Kansas Judge: Abortion Businesses Don't Have to Report
Teen Sexual Abuse
April 18, 2006
Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
LifeNews.com
Wichita, KS (LifeNews.com) -- A federal judge ruled on Tuesday that
abortion businesses and practitioners are not required to report cases
of sexual abuse or statutory rape under Kansas law. Kansas Attorney
General Phill Kline has been pursuing a case against two state abortion
centers for not reporting statutory rape of underage girls getting abortions.
Kline said a 1982 law requiring doctors, teachers and others to alert
state and local officials about potential child abuse covers the statutory
rape young teens experienced who are getting abortions.
He said the law should apply to abortion practitioners as well, but
the abortion centers challenged that and won.
"It's not unexpected," Kline said of the ruling, according
to an AP report. "It's what we've been predicting."
U.S. District Judge Thomas Marten ruled that the law in question gives
health care providers the latitude to determine if they believe a child
has been subject to abuse. That leaves it up to Kansas abortion facility
staff to determine whether they want to report statutory rape of teens
under 16 or not.
Judge Marten ruled that it was more important for health care workers
to be able to treat patients with confidence and not violate their privacy
by reporting possible abuse.
Despite that view, he contended that his ruling was "not about
promoting sexual promiscuity among underage persons."
Kline is also looking into the potential that illegal late-term abortions
have been performed at the late-term abortion facility operated by infamous
abortion practitioner George Tiller in Wichita. Tiller escaped prosecution
in the abortion death of a mentally disabled teenager last year.
Abortions in Kansas can't be performed after 22 weeks of pregnancy
and require a viability test on the unborn child. Such abortions can
only be performed for medical health reasons.
In addition to Tiller's facility, Kline is seeking abortion records
from the Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri abortion business
in Overland Park. The records involve 90 women and girls.