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WHY CAN'T WE LOVE THEM BOTH
by Dr. and Mrs. J.C. Willke
CHAPTER 7
LEGAL PRE-ROE
Were
there laws against abortion in the early American colonies?
The colonies inherited English Common Law and largely operated under
it until well into the 19th century. English Common Law forbade abortion. Abortion prior
to quickening was a misdemeanor. Abortion after quickening (feeling life) was a felony.
This bifid punishment, inherited from earlier ecclesiastic law, stemmed from earlier
"knowledge" regarding human reproduction.
When did this change?
In the early 1800s it was discovered that human life
did not begin when she "felt life," but rather at fertilization. As a direct
result of this, the British Parliament in 1869 passed the "Offenses Against the
Persons Act," eliminating the above bifid punishment and dropping the felony
punishment back to fertilization. One by one, across the middle years of the 19th century,
every then-present state passed its own law against abortion. By 1860, 85% of the
population lived in states which had prohibited abortion with new laws. These laws,
preceding and following the British example, moved the felony punishment from quickening
back to conception. J. Dellapenna, The History of
Abortion: Technology, Morality, and Law, University of Pittsburgh Law Review, 1979
Quay, Justifiable Abortion-Medical and Legal Foundations, Georgetown Univ., Law
Review, 1960-1961
Who was
punished?
Abortionists, if convicted, were sent to jail for varying lengths of
time. There is no record of any having been executed.
Were women punished?
The definitive study on this gives the lie to
Planned Parenthoods ads which claimed: "If you had a miscarriage you could be
prosecuted for murder." Washington Post April
27, 1981
Studying two hundred years of legal history, the
American Center for Bioethics concluded: "No evidence was found to support the
proposition that women were prosecuted for undergoing or soliciting abortions. The charge
that spontaneous miscarriages could result in criminal prosecution is similarly
insupportable. There are no documented instances of prosecution of such women for murder
or for any other species of homicide; nor is there evidence that states that had
provisions enabling them to prosecute women for procuring abortions ever applied those
laws. The vast majority of the courts were reluctant to implicate women, even in a
secondary fashion, through complicity and conspiracy charges. Even in those rare instances
where an abortionist persuaded the court to recognize the woman as his accomplice, charges
were not filed against her. In short, women were not prosecuted for abortions.
Abortionists were. The charges of Planned Parenthood and other "pro-choice"
proponents are without
factual basis. Given the American legal systems reliance on precedent, it is
unlikely that enforcement of future criminal sanctions on abortion would deviate
substantially from past enforcement patterns." Women and
Abortion, Prospects of Criminal Charges Monograph, American Center for Bioethics, 422 C St., NE,
Washington, DC 20002, Spring 1983
But why were so few abortionists prosecuted?
Because there were no scientifically accurate methods in those days
to diagnose early pregnancy. The only absolute diagnosis of pregnancy, medically and
legally binding, was for the doctor to hear the fetal heart, and that was only possible
after four and five months. Prior to that, the abortionist could claim that her menstrual
period was late or that she had some other malady, and that all he did was to bring on her
period. It is all but impossible to convict a person of murder unless the body can be
produced the corpus delicti. Since they were almost never able to obtain and examine the
tissue removed from the womans body, in a court of law it was almost impossible to
prove (a) that she had been pregnant and (b) that the actions of the abortionist had
terminated the pregnancy. In practice, abortionists, therefore, were typically only
prosecuted when the woman had been injured or killed. It was not until the advent of
x-rays in the early 1900s (fetal bones visible at three months) and later hormone tests
for pregnancy in the 1940s that pregnancy could be legally confirmed in its earlier weeks.
When did the
first state legalize abortion?
In 1967 Colorado and California legalized abortion. By June, 1970,
when the State of New York passed the first Abortion on Demand Law (24-week limit), it
be-came the 16th state to allow abortion. Due to an extremely loose interpretation of
"mental health," California also had defacto abortion-on-demand. Alaska and
Hawaii had liberal laws. Laws in the other 12 states, which included Arkansas, Colorado,
Delaware, Georgia, Kansas, Maryland, Mississippi, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oregon,
South Carolina and Virginia, were very restrictive, typically allowing abortion only for
pregnancies due to assault rape, incest and life of the mother as well as for severe fetal
handicap.
No more laws passed after that?
Between the passage of New Yorks law in 1970 and the Supreme
Courts decision of January 73, no more state legislatures voluntarily passed
permissive abortion laws. Florida did because of a court order. The other states debated
the issue in their legislatures, and all 33 voted against permitting abortion for any
reason except to save the mothers life. In April of 72, New York State
repealed its most permissive law. Governor Nelson Rockefeller vetoed the repeal, and the
law remained in force. In the November 72 elections, however, so many pro-abortion
legislators were swept out of office that the New York General Assembly had enough votes
to override the governors veto. Plans were made to again repeal the law when that
legislature reconvened in 1973. Before it could act, however, the Supreme Court handed
down the Roe v. Wade decision and nothing was done.
The old state laws were challenged?
Yes. Having been stopped cold in their attempts to legalize abortion
in any additional states, after 1970 pro-abortion forces challenged the legality of laws
in many of the other states. These challenges to the constitutionality of the laws
forbidding abortion in these states met with rather consistent results. In about one-third
of the states, most of which had already legalized abortion by statute, these laws were
declared unconstitutional in varying degrees. Two-thirds of the federal courts in the
states, however, declared existing laws to be constitutional. In general, the states on
the east and west coasts were permissive, whereas the broad sweep between the Alleghenies
and Rockies remained pro-life.
There were referenda?
Yes. After the pro-abortionists were stopped in the legislatures and
in the courts, they tried referenda in two states, to allow abortion-on-demand until 20
weeks in the November 1972 election.
North Dakota, only 12% Catholic, voted 78% against abortion.
Michigan, an industrial state (pre-polled at 60% pro-abortion),
voted 63% against abortion.
The tide had turned?
Yes. It seemed obvious that most people did not want
abortion. But, on January 22, 1973, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled and abortion was imposed
from the top down. Roe vs. Wade, U.S. Supreme
Court410 U.S. 113, 1973 Doe vs. Bolton,
U.S. Supreme Court 410 U.S. 179, 1973
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