Pro-life news brief 3-28-13
by JivinJ, host of the blog, JivinJehoshaphat
- A Pennsylvania man named Ruben Velazquez has pleaded guilty to killing his girlfriend and unborn child. He faces two terms of 5 to 40 years.
- A woman who believes proposed legislation in North Dakota would prevent her from getting in vitro fertilization has allegedly threatened the life of a state lawmaker. The legislation appears to attempt to limit the number of embryos created in an IVF cycle to the number that will be implanted:
Richland County State’s Attorney Ron McBeth on Friday charged Nicolette Jean Knudson with threatening a public servant, a class C Felony punishable upon conviction with up to five years in jail, $5,000 or both.Court records obtained by Forum Communications show authorities allege Knudson called Sen. Margaret Sitte, R-Bismarck, at 3 a.m. Feb. 27 and threatened to kill Sitte if she interfered with her attempts to get pregnant via in vitro fertilization.
- In the Kermit Gosnell murder trial, assistant medical examiner Gary Collins has testified that despite the defense attorney’s claims, Karnamaya Mongar’s death had nothing to do with soot in her lungs:
Defense attorney Jack McMahon has argued that Mongar hid respiratory problems that made her more vulnerable to the effects of Demerol.Mongar, a native of Bhutan, lived for 20 years in a refugee settlement camp in Nepal before immigrating with her family to the United States four months before she died.
Collins conceded that Mongar’s lungs showed carbon particles but said it was the normal soot inhaled by any person, not sign of a disease such as black lung. Otherwise, Collins said, Mongar’s lungs were normal.
- A fight is brewing in San Francisco over Planned Parenthood’s plans to put a clinic (at which they claim won’t provide abortions) downtown near a Catholic church:
Although Planned Parenthood says it doesn’t intend to offer abortions at the clinic, opponents of the procedure have already fired off dozens of letters to the city opposing the facility. Neighboring businesses are also wary of the project, fearing protesters at the clinic will drive away customers.Some 100 people, many of them opponents, turned up at a recent meeting where a parking plan for the clinic at 435 Grand Avenue was approved. An appeal to the City Council of that decision is expected and the deadline is next week. But parking is just the start of the approval process, which will go to the planning commission, and in all likelihood the City Council.
[Mongar photo via LifeSiteNews.com]

It isn’t right to prosecute Kermit Gosnell for murder in the woman’s death as that was a medical error. She died because of poor medical practice.
OTOH, when late-term abortions produced LIVING babies that had the back of their necks cut with scissors, that WAS homicide. The charge about the woman should be dropped but he should be prosecuted to the limit for what was done to babies that were “aborted into life.”
Here you go DeniseNoe.
http://www.lifenews.com/2013/03/28/abortion-doc-gosnell-never-tried-to-revive-woman-killed-in-abortion/
Of course it is right to prosecute Kermit Gosnell for her death!
“aborted into life.”
Murdered in cold blood.
Carla says:
March 29, 2013 at 9:10 am
Here you go DeniseNoe.
http://www.lifenews.com/2013/03/28/abortion-doc-gosnell-never-tried-to-revive-woman-killed-in-abortion/
Of course it is right to prosecute Kermit Gosnell for her death!
(Denise) She did not get good medical care. You might be right.
Crime Library, for which I write, has an article about the bizarre things that went on at the Gosnell clinic. Gosnell frequently used instruments on one patient and then another without sterilizing them. That means some patients left with something they didn’t have when they went into the clinic: an STD. A flea-infested cat had the run of the clinic and left feces on the floors.
Denise, do note that he is charged with just 3rd degree murder in her death. That charge usually implies, I think, that it wasn’t premeditated. Given his negligence, he’s certainly not being overcharged.
Kate says:
March 29, 2013 at 7:41 pm
Denise, do note that he is charged with just 3rd degree murder in her death. That charge usually implies, I think, that it wasn’t premeditated. Given his negligence, he’s certainly not being overcharged.
(Denise) You are right. That place was a butcher shop. It was filthy. Third degree murder may be justified in such a case.