In 1973 the United State Supreme Court created a woman's "right" to an abortion in a ruling titled, "Roe v. Wade." Many legal scholars believed the court's ruling was based on what is, at best, shaky legal ground. For example, the Constitutional right to privacy is still debated by many legal scholars who say such rights are not clearly defined within the U.S. Constitution. Also, lawyers who presented the case for legalized abortion simply lied concerning statistical data they presented to the nation's highest court. It was said thousands of women had died as a result of "botched back-alley abortions."...