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January 2003 Issue
Tale of
the Tapes
Exposing Illegal and Predatorial
Practices
by Karla Dial
An undercover investigation
reveals that abortion clinic workers know what statutory rape
is and the laws requiring them to report it. Yet most of the time,
they say nothing.
Life was looking pretty good to
JoAnne Bennett in 1999.
Her job at a Pennsylvania law firm was going well. She had
two daughters, ten and thirteen, she was very proud of. And best
of all, she was engaged to a man she was sure would make a great
stepdad.
That September, though, Bennett got the news that would bring
her tranquil world crashing down: Her fiancé had been sexually
abusing her older daughter for more than a year.
It didn't seem like things could get any worse but a
few months later, they did. Her daughter told her that as a result
of the abuse, she had gotten pregnant twice within five months.
Both times, her mother's fiancé had taken her to an abortion
clinic in Maryland, where they checked in with their real names,
ages, and addresses. Despite their two last names and an obvious
twenty-year age gap, the man didn't claim to be her stepfather
or any other relative he merely reminded the girl to stick
to the story he'd coached her on all week, answered all the questions
for her during the counseling session, and paid for the abortion
in cash.
Five months later, when he took the thirteen-year-old back
for the second abortion, clinic workers recognized the pair and
told them they didn't have to fill out all those forms again.
But the staff didn't call the police or the state Department of
Social Services to report a suspected sexual abuse case, as the
law requires them to do.
In late June, Bennett filed a civil lawsuit. It wasn't against
her former fiancé, though he already was serving
a seventeen to thirty-five-year sentence in a Pennsylvania
state penitentiary.
This lawsuit was filed in Maryland, against the National Abortion
Federation, for helping cover up the crimes of the man who raped
her daughter.
A Veil of Silence
JoAnne Bennett isn't alone. The results of a ten-month sting
operation conducted by Life Dynamics, Inc. (LDI) a pro-life
organization based in Denton, Texas show that abortion
clinics have their own interests at heart when dealing with pregnant
girls under the age of consent.
Though laws defining it vary widely, all fifty states list
statutory rape as a prosecutable offense one health care
workers are nearly always required to report. To find out if abortion
clinics uphold those laws, Life Dynamics hired a twenty-three-year-old
woman to call 800 Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA)
and National Abortion Federation (NAF) facilities around the country,
posing as a thirteen-year-old girl seeking an abortion who didn't
want her parents to find out she was having sex with a twenty-two-year-old
man.
According to Life Dynamics President Mark Crutcher, the results
were shocking: 91 percent of the clinic workers said they were
required by law to report the statutory rape, but then assured
her they wouldn't. Most advised the caller not to mention her
boy-friend's age when she checked in for the abortion, so no one
would ask her any questions. Several warned she'd already given
them too much information and if she came to them, they'd have
to report it but then gave her the number of another clinic
and instructed her to either keep quiet or lie about the age difference.
A few even said that if she showed up with the right amount of
cash, she and her boyfriend could be any age they wanted.
"This is going on all over the country, and Planned Parenthood
is providing the protection for these pedophiles," Crutcher
told Citizen, published by Focus on the Family. "We're
going through this national tragedy right now with the Catholic
church, and my view is that anybody who protects pedophiles goes
to jail. I don't care who they are but right now the only
people we seem to be interested in are Catholic priests. Planned
Parenthood workers seem to be immune."
Ironically, Crutcher said, it was the abortion industry that
first noticed the trend of adult men impregnating underage girls
in increasing numbers, starting about ten years ago. A study published
in 1995 by the Alan Guttmacher Institute the research arm
of Planned Parenthood documented what abortion clinic workers
were seeing. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, several
peer-reviewed medical journals, and Planned Parenthood's internal
data have corroborated the evidence over the years. In 1998, former
Surgeon General Jocelyn Elders wrote in the Journal of the
American Medical Association that "over half of all infants
born to women younger than eighteen years are fathered by adult
men, with 40 percent of fifteen-year-old girls having infants
with partners aged twenty years or older.... Research suggests
that the younger the mother, the greater the partner age gap."
But instead of helping to solve that problem by upholding laws
requiring health care workers to report sexual abuse, the abortion
lobby has chosen to spend its energy finding ways to get around
them and keep teenage girls coming through clinic doors,
no matter who their partners were. In some states, they are aided
by laws that narrowly define sexual abuse as an act committed
by a parent or immediate family member meaning clinic workers
don't always have to report older boyfriends. But for workers
in states where that is illegal, there is K. Kaufmann's 1997 publication,
The Abortion Resource Handbook, which offers not only detailed
advice on how to get around parental-notification and informed-consent
laws, but also includes interviews with abortion clinic workers
on how they circumvent reporting laws in their states. And in
1999, Planned Parenthood published a tutorial for girls wanting
"healthier" sexual relationships with older men called
Unequal Partners: Teaching about Power and Consent in Adult-Teen
Relationships.
Crutcher pointed out that the tactics outlined in Kaufmann's
book are virtually identical to those his pseudo-thirteen-year-old
caller encountered on the phone five years later. And that, he
believes, is no coincidence.
"Their [legal] exposure in this thing is monumental,"
he said of the abortion industry. "They can't afford to change.
They realize if it becomes public knowledge that they adhere to
the state-mandated reporting laws, these girls will quit coming
to them. So they can abide by the law and lose one of their big
profit centers or protect the profit center and violate the law.
"The question is, will our culture allow them to protect
the profit and violate the law?"
A Financial Incentive
Planned Parenthood and the NAF had little to say to the media
in the wake of the Life Dynamics report. PPFA President Gloria
Feldt, while denying not one detail of Crutcher's charges, told
the Associated Press that Life Dynamics is "trying to damage
Planned Parenthood and also eliminate reproductive health services
in this country. They'll use any tactics they can... . [PPFA workers
are trying to] provide callers with what I'd call a comfort level."
Interestingly, Feldt's implication that LDI gathered
its information dishonestly echoes the complaints of pro-life
activists after the National Abortion and Reproductive Rights
Action League (NARAL) published a field guide on how to use undercover
means to smear pregnancy resource centers (see "Prime Target,"
January 2002 Citizen, page 22). Is there an ethical difference
between what NARAL encouraged activists to do and Life Dynamics'
sting operation?
"I can see how from some people's perspective, it wouldn't
be any different," said Julie Parton, director of Focus on
the Family's Pregnancy Resource Ministry. "One difference,
though, is that abortion clinics are making money off their deception,
while we in the crisis pregnancy center world are not making any
money from trying to reveal the truth. The reason they were sending
undercover agents into CPCs is because we were hurting their bottom
line. We don't have one, so it's not a financial interest that
prompts us."
While there is always a possibility that a pregnancy resource
center is as guilty of not reporting statutory rape as Planned
Parenthood seems to be, Kurt Entsminger, vice president and general
counsel for the pregnancy resource center chain CareNet, doesn't
think it's likely.
"One thing that distinguishes our centers from the other
side is that we want to emphasize the importance of parental involvement
and encourage minors to take the appropriate steps to end the
relationship, and, when appropriate, that authorities be notified,"
Entsminger told Citizen. "From a philosophical standpoint,
we come at this issue from opposite directions. Even though pregnancy
centers promise confidentiality, they make that promise subsequent
to any laws or moral responsibilities that apply."
To date, the ripple effects of Life Dynamics' survey haven't
spread too far from the center. A few national media outlets
most notably the Fox News Channel and WorldNetDaily
reported it when the results were released in May. A Connecticut
television station, still reeling from the shock of seeing a seventy-five-year-old
man arrested after impregnating a ten-year-old Bridgeport girl
a month earlier, picked up the study and ran with it calling
the same clinics and finding workers with the same names of the
people on the incriminating LDI tapes.
As a result, Jack Bailey, Connecticut's chief state's attorney,
met with local Planned Parenthood administrators June 12 to give
them a refresher course on what they can and can't tell underage
callers. At about the same time, Nebraska Attorney General Don
Stenberg asked his state's Department of Health and Human Services
to conduct its own investigation of Planned Parenthood clinics.
But so far, no criminal suits have been filed, and left-leaning
news organizations haven't touched the story a fact that
has stuck in the craw of Gregory Hession, a Massachusetts lawyer
who specializes in defending families against false allegations
of child abuse.
"Where are the feminists? Where is NOW?" Hession
asked. "Why have there not been articles in The New York
Times and Washington Post about all these girls who
are being abused? The priest pedophilia is just a fraction of
what Planned Parenthood has enabled."
Impending Implosion?
What Crutcher would ultimately like to see happen is a tidal
wave of civil suits like JoAnne Bennett's come crashing down on
Planned Parenthood and other abortion providers that circumvent
the law for profit. If the Catholic church can pay millions in
damages to sexual abuse victims for covering up the crimes of
a few priests, Crutcher figures Planned Parenthood which
attracts at least 450,000 teenage girls each year is exposed
to even greater liability.
"We're going to take their failure and use it to compensate
the victims," said LDI attorney Ed Zielinski. "They're
trying to hide behind this special status they believe they have
that puts them above the law. But all the law we need is on the
books right now."
As Citizen went to press, Crutcher planned to send information
to each of the nation's 16,000 school districts, alerting them
that if they allow Planned Parenthood to provide sex-education
seminars to students, they could be named as parties in future
lawsuits.
With that tsunami still miles out at sea, though, Crutcher
and his team are trying to compile their decade's worth of data
into a format useful to prosecutors. The covert calls to abortion
clinics made in Texas, which does not require callers to
get permission before taping phone conversations are legal
to use as evidence in thirty-one of the fifty states.
But since there is no uniform law regarding the age of consent
and mandatory reporting, it will take some grassroots effort to
get the ball rolling.
Ed Szymkowiak, national director of STOPP International, an
organization aimed at opposing Planned Parenthood, urged parents
to get a copy of LDI's report "into the hands of their local
law enforcement officials, child protective services officials,
political leaders, and school officials. Ask that they prosecute,
defund, and remove an organization which is not fulfilling its
legal obligation to report child abuse and statutory rape."
But Entsminger points out the process won't be that simple,
thanks to vagaries in the reporting laws.
"In terms of legal responsibility, the first part of the
equation is: Is Planned Parenthood a mandatory reporter? The answer
is probably yes," he explained. "In some states, child
abuse is defined broadly enough to include any kind of sexual
contact with a minor, so if you're in one of those states and
a medical facility doesn't report it, you have a clear-cut case.
But in other states, that's much more of a gray area, whether
they did something wrong."
Parents interested in finding ways to make use of LDI's study
locally can start with research at the community Child Protective
Services Department: Find out what the age of consent is in your
state, how the law defines reportable "abuse," who is
required to report that abuse and to whom. Many states define
it as "physical, mental, or sexual abuse" period, but
others stratify who potential abusers might be for example,
parents, guardians, or immediate family members. Some states are
more inclined to prosecute "older boyfriends" than others.
Once violations have been clearly identified, district attorneys
most likely will take an interest in investigating, Hession said.
"Most of them are pretty intent on prosecuting statutory
rape," he said. "I really think that justice for its
own sake to honor God and validate His justice is
important as a signal to people that the state is going to, in
essence, be an arbiter of God's justice. It was set up to do that.
It doesn't do it very well anymore. But for attorneys who want
to see their work be part of that bigger work, this is a requirement.
"Not everybody has the privilege or opportunity to bring
that about. It's up to those who've been entrusted with a law
license to see this done."
TAKE ACTION: For a free copy of the Life Dynamics report,
log on to www.ldi.org or the group's new Web site, www.ChildPredators.com;
or call 940-380-8800. You may also want to contact STOPP International,
another group committed to fighting Planned Parenthood, at P.O.
Box 1350, Stafford, VA 22555; or call 540-659-4171.
Citizen, September
2002, published by Focus on the Family.
Sanctity of Human Life Sunday is January 19. For helpful
resources go to the Ethics and Religious Liberty Commission's
Web site www.erlc.com or call 800/475-9127.
Copyright
© 2012 Southern Baptist Convention Executive Committee
SBC Life is published by the
Executive Committee of the Southern Baptist Convention
901 Commerce Street,
Nashville, Tennessee 37203
Tel. 615.244.2355
Email us: sbclife@sbc.net
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