The abortion was performed by David Gluck. Staff said that after her abortion, Alerte was "feisty, telling nurses she wanted to go home. Then all of a sudden, she coded, she went into cardiac arrest." This "feisty" condition, wanting to go home, is a sign of shock. The next sign of shock was when Alerte's blood pressure fell. Staff attempted to revive her, then transported her to a hospital. Her death was tentatively attributed to amniotic fluid embolism by staff -- the abortionists' equivalent of "The dog ate my homework."
Desanges' 66-year-old mother, who speaks only French, was described as throwing her hands in the air and sobbing, "What are we going to do? What are we going to do? We can't go back to Haiti." Desanges supported her mother and three daughters working as a caretaker for an elderly woman, and had just bought a small house in Brooklyn.
Gluck's license had been revoked for three years after selling controlled substances to finance his gambling addiction. Gluck had also been Medical Director at C.R.A.S.H. when abortion patient "K.B." died. The Choices clinic director said "We are firmly committed to helping people who are skilled medical professionals who have had a fall from grace."
Evidently they are not equally committed to helping women to survive their abortions.
I have been unable to learn if the baby Alerte died aborting really did have a disabling condition. Other women how have died during "fetal indications" abortions include:
- Linda Boom, unborn baby diagnosed with Down syndrome, who died on this day in 1995
- Marla Anne Cardamone, falsely told that her medications had seriously harmed her unborn baby
- Michelle Madden, told that her epilepsy medications had harmed her baby
- "Beverly" Roe, told that her baby had anencephaly
- "Gloria"" Roe, told that her baby had been harmed by x-rays
- Allegra Roseberry, falsely told that her unborn baby was "doomed"
- Margaret Louise Smith, told that her unborn baby had been harmed by rubella
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