Pubdate: Mon, 10 Jul 2006 Source: Sun News (Myrtle Beach, SC) Copyright: 2006 Sun Publishing Co. Contact: http://www.myrtlebeachonline.com/mld/sunnews/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/987 Note: apparent 150 word limit on LTEs Author: Rick Montgomery /McClatchy Newspapers Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/decrim.htm (Decrim/Legalization) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/meth.htm (Methamphetamine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/women.htm (Women) FETUS-RIGHTS STATUTES HOLD MOTHERS LIABLE In Arkansas, lawmakers are considering making it a crime for a pregnant woman to take a drag off a cigarette. In Utah, a woman serves 18 months' probation for child endangerment after refusing to undergo a Caesarean section to save her twins, one of whom died. In South Carolina, Regina McKnight is serving a 12-year prison sentence for killing her unborn child by smoking crack, as jurors saw it. They needed 15 minutes to deliberate, and the U.S. Supreme Court let the verdict stand. And July 1 in Alabama, Brody's Law took effect. It enables prosecutors to level two charges against anyone who attacks a pregnant woman and harms her fetus. Common-sense measures to protect America's most helpless citizens-to-be ... or something else? Abortion-rights groups see this revived wave of "fetal protectionism" as a setup to make a fetus a person entitled to constitutional rights, contrary to how the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Roe v. Wade. But anti-abortion forces - plus some groups with no stake in the fetal-rights debate - say it's a no-brainer that society do whatever it can to keep developing babies safe and healthy. "It's an economic issue and a public-health issue," said state Rep. Bob Mathis, an Arkansas Democrat who touts a record backing abortion rights and recently floated the idea of a smoking ban during pregnancy. A tragedy in Wichita, Kan., last month underscored the intractable politics at work. The killing of 14-year-old Chelsea Brooks, who was nine months pregnant, became a political cause celebre after her family learned that the state could not file homicide charges in the death of Alexa - the daughter Chelsea was carrying. Three people, including her boyfriend, have been charged in Chelsea's killing, which authorities say was a murder for hire. Legislative inaction this year on a fetal homicide bill kept Kansas from joining more than 30 states, including Missouri, where murder laws include the unborn as legal victims. The anti-abortion group Kansans For Life leapt on the controversy, accusing Senate moderates and Gov. Kathleen Sebelius of "kowtowing" to abortion-rights forces by stalling a bill that might have given Chelsea's family the justice it sought. Critics of fetal-rights legislation see a slippery slope in the making. In some states, prosecutors have turned such laws against mothers whose behavior - typically methamphetamine or crack use - may have contributed to a stillbirth or to costly birth defects. Taken further, could authorities charge pregnant women who reject a doctor's advice to take prenatal vitamins and then miscarry? How about banning them from playing sports? And why not punish alcoholic men whose addiction, studies show, could affect sperm and produce birth defects? "What we're seeing is a political trend in which the fetuses are coming first, and the rights of women ... are coming last," said Lynn M. Paltrow, executive director of the National Advocates for Pregnant Women. "I think 30 years of anti-abortion rhetoric - 'women killing their babies' - has led to a moral vilification that doesn't just stick to those who seek to terminate a pregnancy. It's spreading to all pregnant women." The Center for Reproductive Rights says six states passed fetal homicide bills last year, but others have had them on the books for decades. In California, fetal homicide laws date to before the legalization of abortion and were successfully leveled against Scott Peterson, convicted in the well-publicized murder of his wife, Laci, and the son she was carrying, Connor. Abortion foes in 2004 cheered President Bush when he signed the Unborn Victims of Violence Act - the Laci and Connor Law - providing protections for fetuses harmed in the commission of a federal crime. Still, many courts have been uneasy about how far fetal rights can go. Saying prosecutors overreached, a Texas appeals court last year unanimously threw out the convictions of two women charged under the state's Prenatal Protection Act for "delivering" cocaine and methamphetamine to their babies through the umbilical cord. "It makes sense that if a woman's right to privacy encompasses decisions regarding procreation, such as contraception and abortion, it should also include decisions regarding health during pregnancy," wrote Chicago lawyer Erin N. Linder in the September issue of University of Illinois Law Review. Even Mathis, the Arkansas legislator, harbors doubts about the state's ability to enforce an anti-smoking law. "The more I think about it ... you might end up with a fat lip" if police approach a smoker who is overweight but not pregnant, he said. - --- MAP posted-by: Beth Wehrman