Skip to comments.
Baby Doe (Infanticide) (Terri Schiavo is the latest human being murdered by the courts)
Affirminglife.org ^
Posted on 03/22/2005 11:03:14 AM PST by Recovering_Democrat
BABY DOE
The cases of Baby Doe in Bloomington, Indiana and that of Baby Jane Doe in New York demonstrate to what degree the respect for human life has been eroded even after birth.
In both cases, court decisions supported the parents' wishes see their disabled children die. In the case of Indiana, it resulted in death by starvation. In the New York case, the parents were only required to provide comfort while they waited for their child to die. In this case, however, the child survived.
Both cases provide examples of how the abortion on-demand mentality has infected the American legal system. Instead of being welcomed into life and protected by law, many disabled children are seen as "burdens" to be disposed of as others see fit.
- Baby Doe in Bloomington, Indiana
In 1982, a Bloomington, Indiana child with Down's Syndrome was born with a connection between his food-pipe and windpipe, a condition know as trachea-esophageal fistula. This prevented the child from being fed since food could not reach the stomach.
A routine operation could have been performed by several surgeons in a 50-mile radius. Because the child had Down's Syndrome, the parents refused to grant permission to operate and had decided to starve the child to death. When word of the situation became public, a dozen families came forward and offered to adopt the baby.
The parents refused. Though it would have cost them no money, time or effort to allow someone else to raise their child, the parents, their doctors and the Supreme Court of Indiana said they had the right to starve the child to death.
The child died seven days after birth, before the U.S. Supreme Court could hear an appeal to the Indiana decision.
In addition to the horrible injustice, another troubling aspect of this case was the the reaction by pediatricians and pediatric surgeons. More than two-thirds stated that they would go along with the parents' wishes to deny life-saving surgery to a child with Down's Syndrome. Almost 75% said that if they had a child with Down's Syndrome, they would let the baby starve to death.
This case, along with that of Baby Jane Doe in New York motivated Congress to pass legislation in 1984 prohibiting the withholding of "medically indicated" treatment from any disabled newborn. [Return to Top]
- Baby Jane Doe in New York
The Case of Baby Jane Doe is a sobering example of the lengths to which abortion-on-demand has corrupted our culture with the message: "If you don't want your child, it is acceptable to kill her through abandonment, neglect, or abortion." Sadly, children especially those with mental or physical disabilities are often seen as burdens to be disposed of rather than gifts for which we are called to care.
The parents of Baby Jane Doe were apparently ready to give permission to doctors to perform a surgical procedure to close the spinal defect with which she was born and to place a shunt to prevent hydrocephalus (water head). When they were told that the baby could be mentally retarded, they changed their minds and refused surgery. Without closure, the infant would die from recurrent meningitis infections which would enter through her open spine. Several such infections did occur.
Unlike the case of Baby Doe in Indiana, the parents could not starve the child to death, but a New York court ruled that the parents could treat the child "passively" with adequate food, antibiotics and dressings. In other words, all the parents were obligated to do was to keep the child comfortable while they waited for her death.
However, the little girl's skin spontaneously grew over the spinal defect about three months later, closing it. The parents then consented to the placement of the shunt. Prior to this consent, the federal government and a private attorney had attempted to step in and have the surgery authorized without parental consent. The following timeline outlines these efforts, which ultimately led to the passage of the federal Child Abuse Amendments of 1984:
Oct. 11, 1983: Baby Jane Doe is born at University Hospital at Stony Brook, New York. The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services receives a hotline complaint that Baby Jane Doe may be a victim of denial of medically beneficial care for her spina-bifida (an opening in the spinal column).
Oct. 1983: The first physician who examines Baby Jane Doe recommends surgery. The first judge who hears the evidence orders surgery. Her parents refuse to consent and receive court approval to pursue custodial care only. During the ensuing court battle, Baby Jane Doe undergoes surgery, which will allow her to talk, laugh, and attend school in a wheelchair in the future.
Nov.17, 1983: HHS, denied access to the medical records by University Hospital, is forced to commence legal action to obtain the medical records for Baby Jane Doe and is denied the records by the Federal District Court.
Feb. 23, 1984: A three-judge panel of the 2nd Circuit, U.S. Court of Appeals, rules 2-1 that the government may not have access to the medical records of Baby Jane Doe, saying that Congress had not intended Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 to apply to cases involving denial of medical treatment to handicapped newborns.
May 8, 1984: The Justice Department files a request with the 2nd Circuit Court of Appeals asking the entire 12 member court to rehear the government's Baby Jane Doe case.
Mar. 13, 1984: The American Medical Association and five other medical groups file suit in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York to invalidate the Administration's new Baby Doe regulation on the basis of the 2nd Circuit decision, claiming that efforts to investigate "alleged discrimination in treatment decisions involving impaired new born infants" are contrary to congressional intent. The judge delays ruling on the regulation, but issues a verbal warning against enforcement of the regulation in the meantime. (AHA & AMA v. Heckler)
May 17, 1984: The Second Circuit Court of Appeals denies the Justice Department's request for rehearing the Baby Jane Doe case.
May 23, 1984: U.S. District Court Southern District of New York grants summary judgment in AHA & AMA v. Heckler invalidating the Administration's Baby Doe regulation saying that they were promulgated without statutory authority.
June 11, 1984: The U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York issues its final injunction order against the Baby Doe regulation, declaring it "invalid and unlawful" and halting any further implementation of the regulation, including any investigation of charges of medical neglect of handicapped newborns.
July 26, 1984: The Baby Doe provisions of the Child Abuse Amendments of 1984 pass the U.S. Senate by a voice vote.
Aug. 17, 1984: The Justice Department decides to drop efforts to obtain medical records of Baby Jane Doe, but appeals injunction against Baby Doe regulation to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. (AHA & AMA v. Heckler)
Oct. 9, 1984: President Reagan signs the Child Abuse Amendments of 1984, making it illegal for doctors to withhold nourishment or medically indicated treatments unless the infant is comatose, the treatment will promote its death or is "futile in terms of the survival of the infant."
Dec. 10, 1984: In order to implement the Baby Doe provisions of the Child Abuse Amendments of 1984, HHS publishes a proposed regulation which closely follows the expressed intent of Congress. Receipt of federal funds for child abuse programs will be dependent on the states assuring that denial of ordinary medical treatment for handicapped babies will be treated as a form of child abuse or neglect and responded to accordingly with legal remedies.
Jan.15, 1986: The U.S. Supreme Court hears oral arguments in the AHA & AMA v. Bowen case (formerly AHA & AMA v. Heckler). At issue is whether the civil rights statute for the handicapped, Section 504 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, applies to medical treatment decisions for handicapped newborns.
June 9, 1986:
The Supreme Court of the United States rules in favor of the AMA and AHA and affirms the decision of the Court of Appeals indicating that HHS regulations are invalid. In its decision, the court stated that "Section 504 does not authorize the Secretary (of HHS) to give unsolicited advice either to parents, to hospitals, or to state officials who are faced with difficult treatment decisions concerning handicapped children."
TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: crypthanasia; cultureofdeath; doe; eichmannlovesdems; finalsolution; lionseekingtodevour; schiavo; terri; terrischiavo
In the case of Indiana, it resulted in death by starvation...In 1982, a Bloomington, Indiana child with Down's Syndrome was born with a connection between his food-pipe and windpipe, a condition know as trachea-esophageal fistula. This prevented the child from being fed since food could not reach the stomach.
A routine operation could have been performed by several surgeons in a 50-mile radius. Because the child had Down's Syndrome, the parents refused to grant permission to operate and had decided to starve the child to death. The motto of the courts? "Death to all who are inconvenient."
To: Recovering_Democrat
The good news is that those cases caused laws to be passed preventing such injustices. Hopefully. the Schiavo case will have similar effect.
To: Recovering_Democrat
Pamela A.M. Campbell was the attorney that lost the Terri Schiavo trial.
Although she no longer works as a lobbyist, she remains active in politics. She is a member of the Suncoast Tiger Bay Club and a former board member for the organization. "One of our greatest rights as Americans is our responsibility to speak out and participate," she says."I have two times every year when I make an evaluation of my life and decide what I should do differently," she says. "Those days are July 15, my birthday, and New Year's Eve.http://www.stpetebar.com/index_frame.htm?http://www.stpetebar.com/v3_giv_campbell.htm
To: marsh_of_mists
The good news is that those cases caused laws to be passed preventing such injustices...Did you even bother to read the article? Yes, some laws were passed...and then...this is in the article, by the way:
The Supreme Court of the United States rules ..[that the law signed by Reagan was]..invalid. In its decision, the court stated that "Section 504 does not authorize the Secretary (of HHS) to give unsolicited advice either to parents, to hospitals, or to state officials who are faced with difficult treatment decisions concerning handicapped children."
A culture of death permeates the courts, as well as the halls of liberalism.
4
posted on
03/22/2005 11:12:32 AM PST
by
Recovering_Democrat
(I'm so glad to no longer be associated with the Party of Dependence on Government!)
To: Recovering_Democrat
President Bush, or Governor Bush...
Please get this woman some GLASSES.
She has been VERY nearsighted all her life.
It is NO WONDER she seemed to do poorly for 3 doctors
use your EXECUTIVE POWER to take this woman into protective custody and give her 60 days of THERAPY....
STARTING with SWALLOWING THERAPY. There is nothing 'experimental' about it. She ALREADY CAN swallow.
The therapy will be deemed an Easter miracle, and will prove you to be a saint and humanitarian.
To: Recovering_Democrat
Well, we just have to keep voting in conservative politicians and making sure they push through their judicial nominations. For me it's one of the most important reasons for voting for conservatives.
To: marsh_of_mists
I agree with you on that point.
7
posted on
03/22/2005 11:19:55 AM PST
by
Recovering_Democrat
(I'm so glad to no longer be associated with the Party of Dependence on Government!)
To: Recovering_Democrat
It's old, but the book
Playing God in the Nursery by Jeff Lyon is still one of the best sources on the baby Doe cases, and other cases of that nature.
One case haunts me. There was a child with moderate/severe birth defects born in Indiana IIRC. Care would be provided for the child, but care in that state's system was distributed on a "triage" basis : The severity of the child's condition, the likelihood and extent of projected improvement, and the educational and intellecual level of the parent(s). The last was justified on the need for the parent to take charge of the daily after care, giving medicine, etc.
The little boy's case was turned down, and it later was learned (the parents sued) that children with more severe defects had been accepted and treated. So why was the little boy rejected, if he had less severe defects, and his parents were highly motivated and loving?
The little boy was named Stonewall Jackson "Doe".
I believe that the state medical officials (it was above the Mason-Dixon line, even if it wasn't Indiana) took one look at that "redneck" name and just ASSumed the parents had to be too stupid and ignorant to be able to care for the child. Or maybe they ASSumed they were racists, so they deserved to be punished...Or that the child was obviously genetically inferior, having parents "like that." I don't know-but I truly believe that child was allowed to die because of (probably subconscious) disapproval of his name.
8
posted on
03/22/2005 11:26:30 AM PST
by
kaylar
To: Recovering_Democrat
No, the court ruled that "section 504 [of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973] does not authorize......"
That's not the law that Reagan signed, the Child Abuse Amendments of 1984.
9
posted on
03/22/2005 11:26:46 AM PST
by
Valpal1
(Crush jihadists, drive collaborators before you, hear the lamentations of their media. Allahu FUBAR!)
To: Recovering_Democrat
"The motto of the courts? "Death to all who are inconvenient."" Pilate Redux.
To: Valpal1
That's not the law that Reagan signed, the Child Abuse Amendments of 1984.I thought those Amendments were additions to that section (504) of the law. If I'm mistaken, I apologize.
11
posted on
03/22/2005 11:40:24 AM PST
by
Recovering_Democrat
(I'm so glad to no longer be associated with the Party of Dependence on Government!)
To: kaylar
This is not new: killing those inconvenient to the guardian has been happening since the early 80s. Remember the case of Baby Doe in Indiana?
Baby Doe
Unfolding today
A miracle play
This Indiana morn
The father - he sighs
She opens her eyes
Their baby boy is born
"We don't understand
He's not like we planned"
The doctor shakes his head
"Abnormal" they cry
And so they decide
This child is better dead
I bear the blame
Believers are few
And what am I to do?
I share the shame
The cradle's below
And where is Baby Doe?
A hearing is sought
The lawyers are bought
The court won't let him eat
The papers applaud
When judges play God
This child is getting weak
They're drawing a bead
Reciting their creed
"Respect a woman's choice"
I've heard that before
How can you ignore?
This baby has a voice
I bear the blame
Believers are few
And what am I to do?
I share the shame
The cradle's below
And where is Baby Doe?
Where will it end?
Oh, no...
It's over and done
The presses have run
Some call the parents brave
Behind your disguise
Your rhetoric lies
You watches a baby starve
I bear the blame.
Written by Steve Taylor © 1984 Birdwing Music/Cherry Lane Music Publishing Co., Inc./C.A. Music (ASCAP)
Steve says, "I must credit both the Christian philosopher Francis Shaeffer and Village Voice columnist Nat Hentoff for their influence and inspiration in helping me to develop a foundational belief in the sanctity of human life. Ten years after the events described in this song occurred, the alarm they and others sounded rings prophetically true. But it continues to be drowned out by the rhetoric of 'freedom of choice' and 'quality of life'. A baby was born in Bloomington, Indiana with down's syndrome, and despite numerous outside pleas for adoption, the parents, doctors, and ultimately the courts agreed to allow Baby Doe to starve to death, right there in the hospital. I began writing this song with the sense of outrage that fingers those responsible and demands justice. But the more I thought about what had happened, the more I realized that I shared in the blame -- that my silence had helped clear the way for Baby Does' suffering and death. Hearing this song again leaves me feeling empty and a little numb. In our democratic society, the battle for the sanctity of human life is being lost. And when that window closes, nothing will be sacred."
(taken from liner notes to "Now The Truth Can Be Told")
12
posted on
03/22/2005 11:41:36 AM PST
by
Recovering_Democrat
(I'm so glad to no longer be associated with the Party of Dependence on Government!)
To: Recovering_Democrat
I'm not sure where the ammendments were added, but their intent was to tighten up the law in response to the appeals court loss.
Basically Congress realizing the appeal was going to lose again at the USSC, so fix it now. Of course the original case continued on and was finalized two years after the new law fixed that wagon.
13
posted on
03/22/2005 11:55:59 AM PST
by
Valpal1
(Crush jihadists, drive collaborators before you, hear the lamentations of their media. Allahu FUBAR!)
To: Recovering_Democrat
I remember that song.
I thought of it when Terri was first witheld food and water.
I had hoped that Terri's probable death would be a catalyst to create new laws, which would prevent this from happening again. Now I see that it is pointless, the judiciary rules a corrupt bench by fiat.
God help us.
14
posted on
03/26/2005 12:06:33 PM PST
by
msf92497
(nothing yet.)
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson