News Briefs
Arizona Abortionist Loses License After Two Botched Abortions
An Arizona abortionist who has been involved in two botched abortions
has had his license revoked, the Arizona Board of Medical Examiners said
earlier this month. John Biskind, 72, agreed to give up his license rather
than face a continuing investigation.
Authorities began investigating Biskind after a June 30 incident in
which he tried to perform a partial-birth abortion and wound up delivering
a full-term baby girl. The baby suffered a skull fracture and two deep
lacerations on her face, but doctors said she had no other serious injuries.
A Texas couple is reportedly planning to adopt her.
Dr. Edward Sattenspiel, a member of the state medical board, said it
was impossible to believe that Biskind could not tell that the baby's 17-year-old
mother was 37 weeks pregnant instead of the claimed 23 weeks.
Biskind is also under investigation for his role in the death of 32-year-old
LouAnn Herron, who bled to death from a punctured uterus after Biskind
performed a late-term abortion on her in April. Heron was about 26 weeks
pregnant when Biskind performed the abortion, despite an Arizona law that
makes abortions illegal after viability. A former clinic employee said
that she heard Biskind tell a medical assistant to take the ultrasound
from a different angle so Heron would appear to be less than 24 weeks pregnant.
Clinic employees said Herron was left to bleed for three hours before
an ambulance was called, despite a medical assistant's pleas for the supervisor
to call 911. They also said that Biskind left the facility about an hour
after the abortion and that there was no nurse on duty in the recovery
room.
Officials have said that Biskind's agreement with the medical board
will not effect the criminal investigation into the two incidents. A-Z
Women's Center in Phoenix, which employed Biskind, has been closed, along
with two other clinics owned by clinic CEO Dr. Moshe Hachamovitch.
Judge Closes Georgia's Biggest Abortion Clinic
In May, Georgia Superior Court judge William Alexander responded to
complaints from state officials by shutting down Georgia's biggest abortion
facility. The Department of Human Resources said Midtown Hospital in Atlanta
was "overcrowded, understaffed and dirty" and showed "a complete disregard
for, or the inability to care for, the health and safety of its patients."
Midtown Hospital performed more abortions than any facility in Georgia--7,465
in 1996, according to the DHR. The state is pursuing efforts to close the
clinic permanently.
Criminal Charges Against Abortionist Dismissed
A California abortionist with a long history of problems with state
officials was cleared in June of charges that he was practicing medicine
without a license. The judge ruled that prosecutors could not prove that
Gordon Sean Goei, who was arrested in May after a botched abortion, had
read the notification that his license was suspended. His roommate testified
that he hid the letters informing Goei of his suspension to protect him
from "bad news."
Goei's license was revoked in 1997 after a series of reprimands from
the state medical board, but a judge instead placed Goei on seven years
probation on the condition that he get more education and take exams. Failing
an exam led to his suspension in March. The medical board has yet to determine
if he can keep his license.
Abortion Clinic Must Pay Woman $700,000
A Canadian judge has ordered staff members at a Halifax abortion clinic
to pay more than $700,000 in damages to a woman who was seriously injured
in a car accident following an abortion.
Wanda MacPhail, 37, testified that after her abortion she sat for an
hour in a "zombie-like" state without being offered any kind of counseling
or support from the staff. She said that on her way home from the clinic,
she lost control of her car and crossed the center line, striking another
vehicle. The judge ruled that MacPhail was traumatized by her abortion
and should not have been permitted to undertake the 40-kilometer drive
home.
NOW Backs California Abortionist in Murder Trial
The national leaders of NOW (National Organization of Women) are publicly
supporting California abortionist Bruce Steir, who will soon face murder
charges in the death of 27-year-old Sharon Hampton. Hampton bled to death
from a punctured uterus after Steir performed an abortion on her in December
1996.
A clinic employee told police that during Hampton's abortion, Steir
said he thought he had "pulled bowel" but that he would "just put it back."
Prosecutors say Steir had to have known that he punctured Hampton's uterus
since that was the only way he could have reached her bowel.
Steir, who admits that he made a "terrible mistake" during Hampton's
abortion, surrendered his medical license in March 1997 after complaints
of negligence during other abortions, including three in which women had
to undergo surgery to repair injuries. Predictably, the National Abortion
Federation and the California Abortion and Reproductive Rights League are
also backing Steir.
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