Kansas
Attorney General Seeks Records of Late-Term Abortions
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
February 24, 2005
TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) -- The Kansas
attorney general is demanding abortion clinics turn over the complete
medical records of nearly 90 women and girls, saying he needs the
material for an investigation into underage sex and illegal late-term
abortions.
Two clinics are fighting the
request in Kansas Supreme Court, saying the state has no right to such
personal information.
But Attorney General Phill Kline,
an abortion opponent, insisted Thursday: ``I have the duty to
investigate and prosecute child rape and other crimes in order to
protect Kansas children.''
Kline is seeking the records of
girls who had abortions and women who received late-term abortions. Sex
involving someone under 16 is illegal in Kansas, and it is illegal in
the state for doctors to perform an abortion after 22 weeks unless
there is reason to believe it is needed to protect the mother's health.
Kline spoke to reporters after
details of the secret investigation, which began in October, surfaced
in a legal brief filed by attorneys for two medical clinics. The
clinics argued that unless the high court intervenes, women who
obtained abortions could find government agents knocking at their door.
The clinics said Kline demanded
their complete, unedited medical records for women who sought abortions
at least 22 weeks into their pregnancies in 2003, as well as those for
girls 15 and younger who sought abortions. Court papers did not
identify the clinics.
The records sought include the
patient's name, medical history, details of her sex life, birth control
practices and psychological profile.
The clinics, which said nearly 90
women and girls would be affected, are offering to provide records with
some key information, including names, edited out.
``These women's rights will be
sacrificed if this fishing expedition is not halted or narrowed,'' the
clinics said in court papers.
On Oct. 21, state District Judge
Richard Anderson ruled that Kline could have the files. The clinics
then filed an appeal with the high court. No hearing has been scheduled.
The clinics outlined their legal
arguments in a brief filed Tuesday. Though other documents in the case
remain sealed, the brief filed Tuesday was not, and The Wichita Eagle
disclosed Kline's investigation in a story published Thursday.
In their brief, the clinics'
attorneys said a gag order prevents the clinics from even disclosing to
patients that their records are being sought. Attorneys declined to
comment Thursday, citing the order.
``You can see our desire to discuss
as much as possible, but we feel constrained,'' said attorney Lee
Thompson.
Thompson declined to say if his
client was Dr. George Tiller, whose Wichita clinic is known as a
provider of late-term abortions and is a frequent target of abortion
opponents.
Kline would not discuss the scope
of the investigation. Recently, Kline's office helped Texas authorities
gather information from Tiller regarding a pregnant teenager who sought
his care and died in Kansas.
Kline began pushing in 2003 to
require health care professionals to report underage sexual activity.
Kline contends state law requires such reporting, but a federal judge
blocked him. The case has yet to be resolved.
http://nytimes.com/aponline/national/AP-Abortion-Investigation.html?ei=5094&en=937538cf258ee4be&hp=&ex=1109307600&partner=homepage&pagewanted=print&position=