Pubdate: Tue, 07 Oct 2003 Source: State, The (SC) Copyright: 2003 The State Contact: http://www.thestate.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/426 Author: Rick Brundrett COURT REJECTS APPEAL OF DRUG-USING MOM Horry County Woman Was Convicted In 2001 Of Killing Her Fetus By Using Cocaine Pregnant women who use illegal drugs likely will not face a new wave of prosecutions in South Carolina despite a U.S. Supreme Court ruling Monday clearing the way, state prosecutors said. The nation's top court without comment declined to hear the appeal of Regina McKnight, an Horry County woman convicted in 2001 of killing her fetus by using cocaine. The court's decision, in effect, upholds her conviction. In May, McKnight asked the high court to overturn a sharply divided January ruling by the S.C. Supreme Court. She is serving a 12-year prison sentence for homicide by child abuse - the stiffest penalty, her lawyers say, for any South Carolina woman convicted of harming her unborn child. McKnight was prosecuted based on an earlier S.C. Supreme Court ruling that said a fetus that can survive outside the womb is a person under state child abuse and neglect laws. She was charged after giving birth to a stillborn, 5-pound girl in May 1999. The gestational age was estimated at between 34 and 37 weeks. More than 70 women have been prosecuted statewide since 1989 for using drugs while pregnant, according to the National Advocates for Pregnant Women, a New York organization. Critics say the latest court rulings will allow prosecutors to target pregnant women who drink or smoke too much, not just those who use illegal drugs. They also contend it will discourage women from seeking prenatal care. "I'm afraid that it opens the door to more legal experimentation that can hurt more people in the process," said Donny Brock, of Charleston, president-elect of the S.C. Association of Alcohol and Drug Abuse Counselors. But solicitors surveyed Monday by The State generally said they would prosecute only those pregnant women who use illegal drugs, and only if they refused treatment for their addiction. "The preferable thing to me is if you got someone hooked on coke and they're charged, run them through drug court ... try to use the treatment aspect as much as you can," said Donnie Myers, the solicitor for Lexington, Saluda, McCormick and Edgefield counties. Myers couldn't recall a case in which his office prosecuted a drug-addicted pregnant woman, adding any future decisions would be made on a case-by-case basis. S.C. Attorney General Henry McMaster said Monday he supports a policy started by his Republican predecessor, Charlie Condon, to prosecute pregnant, drug-addicted women who show "extreme indifference" to their unborn children. "People must be accountable for their actions," he said. "It is common knowledge now as to the effects of drugs ... on unborn children." But McMaster, a Republican, said his office does not plan to take away control of those cases from local prosecutors, as was done at times under Condon. "That is not a procedure we invoke very often, and we don't intend to invoke it here," he said. Condon, a U.S. Senate candidate, couldn't be reached Monday. Barney Giese, the solicitor for Richland and Kershaw counties, said Monday his office has prosecuted only a handful of such cases since 1997, when Talitha Garrick pleaded guilty to involuntary manslaughter in the 1995 stillborn death of her 38-week fetus. Garrick was the first woman in South Carolina to be convicted of killing her unborn child by smoking crack cocaine. She was placed on probation. But Garrick's isn't the typical case handled by his office, said Giese, the newly elected president of the S.C. Solicitors Association. "We have a protocol," he said. "If we find out (pregnant women are using illegal drugs), we get them counseling most of the time and get them off (the drugs)." Some prosecutors have taken a tougher stance. For example, Robert Ariail, the solicitor for Greenville and Pickens counties, said pregnant women who are referred to drug court in his jurisdiction cannot have their charges dropped even if they complete treatment programs. Druanne White, the solicitor for Anderson and Oconee counties, said she will prosecute pregnant women who are first-time drug offenders if they do not voluntarily come to authorities. In many cases, she pointed out, drug-addicted mothers have more than one drug-addicted child. "Injecting an illegal drug is illegal," White said. "I don't understand the desire to protect mothers who are totally unfit over innocent children." Still, White acknowledged her office has prosecuted few such cases in recent years and doesn't expect any immediate changes in light of Monday's ruling. She added that, even in cases she decides to prosecute, she generally would recommend court-ordered treatment programs instead of jail time. Brock, of the state association of alcohol and drug abuse counselors, said his group wants more treatment programs. He cited the costs of McKnight's trial and appeals. "Look at how many drug-addicted mothers we could have treated with the money that has been spent on both sides," he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens