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Bush signs Unborn Victims of Violence Act: legislation
targets abortion rights
By Kate Randall
9 April 2004
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George W. Bush signed into law April 1 the Unborn Victims
of Violence Act. The legislation makes it a separate federal
offense to cause death or bodily injury to an embryo or fetus
while committing any one of 68 federal offenses.
If a pregnant woman is the victim of one of these federal offenses,
and the embryo or fetus is damaged or killed, the person committing
the offense will be charged with two federal crimes. Moreover,
the bill specifically applies to crimes against embryos from the
time of conception.
The act was promoted by the National Right to Life Committee
and other anti-abortion groups and pushed through the House of
Representatives and Senate by the White House
and the Republican right. Although the legislation exempts abortion
procedures from prosecution, the objective of the bills
supporters is clear: to further the Bush administrations
campaign to restrict and ultimately eliminate
womens right to abortion.
Opponents of abortion have long upheld the view that abortion
at any stage constitutes murder of an independent human
being and that a pregnant womans reproductive rights
should be denied on that basis. This directly contradicts the
1973 US Supreme Court ruling in Roe v. Wade, which, in
making abortion legal, did not consider an embryo or fetus a separate
human life.
By covering crimes in which an embryo is protected from the
time of conception, anti-abortion advocates are seeking
to establish a precedent in federal law that could be used to
push through new anti-abortion legislation. While exempting abortion,
the entire logic of the new legislationif applied to abortion
procedureswould make abortion illegal at any stage of pregnancy,
and the doctor performing the procedure a murderer.
Supporters of the Unborn Victims of Violence Act in the US
Senate campaigned vigorously against a substitute amendment to
the bill sponsored by Senator Dianne Feinstein (Democrat of California)
that would have made termination of a pregnancy and
the interruption of the normal course of the pregnancy
a crime, but would not have made reference to an unborn
child as a separate victim.
The new legislation has been dubbed Laci and Conners
law, in reference to the high-profile California case in
which Scott Peterson has been charged with the murder of his wife
Laci and their unborn son, who was to be named Conner. California
law already allows prosecutors to charge assailants with the death
of a fetus when a pregnant woman is attacked. Twenty-nine states
have some kind of legislation making it a separate crime to harm
a fetus.
In the US, the vast majority of murders and other felonies
are state crimes. Only certain crimes are federal offenses, including
kidnapping, murder of a federal agent, crimes committed while
crossing state borders, among others. As the new law applies only
to federal crimes, its scope would be limited and might apply
to only a handful of cases. This is further indication of its
symbolic significance for the anti-abortion fanatics.
The Unborn Victims act is the second major piece
of legislation signed by Bush in the last six months. On November
5, 2003, the president signed the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act
of 2003 (PBABA), which makes illegal the medical
procedure known as dilation and extraction (D&X). This is
an extremely rare procedureaccounting for only .004 percent
of abortions performed in the USduring which the fetal skull
is penetrated and the contents removed as it exits the womans
uterus. Most of these cases involve fetuses with massive cranial
abnormalities.
As with the newly passed legislation, the aim of the supporters
of PBABA was to chip away at the right to abortion and eventually
see it outlawed. PBABA is currently being challenged in cases
in Nebraska, New York and California, and is stayed until the
outcome of these non-jury trials.
In an effort to defend PBABA, the federal
Justice Department has demanded that numerous hospitals turn over
medical records of hundreds of abortion patients. This action
has been challenged by a number of hospital administrators and
denounced by the American Civil Liberties Union, Planned Parenthood,
the National Abortion Federation and others as a gross violation
of patients privacy.
See Also:
The Partial-Birth
Abortion Ban Act of 2003: Republicans drum up support from religious
right
[24 October 2003]
Bush preparing to
axe vital medical research into stem cells
[13 January 2001]
US Supreme Court hears
arguments on state-imposed abortion limits
[26 April 2000]
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