Pubdate: Thu, 28 Jun 2001
Source: Christian Science Monitor (US)
Copyright: 2001 The Christian Science Publishing Society
Contact:  http://www.csmonitor.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/83
Author: Patrik Jonsson

SOUTH CAROLINA TESTS THE BOUNDS OF A FETUS'S RIGHTS

Court will decide if state can file charges of abuse against pregnant 
women on drugs.

In a South Carolina courtroom, a case is playing out that weighs the 
rights of a mother and her fetus - with potentially far-reaching 
ramifications.

Brenda Kay Peppers was arrested for child abuse two years ago after 
giving birth to a stillborn baby with cocaine in its bloodstream. She 
was charged under an unusual South Carolina law that allows 
prosecutors to file abuse, and even murder, charges against 
drug-addicted women who are pregnant.

Ms. Pepper accepted a plea bargain in 1999 giving her two years 
probation. But now she is back fighting the law itself before the 
South Carolina Supreme Court.

In many ways, her case is serving as a litmus test for other states 
considering fetal rights' laws - which some women's groups say are 
simply a smokescreen for attempts to eventually legislate around 
abortion rights.

Ultimately, the Carolina court may have to grapple with the difficult 
question of how to balance the rights of the mother with the rights 
the state has assigned to the unborn child.

It's not surprising that the case is surfacing in South Carolina. No 
other state has gone as far as in allowing criminal prosecution of 
neglectful moms. Its attorney general, Charlie Condon, has crusaded 
for 12 years on behalf of unborn babies.

His efforts mirror policies and laws in communities from Wisconsin to 
Florida. Ten years after the uproar over "crack babies," the movement 
to protect the unborn through so-called fetal rights laws is gaining 
momentum.

"What you've got across the country is a movement toward a state 
apparatus that can control women's lives when they are pregnant," 
says Barbara Risman, co-chair of the Council for Contemporary 
Families in Raleigh, N.C.

History of Fetal Laws

In 1970, California became the first state to address "fetal rights," 
but excluded mothers from culpability. South Carolina, though, has 
been the most aggressive in moving on the issue: Last month, a jury 
there became the first ever to convict a woman - Regina McKnight - 
for the murder of her cocaine-infused fetus.

Another woman was recently arrested for drinking while pregnant. In a 
third case, the parents of a 13-year-old who gave birth to a 
stillborn child were arrested for failing to provide "fetal care."

About one-third of the states are following South Carolina's 
thinking, if not its tough protocol. Earlier this year, Wisconsin 
criminalized in utero child abuse, though it didn't force doctors to 
make the call to police. Some 18 states have added civil laws that 
extend rights to unborn babies. While they won't send a mom to jail, 
they will use the laws to take the child from the home after birth.

As a result of this trend, some 200 women in 30 states have been 
charged for violating some kind of "fetal rights." A study of 178 of 
those women by the American Civil Liberties Union showed they mostly 
came from South Carolina and Florida - specifically from two poor, 
mostly African-American counties where drug abuse is a major problem.

South Carolina officials hail the moves by other states as evidence 
that America is starting to pay attention to the rights of the child 
in the womb.

Critics, however, argue that the whole theory of women's reproductive 
freedom is at stake. They point out that South Carolina officials 
have said in open court that women who choose to have a late abortion 
may one day face the death penalty.

The Idea Is Child Protection

The idea, however, is not to criminalize women, but to make sure that 
those who have drug problems seek treatment, says Robb McBurney, a 
spokesman for Attorney General Condon. "Unfortunately, [critics] 
don't see it as a child-protection issue," he says. "They see it as 
some kind of erosion of abortion rights."

Although many pregnant women have been confronted about their drug 
abuse and ordered to seek treatment, only a "handful" have been 
actually hauled into court and ended up in jail, Mr. McBurney says. 
"We give them every chance to straighten up. To end up in jail, you 
basically have to break into jail."

But not everyone agrees the strong-arm tactic is working the way 
supporters say it's intended.

In South Carolina, instead of seeking more help, fewer and fewer 
women are seeking prenatal care - likely caused by a fear of getting 
busted at the clinic, critics say. At the same time, South Carolina 
spends less money than any state toward prenatal care for 
drug-addicted moms.

Two Litigants?

Inevitably, the South Carolina approach on fetal rights is 
reinvigorating the abortion debate. So far, most states still count a 
pregnant mother as one citizen, not two. But some legal observers say 
that, in effect, these laws create two litigants within the same body 
- - sometimes with opposing interests.

If fetuses gain any more rights, then anti-abortion prosecutors will 
effectively have created a loophole around Roe v. Wade, some women's 
rights advocates fear. "South Carolina is very frightening in that it 
encourages other states to follow suit through criminal and civil 
laws that devalue pregnant women's personhood," says Lynn Paltrow, 
executive director of the National Advocates for Pregnant Women in 
Washington.

So far, the US Supreme Court has declined to take up the "unborn 
victims" debate, though experts on both sides say it will likely have 
to make a distinction at some point.

The high court, however, has had a few words to say about some of 
South Carolina's methods. In March, the court essentially said that 
the state can no longer use doctors to act as police agents in search 
of drug-addicted pregnant moms, a practice that had become common in 
hospitals from Columbia to Charleston.

The South Carolina Supreme Court, which heard oral arguments in the 
Pepper case last week, is expected to rule within the next two months.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Josh Sutcliffe