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Baby Parts For Sale.
A batch of eyes by UPS, 30 livers by FedEx.
- By J.C. Willke, MD
Original article featured in LIFE ISSUES CONNECTOR, July 1999;
published by LIFE ISSUES INSTITUTE, INC
After fighting abortion for 30 years I thought I had seen and heard it all, but not so. Here is a new development, a coordinated high-tech industry functioning for the specific purpose of obtaining and selling high-quality fetal organs for research. Partial-Birth abortions seemed to be so horrible that most of us wondered how such procedures could be defended. Many of us chalked it up to the fact that the pro-abortion advocates and the abortion industry didn't want to give one inch for fear that their whole house of cards will fold. I, among others, felt that their resistance to forbidding this gruesome procedure was a fear of a domino effect. If we stopped this one, then we'd stop the next and the next and the next and they didn't want it to start. But now we have evidence of a very clear additional reason why they want these late-term abortions to continue. The reason is that this is the one method that gives them intact fetal bodies from which they can obtain organs for research.
The other method of late-term abortion, D&E (Dilatation and Evacuation), involves reaching up into the uterus and dismembering the live baby. This delivers pieces of macerated organs that are usually unsuitable for fetal research, transplantation, etc. This may be the main reason for their vehement defense of the practice of Partial-Birth abortion.
The story was broken recently by Life Dynamics under the guidance of its director, Mark Crutcher. A lady came to him with a story, which he has verified. The name of the informant cannot be revealed, as she is still involved in the work that she has exposed. Her story is dramatically recorded in a video just released by Life Dynamics. In it, this woman under the pseudonym, Kelly, tells her story. Her back is to the camera and her voice is electronically altered to prevent her identification. She worked for "an outside source, hired with a team to go in [to late term abortion clinics] to dissect and procure fetal tissue for high-quality sales." Read on as Kelly describes her macabre profession. "What we did was to have a contract with an abortion clinic that would allow us to go there on certain days. We would get a generated list each day to tell us what tissue researchers, pharmaceutical companies and universities were looking for. Then we would examine the patient charts. We would screen out the ones we didn't want. We did not use specimens that had STD's [sexually transmitted diseases] or fetal abnormalities. We only wanted the most perfect specimens that we could give to the researchers." And the age of these babies? The victims were up to and over 30-weeks gestation. "We were looking for eyes, livers, brains, thymuses [lymphoid tissue], cardiac blood, cord blood, blood from the liver, even blood from the limbs." Only an estimated 2% of the late-term aborted babies had abnormalities. "The rest were very healthy. 95% of the time, she was just there to get rid of the baby." How many of the late-term - the ones around 30 weeks - would you see? "Probably 30 or 40 babies a week."
Kelly stated, "We would sell the tissue to private contractors. They in turn would sell to other universities and researchers. There was a high demand every week to buy such fetal tissues. It was shipped by UPS, FedEx, Airborne and sometimes by special couriers. Sometimes we would take the specimens in a box to the airport and put it on as regular cargo, to be picked up at the destination." And did these shipping companies know they were transporting baby parts? "No. All they knew was that it was just human cells. But it could be a completely intact fetus. It might be a batch of eyes, or 30 or 40 livers going out that day, or thymuses."
And the leftover parts? "We
would usually put this down the garbage disposal along with the placenta
and the leftover blood material. If it was too large to go down the drain,
they had a special freezer and when they accumulated 60 or 70 fetuses in
one box, it would be picked up for incineration."
And then the obvious question. Kelly is still
working for this company, so why did she come and tell this story to a
pro-life group? One day when she was working, "A set of twins at 24 weeks
gestation was brought to us in a pan. They were both alive. The doctor
came back and said, 'Got you some good specimens, twins.' I looked at him
and said, 'There's something wrong here. They are moving. I don't do this.
This is not in my contract.' I told him I would not be part of taking
their lives. So he took a bottle of sterile water and poured it into the
pan until the fluid came up over their mouths and noses, letting them
drown. I left the room because I could not watch this." But she did go
back and dissect them after they were dead. She said, "That's when I
decided it was wrong. I did not want to be there when that happened." And
then it happened again and again. "At 16 weeks, all the way up to
sometimes even 30 weeks, and we had live births come back to us." And
then? "Then the doctor would either break the neck or take a pair of tongs
and beat the fetus until it was dead."
Did the abortionist ever alter the procedures to get you the type of
specimens you needed that day? Her answer was "Yes, before the procedures
they would want to see the list of what we wanted to procure. The [abortionist] would get us the most complete, intact
specimens that he could. They would be delivered to us completely intact.
Sometimes the fetus appeared to be dead, but when we opened up the chest
cavity, the heart was still beating." She was asked if the type of
abortion procedure was intentionally altered to deliver to you an intact
specimen, even if that meant giving you a live baby? Her answer was "Yes,
that was so we could sell better tissue, so that our company would make
more money. At the end of the year, they would give the clinic back more
money because we got good specimens."
The Partial-Birth abortion procedure involves inserting seaweed
laminaria into the cervix. This swells up, dilating the cervix. In 24
hours, new laminaria are inserted. This produces more swelling and
dilatation so that by the third day the baby can be extracted. During the
dilatation procedure she is sent to a nearby motel. Sometimes the laminaria would fall out and she would go into
labor and deliver the baby. And then? "They would call the nurse, and the
nurse would call the doctor who would go to the motel room and pick up the
woman and the fetus. That's when they would call us and say, "Okay,
we've got a couple of specimens here,' or 'We've got one
specimen.' We would go [to the clinic] and the specimen [the baby] would
be in a bucket, sometimes alive. When we opened the chest cavity the heart
would still be beating. Sometimes we could see movement in the bucket.
These babies had to come out alive. There's no way for them to be coming
out dead. They were all alive. How they killed them is anyone's guess. My
guess is that they had to kill them in the bucket or put them in a corner
and let them die slowly." And that was because the abortionist had seen
how strongly you reacted to seeing them killed in front of you? "That's
correct. And he did not want to repeat those instances, but they kept
happening anyway. And that's how I came to call you guys [Life
Dynamics]."
Finally, Kelly related how sometimes a woman,
halfway through the dilatation procedure , would change her mind and say
she did not want the abortion. In such a case they would tell her that
it's too late now. "You're going to have the abortion." Kelly said, "All
of the staff would gather around pressuring her to have the abortion. On
the second day, they're given an IV sedation, which kind of puts them into
what I call a Nyquil nap. They're just basically drowsy, not thinking for
themselves and that's basically how they are coerced into continuing the
procedure."
Finally, in the interview, she notes that many
of the employees of the clinics are lesbians. When the mother was
unconscious these women would discuss her genitalia with degrading remarks
and on occasions even take the phone number off her chart. Then they would
"call her weeks down the road and ask her out for a date. It was not
uncommon for women or men at the clinic to hit on these women for
dates."
Now We Know Why
Now we know one of the major reasons why the abortion
industry is fighting so intensely to prevent a ban on Partial-Birth
abortion from being enacted. It's more than not giving any ground on
abortion for any reason. It's also because selling fetal parts is a very
lucrative part of the abortion business. These mothers pay large sums of
money for late-term abortions and the abortionists in turn are given big
money for these intact organs. The model specimens have to be: the
bigger-the better; the older-the better; the more alive-the better.
The above dialogue is from a video that has been
produced by Life Dynamics. If any of our readers would like a free copy of
this interview, feel free to contact us and we will send you a
copy.
Send your request to:
Life
Issues Institute
1721 W. Galbraith
Rd.
Cincinnati, OH 45239
Phone (513) 729-3600. Fax (513) 729-3636.
E-mail: LifeIssues@aol.com
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