Oct 03, 2018 · It’s based on a similarly-titled book by the film’s producers, Ann McElhinney and Phelim McAleer, who are also prolific documentarians and investigative journalists. The …
Sep 04, 2020 · Kermit Gosnell, the notorious abortionist serving a life sentence…is convinced he was only convicted because the top three cops investigating his claim are practicing Roman Catholics.…The men “were motivated by strong moral objectives rather …
Apr 23, 2013 · Dr. Kermit Gosnell. (AP) (CNSNews.com) –The defense attorney for late-term abortionist Dr. Kermit Gosnell, who is on trial for murdering babies who survived abortions, told a Philadelphia court today that it is "ludicrous" to claim that "a baby is born alive because it moves one time without any other movement." The judge in the case today threw out three of the eight …
Jan 25, 2012 · Cohen, an expert on feminist law, was also quoted on Jan. 24 in a Daily Pennsylvanian article about former West Philadelphia abortion doctor Kermit Gosnell, who pleaded not guilty to drug charges. Gosnell has also been charged with eight counts of murder, for seven infants and one women who died as a result of procedures performed in his clinic.
Pennsylvania. Kermit Barron Gosnell (born February 9, 1941) is an American former physician and abortion provider and serial killer convicted of murdering seven infants who were born alive during attempted abortion procedures; he was also convicted of involuntary manslaughter of one woman during an abortion procedure.
Kermit Gosnell. Convicted on 7 counts of first-degree murder, 1 count involuntary manslaughter, 21 felony counts of illegal late-term abortion, and 211 counts of violating the 24-hour informed consent law .
The report divided offenses by Gosnell and other practice employees into three categories: "charges arising from the baby murders and illegal abortions; charges in connection with the death of Karnamaya Mongar; and charges stemming generally from the ongoing operation of a criminal enterprise ". The charges recommended were:
In May 2013, Gosnell was convicted of first degree murder in the deaths of three of the infants and involuntary manslaughter in the death of Karnamaya Mongar. Gosnell was also convicted of 21 felony counts of illegal late-term abortion, and 211 counts of violating the 24-hour informed consent law.
In 2011, Gosnell and various co-defendant employees were charged with eight counts of murder, 24 felony counts of performing illegal abortions beyond the state of Pennsylvania's 24-week time limit, and 227 misdemeanor counts of violating the 24-hour informed consent law.
From June 2008 through February 18, 2010, Gosnell allegedly engaged in a continuing criminal enterprise by writing and dispensing fraudulent prescriptions for thousands of pills of the frequently abused tablets OxyContin, Percocet, and Xanax, and the frequently abused syrups Phenergan and Promethazine with codeine.
Kermit Gosnell was born on February 9, 1941, in Philadelphia, the only child of a gas station operator and a government clerk in an African-American family. He was a student at the city's Central High School from which he graduated in 1959. Gosnell initially attended the University of Pennsylvania then graduated from Dickinson College in Carlisle, PA with a bachelor's degree. Gosnell received his medical degree at the Jefferson Medical College in 1966. It has been reported that he spent four decades practicing medicine among the poor, including opening the Mantua Halfway House, a rehab clinic for drug addicts in the impoverished Mantua neighborhood of West Philadelphia near where he grew up, and a teen aid program. He became an early proponent of abortion rights in the 1960s and 1970s and, in 1972, he returned from a stint in New York City to open up an abortion clinic on Lancaster Avenue in Mantua. Gosnell told a Philadelphia Inquirer reporter in October 1972: "as a physician, I am very concerned about the sanctity of life. But it is for this precise reason that I provide abortions for women who want and need them".
Kermit Gosnell, the notorious abortionist serving a life sentence…is convinced he was only convicted because the top three cops investigating his claim are practicing Roman Catholics.… The men “were motivated by strong moral objectives rather than the law,” Gosnell…said.
The Kermit Gosnell House of Horrors. “We think the reason no one acted is…because the victims were infants without identities.” ~ Report of the Grand Jury on Kermit Gosnell. In February 2010, state and federal authorities raided Dr. Kermit Gosnell’s clinic, the Women’s Medical Society in Philadelphia. This followed a major investigation ...
The Gosnell case is a horrifying example of positivist law in action. He was convicted not because his actions were evil, but because some of his evil actions happened to also be illegal. Positivist law rejects the validity of natural law or moral law.
In Pennsylvania, late-term abortion is allowed up to twenty-four weeks. Gosnell performed late-term abortions within and beyond the limit. When babies survived abortion, Gosnell and his staff cut their neck cords to kill them. At least one woman died after being administered a high dosage of drugs to induce abortion.
His view was that abortion has a societal “value” that would, inevitably, prevail over morality and science. Gosnell also said to another journalist:
Gosnell, a father of six children from three marriages presented an attitude of detachment and coldness in regard to the criminal accusations. These are the respective observations made by a court journalist, a juror, and a police case investigator, of Gosnell during the court proceedings: “His attitude in court is…bizarre and…difficult ...
That is why they often lied to the mothers of the aborted children about the gestational age in order to pretend that the abortion was carried out within the permitted limits. The moral quality of their actions was the same; only their legal status changed.
A grand jury report released ten years ago introduced the world to Kermit Gosnell, an abortionist from West Philadelphia who killed born-alive babies, employed teens with no medical experience as anesthesiologists, and crushed countless lives for more than 30 years. For years, government officials and others turned a blind eye to Gosnell’s “House ...
Staloski spent 35 years as a state employee, ending her career in March 2011. Gosnell was only charged with eight murders because of the lack of existing records, but self-reported more than 40,000 abortions through 2009.
The Gosnell grand jury, a group of people who covered “a spectrum of personal beliefs about the morality of abortion,” gave 15 recommendations, one of which became law after nearly a year-long debate in the Pennsylvania state legislature: Classifying abortion clinics as ambulatory surgical facilities .
The study also used other parts of aborted babies, including livers and spleens. Magee-Women’s Hospital, which performs between 500-700 abortions every year, the most for any hospital in Pennsylvania, supplies the aborted babies used by the University of Pittsburgh. While Gosnell took aborted babies for profit and kept parts ...
The effect of the Department of Health’s reluctance to treat abortion clinics as ASFs was to accord patients of those facilities far less protection than patients seeking, for example, liposuction or a colonoscopy. …. Those clinics, unlike abortion facilities, must implement measures for infection control.
The grand jury report summarized Gosnell’s case by pointing to the “disdain for the lives and health of mothers and infants.” Yet today, the same sort of disdain for human life is still happening in Pennsylvania — at one of the state’s top universities.
While Gosnell took aborted babies for profit and kept parts of their bodies in jars, the University of Pittsburgh uses Planned Parenthood staff it employs to take aborted babies for science and graft parts of their bodies onto rats.
Gosnell's lawyer denies the murder charge and disputes that any babies were born alive. He also challenges the gestational age of the aborted fetuses, calling them inexact estimates.
Moton, the first employee to testify, sobbed as she recalled taking a cell phone photograph of one baby left in her work area. She thought he could have survived, given his size and pinkish color. She had measured him at nearly 30 weeks. ‘The aunt felt it was just best for her [the mother's] future,’ Moton testified.
In one 1999 case, prosecutors said, 20-year-old Marie Smith was sent home after a Gosnell abortion unaware that he had been unable to remove the entire foetus from her uterus. Days later, vomiting and with a swollen abdomen and severe infection, Smith was taken to a hospital, where she was rushed into surgery.
Most doctors won’t perform late second-trimester abortions - those in the 20th week of pregnancy, because of the risks involved. But according to the report, Gosnell specialised in performing abortions well beyond 24 weeks. Sickening: The jury saw another photo of bags of body parts.
Adrienne Moton, 35, testified that Dr Kermit Gosnell taught her the snapping method to kill fetuses. She said in court one newborn baby boy was very large and appeared viable. Gosnell joked the infant was so big he could have walked to the bus stop, she said.
Women and teens came from across the mid-Atlantic, often seeking late-term abortions, Moton said. She recalled one young woman from Puerto Rico who did not speak English and appeared to be 27 weeks pregnant.
Adrienne Moton's testimony as part of her guilty plea to third-degree murder, came in the capital murder trial of Dr. Kermit Gosnell, the clinic owner, who is on trial in the deaths of a patient and seven babies. Prosecutors accuse him of killing late-term, viable babies after they were delivered alive, in violation of state abortion laws.
Defense: Gosnell's lawyer Jack McMahon speaks following the verdict, which he called 'disappointing'. 'We put on a vigorous defense,' he told CNN. 'We think it went well in the courtroom... but we respect the jury's verdict. 'Obviously the jury took their job very seriously...
Property: This home on 32nd Street in Philadelphia is just one of Gosnell's nine properties in four states. Investigators had revealed in court how baby body parts would clog toilets after women delivered them ...
He describes 72-year-old Gosnell as living in total squalor and that he offered the officers flea repellent before they attempted to enter his basement.
The jury found he was guilty of murder in the deaths of babies, who had been named A, C and D for the purpose of the trial. In earlier testimony, the court heard how a clinic employee had photographed Baby A after Dr Gosnell had joked: 'He's big enough to walk you to the bus stop.'.
McMahon argued that each worker had testified to seeing only a single movement or breath. 'These are not the movements of a live child,' McMahon said. 'There is not one piece - not one - of objective, scientific evidence that anyone was born alive.'.
Taggart and his team began searching Gosnell’s properties for fetal remains in February 2010 following an FBI raid of the doctor’s West Philadelphia clinic, the Women’s Medical Society. Unrepentant: Gosnell is pictured leaving the Criminal Justice Center after he was found guilty in May.
Gosnell's grisly business was discovered more than two years ago when authorities went to investigate prescription drug trafficking at Gosnell's clinic in a low-income area of West Philadelphia.