On May 23, 1929, 24-year-old Elizabeth Palumbo died at West End Hospital in Chicago. Dr. Amante Rongetti signed a death certificate attributing her death to appendicitis. However, upon autopsy the coroner's physician, Dr. Thomas Dwyer, determined that her death had actually been caused by an abortion. Dr. Amante Rongetti
Rongetti was held by the coroner on June 12 for having perpetrated the fatal abortion on May 10. However, he was acquitted.
All of these goings-on surrounding Elizabeth's death took place while Rongetti was out on bail pending a new trial in the abortion death of Loretta Enders, for which he'd been sentenced to die in the electric chair.
Newly-added source: "Rongetti Held Again on Serious Charge," Journal Gazette, May 27, 1929
Life
Dynamics lists 29-year-old Rhonda
Ruggiero on
their "Blackmun
Wallsafe
and legal abortions.
According to the information LDI put together, Rhonda underwent an
abortion in May of 1982. She suddenly died of an abortion-related
pulmonary embolism on
May 23. An embolism is a flukey thing that can kill regardless of the
doctor's skill, so Rhonda probably would have died regardless of
whether abortion was legal or not.
Documents
indicate that Josefina Garcia, age 37, mother of 2, died after
abortion at a Family
Planning Associates Medical Group (FPA) facility.
Josefina's survivors filed suit against FPA owner Edward
Campbell Allred,
and 5 other doctors: Kenneth
Wright,
Leslie S. Orleans, Earl Baxter, Soon Sohn, and Thomas Grubbs. The
family said that staff failed to determine that Josefina had an
ectopic pregnancy before proceeding with a routine safe
and legal abortion
procedure by D&C on May 23, 1985. After her abortion, Josefina
was left unattended in a recovery room, where she hemorrhaged.
She died the day of her abortion. Regardless of whether or not
abortion is legal, an ectopic pregnancy is something any abortionist
should have diagnosed, if not before the abortion, then certainly
after the abortion was completed and there were not pieces of fetus
removed. Either way, there was little excuse for failing to detect
the ectopic pregnancy. Whether Josefina lived or died would have
depended on the state of medicine at the time, and the ordinary
skills of doctors who were not abortionists.
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