Pubdate: Tue, 24 Jul 2001 Source: State, The (SC) Copyright: 2001 The State Contact: http://www.thestate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/426 Author: Jeffrey Collins, The Associated Press HIGH COURT OVERTURNS CRACK MOM CONVICTION Technicality Cited By S.C. Justices; Fetal Abuse Issues Remain Unchanged The state Supreme Court overturned Brenda Peppers' conviction on charges she harmed her child by taking crack cocaine while pregnant. But Monday's ruling wasn't the complete victory the Greenwood County woman wanted. The justices unanimously agreed to toss aside Peppers' guilty plea to unlawful conduct toward a child because of a technicality, saying she only agreed to plead guilty if her case could be appealed to the high court. Such conditional pleas are not allowed under South Carolina law, the justices ruled in an unsigned opinion released Monday. The Supreme Court did not touch arguments by Peppers' attorney that South Carolina's law allowing women to be prosecuted under child abuse laws if they take drugs while pregnant and harm an otherwise viable fetus is unconstitutional. Attorney General Charlie Condon said he is pleased with the court's decision and thinks the case will be dropped. "If the goals of the prosecution have been met - if there has been successful drug treatment - I don't plan to prosecute this case again," Condon said. Peppers, who went into a month-long coma shortly after her daughter was stillborn, said she never used crack after she recovered. Peppers' lawyer, C. Rauch Wise, wanted the court to overturn its 1997 ruling in the case of Cornelia Whitner. Then, the justices ruled a viable fetus is considered a child and mothers could be charged with abuse if they took drugs when their unborn child could live outside the womb. "I'm delighted for Brenda Peppers," Wise said. "She's very deserving of getting rid of her criminal record." While Peppers' case appears to be over, Wise said other cases making their way through the court system should provide additional challenges to the South Carolina law. "The ultimate issue has not been resolved," he said. The issue received national attention after 24-year-old Regina McKnight, who gave birth to a stillborn child who tested positive for a cocaine byproduct, became the first woman ever convicted of homicide by child abuse charges in May. McKnight was sentenced to 12 years in prison. Women's rights groups and other national organizations unfairly painted South Carolina's law as a tool to punish mothers, Condon's spokesman Robb McBurney said. "The policy in South Carolina is not to put mothers in jail, but to get them help," McBurney said, pointing to Peppers' sentence of probation as proof. And South Carolina's law is in line with current thinking about drug treatment that forcing addicts into treatment often works. Condon said. In his brief before the court, Wise said no other state has followed South Carolina's lead in allowing mothers to be prosecuted for drug use. Women's advocates touted a study earlier this year in the Journal of the American Medical Association finding that using cocaine was about as harmful to a fetus as cigarette smoking and less harmful than heavy drinking. Wise also warned that the law in the Whitner case could allow prosecutors to try pregnant women for having a glass or two of wine with dinner or even gaining too much weight. McBurney called Wise's arguments "a parade of horribles" used to shoot down a sensible law. "None of those things have happened yet," McBurney said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth