Source: https://personhood.org/2019/12/04/can-a-woman-be-prosecuted-for-aborting-her-child/
Timestamp: 2020-04-07 00:57:26
Document Index: 615666992

Matched Legal Cases: ['§ 750', '§ 44', '§ 200', '§ 940', '§652', '§ 200', '§ 652', '§ 691', '§ 76', 'in fine']

Can women be prosecuted for abortion? | Personhood Alliance
By guest author Daniel Gump — After frequent and inflammatory rhetoric surrounding fetal heartbeat legislation that claimed women could be prosecuted for abortion, and even miscarriage, it became clear that research into maternal liability was needed. Can a woman actually be prosecuted for aborting her child? What do our current federal and state-level abortion laws say, and what about the courts? The answers might surprise you.
Editor’s note: This article does not address whether women should be prosecuted, only whether they can be. This research has major implications for the current rise in self-abortions, which advocates are instructing women to perform on their own via the abortion pill. Our report on this trend is here.
Also, it is critical to note that not a single incident could be found at any point, pre- or post-Roe, where abortion laws were used to prosecute a woman after miscarriage.
This question came to the forefront of the abortion debate in 2019, after articles in Slate and the New York Times expressed the authors’ fears over passage of Georgia’s LIFE Act. These concerns escalated to the point that celebrity boycott campaigns claimed women could be imprisoned for miscarriages!
In late June, the Marshae Jones incident in Alabama further exacerbated the rhetoric—particularly since it was someone else who fired a handgun in self-defense, which led to the death of Jones’ pre-born son. When the prosecutor dropped charges a few days later with no reason given, the original question remained unanswered.
I decided that finding an answer to the question of maternal liability was a worthwhile goal, so I spent a couple months digging through legislation and court cases across all 50 states, Washington, DC, and at the federal level. To my surprise, the debate has actually waged for several decades within state legislatures and courtrooms, only recently coming to the attention of the media and the general public.
What the state laws say
Preceding the U.S. Supreme Court decision of Roe v. Wade in 1973, state laws were mostly silent on how to prosecute criminal abortions carried out directly by pregnant women. These “self-abortions”—as they have become known—were apparently either not common enough to necessitate drafting new laws, or legislators believed such acts were already covered by common law.
Four states had specific penalties toward women for self-abortions: Arizona, Delaware, Idaho, and Oklahoma. Four other states—Georgia, Michigan, New Mexico, and North Carolina—had laws written with syntax that implied only a third-party actor (someone other than the woman) could be charged for the crime. For example, Michigan Compiled Laws § 750.14 describes that the act has to be done “to any pregnant woman.” Aside from these eight states, no other laws appear to have addressed self-abortion liability before 1973.
Over the next few years, state legislatures began updating their abortion statutes to become Roe-compliant. A few of them implied protection against prosecution of women by way of grammatical syntax, but none of them specifically added the language. This would continue to leave prosecution of most cases to the discretion of the individual prosecutors and judges.
During that first decade post-Roe, two state legislatures added new laws to specifically allow the prosecution of women for illegal abortions: South Carolina Code of Laws § 44-41-80(b) (misdemeanor) in 1974 and Nevada Revised Statutes § 200.220 (felony manslaughter) in 1979. The latter states:
“A woman who takes or uses, or submits to the use of, any drug, medicine or substance, or any instrument or other means, with the intent to terminate her pregnancy after the 24th week of pregnancy, unless the same is performed upon herself upon the advice of a physician acting pursuant to the provisions of NRS 442.250, and thereby causes the death of the child of the pregnancy, commits manslaughter and shall be punished for a category B felony by imprisonment in the state prison for a minimum term of not less than 1 year and a maximum term of not more than 10 years, and may be further punished by a fine of not more than $10,000.”
In 1985, Wisconsin became the first state in the nation to add immunity against prosecution of the woman. This came in Wisconsin Statutes § 940.13:
“No fine or imprisonment may be imposed or enforced against and no prosecution may be brought against a woman who obtains an abortion or otherwise violates any provision of any abortion statute with respect to her unborn child or fetus, and s. 939.05, 939.30 or 939.31 does not apply to a woman who obtains an abortion or otherwise violates any provision of any abortion statute with respect to her unborn child or fetus.”
Over the next decade, additional states began slowly adding legal protections for women and requirements for third-party actors. These included Minnesota in 1986, Louisiana and Pennsylvania in 1989, Montana in 1995, and California in 1996.
The impact of the partial-birth abortion debate
During the mid-1990s, the debate over partial-birth abortion was waging in Congress. Attempts to ban the procedure from 1995 through 1997 were met with vetoes by President Clinton. However, several state legislatures took notice and passed their own versions of partial-birth abortion bans, which contained language similar to the congressional one. For example, Alaska’s ban contained the words, “A woman upon whom a partial-birth abortion is performed may not be prosecuted under this section or under any other law if the prosecution is based on this section.”
What have the state courts said?
Beyond legislative actions, the discussion of criminal maternal liability made its way to the Florida Supreme Court in 1997 with the case State v. Ashley. This case addressed Kawana Ashley’s self-abortion attempt during the third trimester by use of a .22 caliber handgun fired into her abdomen. Her act resulted in the premature birth and subsequent death of her child. She was charged with murder and manslaughter for a criminal abortion. A lower court dismissed the murder charge, so this appeal addressed the manslaughter specifically. The case was ultimately dismissed under the following premise:
“At common law an operation on the body of a woman quick with child, with intent thereby to cause her miscarriage, was an indictable offense, but it was not an offense in her to so treat her own body, or to assent to such treatment from another; and the aid she might give to the offender in the physical performance of the operation did not make her an accomplice in his crime. The practical assistance she might thus give to the perpetrator did not involve her in the perpetration of his crime. It was in truth a crime which, in the nature of things, she could not commit.”
The next year, a similar case, Hillman v. The State, advanced to the Court of Appeals of Georgia and resulted in dismissal. The court determined that at least two parties must be involved for the criminal abortion law to apply, since the syntax indicated a third-party actor. Judge Eldridge further addressed repercussions if the criminal abortion statute would, instead, be interpreted to allow prosecuting the woman for fetal demise. The hypothetical precedent would be as follows:
“Under such construction, any woman who suffers a post-viability miscarriage could be subject to scrutiny regarding whether or not she intentionally acted to cause the miscarriage. A woman would be at risk of a criminal indictment for virtually any perceived self-destructive behavior during her pregnancy which could cause a late term miscarriage, to wit: smoking or drinking heavily; using illegal drugs or abusing legal medications; driving while under the influence of drugs or alcohol; or any other dangerous or reckless conduct… Taken to its extreme, prohibitions during pregnancy could also include the failure to act, such as the failure to secure adequate prenatal medical care, and overzealous behavior, such as excessive exercising or dieting. Clearly, the legal truism ‘hard cases make bad law’ applies here.”
After these high-profile cases, four more states passed laws that exempted women from prosecution: Ohio in 2000, Alabama in 2001, Idaho in 2002, and Texas in 2003.
Additional federal influence
In 2003, the Federal Partial-Abortion Ban Act passed Congress and was signed by President Bush. This act specifically excluded the woman from prosecution with the language in section (e):
“A woman upon whom a partial-birth abortion is performed may not be prosecuted under this section, for a conspiracy to violate this section, or for an offense under section 2, 3, or 4 of this title based on a violation of this section.”
The next year, Congress passed two acts relating to fetal homicide on federal land. Both included the identical provision, “Nothing in this section shall be construed to permit the prosecution… of any woman with respect to her unborn child.”
With the passage of these federal laws and the subsequent upholding Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act by the U.S. Supreme Court in Gonzales v. Carhart, several states passed similar fetal homicide laws and partial-birth abortion bans, which all included exemptions for the woman.
In all, 22 more states added explicit protection from prosecution for the woman between 2005 and 2019, and four states updated their statutes to add implied protections through grammatical syntax. Just one state, Oklahoma, added laws allowing prosecution of the woman, but only during the commission of a felony against another person that results in the death of the pre-born child.
The chart below summarizes trends in maternal liability laws over time.
As of November 2019, 32 states have one or more laws that grant full immunity to the woman against prosecution for the death of her pre-born child. Additionally, Florida grants immunity through precedent set in State v. Ashley. Nine more states imply immunity through grammatical syntax of laws that suggests a third-party actor is necessary. Four states and Washington, DC, are entirely silent on the handling of criminal abortions.
This leaves just four states that explicitly allow prosecution of the woman for self-abortion:
Delaware Code 11 §652 (37) predates Roe v. Wade by 20 years, so it is unclear if the law remains active anymore, but there is no evidence it has ever been repealed. The text reads: “A female is guilty of self-abortion when she, being pregnant, commits or submits to an abortion upon herself which causes her abortion, unless the abortion is a therapeutic abortion.”
Nevada Revised Statutes § 200.220 (38) was ratified six years after the Roe verdict, and it limits the crime as follows:
“A woman who takes or uses, or submits to the use of, any drug, medicine or substance, or any instrument or other means, with the intent to terminate her pregnancy after the 24th week of pregnancy, unless the same is performed upon herself upon the advice of a physician acting pursuant to the provisions of NRS 442.250, and thereby causes the death of the child of the pregnancy, commits manslaughter…”
These qualifiers have no conflicts with any relevant U.S. Supreme Court cases, so this law most likely still stands active.
Oklahoma Statutes Citationized 21 §§ 652(E), 691(D), and 713(C), each allow prosecution as secondary crimes. For example, § 691(D) reads:
“Under no circumstances shall the mother of the unborn child be prosecuted for causing the death of the unborn child unless the mother has committed a crime that caused the death of the unborn child.”
Presumably, a self-abortion would always be a crime, since it violates other abortion laws in the state.
Utah Code § 76-5-201(4) gives a very narrow window for prosecution:
“A woman is not guilty of criminal homicide of her own unborn child if the death of her unborn child: (a) is caused by a criminally negligent act or reckless act of the woman; and (b) is not caused by an intentional or knowing act of the woman.”
This places an additional burden on the State to prove the pre-born child’s death was an intentional act. Actions such as those addressed in State v. Ashley or Hillman v. State would qualify, but drug or alcohol addictions would not.
Now that we have reviewed the evolution of maternal liability laws across the entire United States, let’s revisit the original question:
Before 1973, only eight states addressed self-abortions—half allowing prosecution of the woman and half implying only third-party actor liability. All other states were completely silent, so any decision to prosecute would have depended upon interpretation of common law. At that point in time, the answer would have been “maybe.”
In 2019, 42 states and the federal government either explicitly or implicitly grant immunity against prosecution of the woman for self-abortion. Four more states and Washington, DC, are silent, so they would fall under the same common law interpretation that has established immunity in court cases like State v. Ashley and Hillman v. State. Only four states allow for prosecution in specific situations, as shown in the map below.
The answer to this important question is still not as simple as “yes” or “no,” but it is clear that the tide has turned against the idea of prosecuting women for the death of their pre-born children, except in the most blatantly-egregious of circumstances. And yet, such prosecutions are limited to just four states.
Daniel Gump’s drive to directly research legislation and court decisions arose from his frustration over the sensationalized media reporting on abortion in 2019. He uses his background in technical writing to interpret and summarize the source material in a way he hopes will allow others to concisely see the truth. His work can be found on patreon.com/danielgump.
This article was republished with the author’s permission and originally appeared on Human Defense Initiative.
abortionabortion lawsabortion statisticscriminal abortionpersonhoodpro-life lawRoe v Wade
4 comments on “Can a woman be prosecuted for aborting her child?”
Douglas H Hayman says:
12/18/2019 at 4:28 pm
Since do-it-yourself abortions are being promoted by some pro-abortion people, it is very dangerous that pregnant woman are being given immunity. This is a HUGE loophole that endangers the unborn in most states.
Daniel Gump says:
01/03/2020 at 10:56 am
That is a very valid concern. One reason I see the push for at-home abortions happening is that abortionists believe that they will not be liable for prosecution or malpractice lawsuits if the drugs are taken beyond legal gestational limits or incorrectly. (Women on Waves even gives specific instructions to take abortifacients beyond legal limits near hospital emergency rooms so that women can rush in when hemorrhaging and lie that they are having natural miscarriages to hide the illegal activity.) Just as drug companies and physicians have been sued and prosecuted for various reasons, I see this push for at-home abortions eventually catching up with the abortion industry and resulting in fines and jail time.
A technical point. In the graphic of the 50 states, three states are definitely colored red signifying “Prosecution explicitly allowed” (Delaware, Oklahoma, and Utah), and one state (Nevada) has a strictly speaking undefined color on my LED laptop screen at about 18 to 24 inches that I would interpret as brown with a hint of red, that conflates to its eastern contiguous neighbor Utah color of red at a distance of four or five feet. Thank you to
Daniel Gump for your diligent and helpful research. A quarter century ago when I’d just passed the half century mark, my then teen age nephew took me to see a movie about a guy with your same last name that was so like me I’ve adopted him as my thirty third cousin thrice removed. If you see him give him my best regards.
Granville, thank you for pointing out the color issue. I’ll have to check to see if it’s due to human error or software issues and correct it. I have adjusted the color-coding on a few of the maps in my research to work better for print and for color-blindness. I think I will do that for this one, as well.
You can’t go wrong with a Tom Hanks movie! I plan to see his newest on Mr. Rogers during the holidays.