peppers said she'll be sitting in the audience when the justices hear her case Wednesday, determined to keep prosecutors from going after someone else addicted and unable to find help. "I never want another woman to ever go through what I have had to go through," she said. - --- MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe