Texas Department of Health, Selected Characteristics of Abortions, 1990 and 1992
RealChoice
Preparing for a Post-Roe America
Saturday, May 30, 2026
May 30, 1929: Mystery Abortion Proves Fatal
On May 30, 1929, 19-year-old Anela Stumbras died from complications of a criminal abortion. Though the coroner pushed for prosecution, the guilty party was never identified or apprehended.
According to Illinois death records, Anela was a white Chicago native, daughter of Lithuanian immigrants. She worked as a waitress.
Given how little information I have about Anela's death, the only preventability factor is the obvious one of making sure that women know that they are not abandoned to the abortionists. Women who are offered loving support aren't nearly as likely to resort to abortion as women who are left to believe they have no other options. As Planned Parenthood Medical Director Mary Calderone noted in 1960:
"[Planned Parenthood Abortion in America] Conference members agreed, and this was backed up by evidence from the Scandinavians, that when a woman seeking an abortion is given the chance of talking over her problem with a properly trained and oriented person, she will in the process very often resolve many of her qualms and will spontaneously decide to see the pregnancy through, particularly if she is assured that supportive help will continue to be available to her." ("Illegal Abortion as a Public Health Problem," American Journal of Public Health v. 50 no. 7,July 1960)
There is simply no excuse to come between women and hope. And if abortion-rights activists valued women's lives as much as they say they do, they'd stop their drive to keep women away from the people who are willing to offer hope.
Friday, May 29, 2026
May 29, 1988: "Texas Gosnell" Lets Teen Die
Denise Marie Montoya was fifteen years old when her parents brought her to Women's Pavillion in Houston for an abortion on May 13, 1988. Denise was 25 1/2 weeks pregnant.
The abortion was performed by Douglas Karpen, an osteopath, at Women's Pavillion in Houston.
Denise suffered severe bleeding, and was admitted to Ben Taub hospital. Her condition deteriorated, and she died on May 29, 1988.
Her parents, Joe and Janet Montoya, filed suit against Karpen and the clinic, saying that they had failed to adequately explain the risks of the procedure, and had not provided consent forms, or had the parents sign any informed consent document, prior to the fatal abortion. They asserted that had they known how dangerous abortion is that late in the pregnancy they never would have subjected their daughter to the procedure.
According to their 1991 Annual Report, Women's Pavillion was a National Abortion Federation member.
Karpen was also sued over the March 14, 1989 death of Glenda Davis.
Karpen has been dubbed "the Texas Gosnell" by prolife activists after his employees came forward to report appalling behavior including delivering babies alive then killing them.
Watch "Not Warned of Risks Before Late Abortion" on YouTube.
Thursday, May 28, 2026
May 28, 2010: Fatal Referral After Fetal Demise
Operation Rescue obtained documents from a 2011 medical malpractice/wrongful death lawsuit filed by the family of Rebecca Charland, whose OB/GYN referred her to her death in the spring of 2010.
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| Washington Surgi-Clinic |
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| Dr. Cesare F. Santangelo |
May 28, 1985: High-Volume Abortion Mill Screws Up Fatally
Documents indicate that Josefina Garcia, age 37, mother of 2, died after abortion at a Family Planning Associates Medical Group (FPA) facility. She was a native of the Philippines and a mother of two.
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 28, 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.
Josefina was one of 17 women that I know of who lost their lives at FPA abortion facilities. The others are:
- Denise Holmes, age 24, 1970
- Patricia Chacon, age 16, 1984
- Mary Pena, age 43, 1984
- Laniece Dorsey, age 17, 1986
- Joyce Ortenzio, age 32, 1988
- Tami Suematsu, age 19, 1988
- Deanna Bell, age 13, 1992
- Susan Levy, age 30, 1992
- Christina Mora, age 18, 1994
- TaTanisha Wesson, age 24, 1995
- Nakia Jorden, 1998
- Maria Leho, 1999
- Kimberly Neil, age 38, 2000
- Maria Rodriguez, age 22, 2000
- Chanelle Bryant, age 22, 2004
- "Kyla Ellis," age 23, 2014
Wednesday, May 27, 2026
May 27, 1952: Hollywood Socialite's Body Dumped in Alley
In the early morning hours of Tuesday, May 27, 1952, mechanic Bert Darnell made a grisly find as he walked to work. Between two wooden garages in a Los Angeles alley, in disarray, lay the body of a beautiful young woman. She was clad in stylish, expensive clothing: a red coat, a red cashmere sweater, a silver gray skirt, and black leather shoes. The only garments missing were her stockings and one of her white gloves.
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| Patricia Layne Steele |
Victor refused to view his daughter's body in the morgue, but did identify her belongings. He said that he believed that Patricia had eloped to Tijuana with an unidentified serviceman in a blue uniform the previous November. She had made trip to Hawaii shortly thereafter Victor believed that the trip had been a belated honeymoon.
After a promise that an arrest was pending, all mention by the police about the fatal abortionist disappeared from news coverage until November of 1944. Then, police announced that a Los Angeles osteopath, Dr. Frank S. Bunker, was being investigated for four abortion deaths and a kidnapping charge. Only two of the four women, Patricia and Jessie Neidt, were named in news coverage.Sources:
- "Patricia Steele Enlists," Los Angeles Times, May 2, 1944
- "Socialite Found Dead in Alley," Evening Vanguard, May 27, 1952
- "Operation Blamed in Girl's Death," Hollywood Citizen-News, May 27, 1952
- "Hollywood Play-Girl Found Dead In Alley; Said Victim Of Abortion," Lancaster (PA) Intelligencer Journal, May 28, 1952
- "Trace last days in life of socialite," Los Angeles Daily News, May 28, 1952
- "Socialite's Surgery Death Probed," Oakland Tribune, May 28, 1952
- "Wealthy Woman Dies in Mystery," Los Angeles Times, May 28, 1952
- "Illicit Surgery Death Quiz," San Francisco Chronicle, May 28, 1952
- "New Clues Found In Steele Death," Visalia Times Delta, May 29, 1952
- "$10,000 Ring Linked to Woman's Mystery Death," Los Angeles Times, May 29, 1952
- "Beauty's Death Agony Bared; Reported Wed," Los Angles Mirror, May 29, 1952
- "Seek Nurse in Fatal Abortion on Socialite," Los Angeles Daily News, May 29, 1952
- "Socialite's body taken from morgue," Los Angles Daily News, May 30, 1952
- "Police Check Phone Calls for Fatal Surgery Doctor," Los Angeles Times, May 30, 1952
- "Rites Arranged for Society Beauty Found Dead in Alley," Hollywood Citizen-News, May 31, 1952
- "Secrecy Cloak Put on Rites for Patricia Steele," Los Angles Times, May 31, 1952
- "Detectives Cloak Clues in Patricia Steele Death," Los Angeles Times, June 1, 1952
- "Police Say Doctor In Patricia Steele Death Case Known," Hollywood Citizen-News, June 2, 1952
- "Police on Trail of Suspect in Patricia Steele Death," Los Angeles Times, June 2, 1952
- "Arrest Near In Steele Death," Redlands (CA) Daily Facts, June 2, 1952
- "Inquest Set for June 10 in Patricia Steele Death," Los Angeles Times, June 3, 1952
- "Quiz Osteopath in 4 Illegal Surgery Deaths," Hollywood Citizen-News, November 6, 1954
- "Doctor Quizzed on 4 Women's Deaths," Los Angeles Times, November 6, 1954
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
May 26, 1933: Another Dying Woman Named Dr. Mitchell as Abortionist
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| Dr. Justin Mitchell |
While I was looking for more information about the February 2, 1936 abortion death of Alice Haggin, I found an article linking Alice's abortionist, Justin Mitchell, to yet another death. While dying in Chicago's West Side Hospital, Mrs. Florence Falske Jordan named Mitchell as the man who had perpetrated her fatal abortion on May 8, 1933. Florence died on May 26.
According to the 1930 census, Florence and her husband, Edward, lived in the home of Edward's grandmother, Elizabeth Jordan, with their 2-year-old daughter. Edward was a driver for a dry-goods company and Florence was a homemaker.
Mitchell had previously been implicated in the 1931 abortion death of Ethel Vaughan and went on to be implicated in the abortion deaths of Mary Schwartz in 1934 and of Mary Nowalowski in 1936.
* Watch Dr. Mitchell's Many Dead on YouTube.
* Watch Dr. Mitchell's Many Dead on Rumble.
Sources:
- "Physician Arrested After Woman Dies of Operation," Chicago Tribune, May 27, 1933.
May 26, 1915: Bullet in the Head Fails to Distract From Abortion
A Shot Fired in the Night
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| Anna Johnson |
Dr. Shaver told police, "Miss Johnson came to my home eight days ago. She said she was from Ludington, Michigan. She wanted work and I employed her as a maid for $5 a week. She spoke to me only a few times and never mentioned her relatives or anything about being despondent."
Shaver continued, "I sent her to a drug store for cotton late yesterday afternoon, and when I returned I went out to make a professional call. When I got back at 6 o'clock in the evening Harvey told me that he had found her dead body in my son's room."
Another witness, nurse Anna Bratzenberg, would later corroborate part of Shaver's story at the inquest. She said that she had gone to Shaver's house for an appointment at 5:30 the evening in question. Bratzenberg waited about fifteen minutes until Shaver arrived home. "Harvey whispered something to her. She looked scared. I asked her what was the trouble and she said, 'A girl roomer has just blown her brains out.' I didn't want to get mixed up in something like that, so I left."
Not a Suicide
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| Dr. Eva Shaver |
At first, Coroner's Physician Reinhart issued a statement that Anna, about six weeks into pregnancy, had died from the results of an abortion perpetrated two days earlier. He noted that there was very little blood from the bullet wound, indicating that it was inflicted after death. Later he changed his mind, and decided that there was enough blood from the head wound to indicate that Anna had been alive when the bullet was fired into her brain. Anna was already moribund when the shot was fired.
Whether the shot was fired before of after Anna's heart had stopped beating, the fact that the gun was in Anna's left hand but the bullet wound on the right side, it was clear that she had not shot herself. The coroner's jury concluded that the shooting had been an attempt to hide the fact that an abortion was the true cause of death.
The coroner's jury was unable to determine which of their three suspects fired the shots: Clarence, Dr. Shaver, or Willis Harvey.
Investigators tore up the floorboards in the house, searching for the remains of aborted babies.
The Motive for the Abortion
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| Anna Johnson and Marshall Hostetler |
Don't do anything rash, and when you get married, get married right. You have oceans of time for this married bliss stuff. Don't get married too soon; it will mean good night to all your times.
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| Clarence Shaver |
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| Shaver's "Little Red and White Pills" |
Hostetler reported this failure to Clarence, who showed him letters purportedly from satisfied customers. He told Hostetler that the pills could take a long time to work, as long as 14 weeks -- a claim that leads me to believe that the pills were a placebo and that the Shavers hoped that any miscarriage that occurred when the woman was taking the pills would be attributed to their product. Whatever the case, Clarence provided Hostetler with two more boxes of the pills.
When this new round of pills likewise failed to dislodge the fetus, Hostetler went back to Clarence, who told Hostetler to bring Anna to his office so he could "look her over." Clarence told Hostetler, "My mother is a doctor. She has a midwife and a nurse at her home, and we will take Anna to the the house and give her good care."
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| Dr. Eva Shaver's home |
Shaver was tried for Johnson's death and the 1914 abortion death of another patient, Lillie Giovenco. As the date for the Johnson trial approached, witnesses reported death threats. Hostetler found the threats so frightening that he refused to leave police custody, even though re was free to do so, He told police at the inquest that Clarence Shaver had offered him a large sum of money with which he could flee to Canada. Hostetler said that he had truly loved Anna and was not going to leave. The threats had followed. When appearing at court, Marshall was "on the verge of nervous collapse and a physician was called to give him southing medicines." He was placed in a secret location under police guard.
A Strange Crackdown
- "Michigan Girl Is Victim Of Strange Shooting In Chicago," The News-Palladium, May 27, 1915
- "Doctor Will Have to Explain Shooting of Girl," Port Huron (MI) Times-Herald, May 27, 1915
- "Two Held for Girl's Death," Herald-Press, May 28, 1915
- "Ludington Girl Dead; Police Hold Doctor in Chicago," Detroit Free Press, May 28, 1915
- "Ludington Girl Dead, Three Held," St. Joseph (MI) Evening Herald, May 28, 1915
- "Hold Three For Murder Of Miss Anna Johnson," Ludington (MI) Daily News, May 29, 1915
- "Jurors Hold Shavers For Girl Murder," Chicago Daily Tribune, May 29, 1915
- "Maternity Homes in Chicago Face Sweeping Probe," Detroit Free Press, May 31, 1915
- "Death Threat to Hostetler," Chicago Daily Tribune, June 5, 1915
May 26, 1950: Lay Abortionist Blames Death on Phlegm
Joy Malee Joy, 25 years of age, was an employee of Pratt Union in Cunningham, Kansas. She lived with her mother, Inez, identified in news coverage as Mrs. Roy G. Lewis, and her 6-year-old daughter, Vicky Joy. Joy was a former resident of Hutchinson and Medora, and had graduated from Buhler HS in 1942. She had divorced Vicky's father, Victor Joy, around 1945.
On May 26, 1950, ambulance driver Phil Johnson of got a call of a sick woman at the home of Annas Whitlow Brown. Brown had lived 25 years in Hutchinson, and was the mother of two grown daughters.
When Johnson arrived, he was directed through Brown's garage to the basement, where he found a woman lying on a bed on the large bedroom. She appeared to be dead. The bedspread was stained. The woman was Joy Malee Joy. Johnson transported her to Grace Hospital, where she was pronounced dead on arrival.
An inquest into Joy's death was held at Johnson and Sons Funeral Home.
Deputy Sheriff Gene Schroder and Captain John Robinson said that they went to Brown's home at around 9:00 pm. Brown showed them a first floor bedroom and said that this was where Joy had lay down. The police said they told her they knew better, whereupon Brown led them to the basement. They found two bedspreads, still damp, hanging in the utility room.
They said that Brown told them that Joy had suffered a coughing spell so she'd given the young woman a peppermint and a glass of water.
In Joy's purse police found a business card for Annas Whitlow Brown and her phone number. On the back, in pencil, was nurse Margaret Dowdy's name, address, and phone number.
Pathologist Dr. L. C. Murphy performed an autopsy, along with coroner Dr. G. A. Chickering. Murphy testified that "there were two findings. First the examination showed a five months pregnancy. Second there was evidence of instrumentation. There was evidence of an attempt at an abortion." This included tearing of the placenta and uterine bleeding. He believed that Joy had died from either blood loss or asphyxiation. At the time of her death Joy had been suffering from a cold which could have been a contributing factor. "An acute cold, coughing ... could have resulted in death if weakened by anesthetic or loss of blood."
Murphy said that the abortion had only been initiated, not completed. The attempt, however, had triggered heavy bleeding. "There was no way to tell how much loss of blood was suffered." Murphy could not decide if death had been caused by choking on mucus and vomit or by blood loss. Dr. Chickering added that in his opinion, "death was caused by an operation or the circumstances surrounding it."
A man named Frank Annett, from Pratt, testified that he knew Joy, who had approached him about a month earlier and "intimated she was pregnant." She had not, he testified, said anything about an abortion. About a week later, he testified, Joy had come to him wanting to borrow money.
Joy's mother wept when recalling that Joy had called her on Friday, saying that she was going to a shower for a friend and would be getting home late. She said that she hadn't known that her daughter was pregnant. Joy had been suffering a severe cold but was feeling better on Friday.
Nurse Dowdy, who had practiced for 35 years, testified that she had taken care of patients in her home for Brown. When asked if she knew the victim, Dowdy replied, "I never heard of Joy Malee Joy." She said that when Brown referred patients to her, she identified them from their home towns. Thus Joy Joy was "the girl from Pratt." Dowdy said that she'd also been told that "the girl from Pratt" had a daughter living in Cunningham with her grandmother. Dowdy said that Brown had contacted her about two weeks earlier, then was called on May 26 and told that "the girl from Pratt" would be coming to stay with her for a few days. "She called again in a few minutes, about 15 minutes, and said the girl was sick and had turned blue and would I come right out."
Dowdy said that by the time she arrived at Brown's house, "the girl from Pratt" had already been taken away. Dowdy went to the basement, where Brown had a rec room, a utility room, and two bedrooms. One bedroom had an attached bathroom.
"Mrs. Brown told me the girl had asked to use the bathroom, had a severe coughing spell and then asked to lie down on the bed. She gasped a few times and was gone. There was a large red spot on the bed."
Dowdy said that she had not been specifically told why Joy was at Brown's home, but believed it was for an abortion. When asked if she was an abortionist, she replied, "Oh no. I've never done an abortion. I just do the cleaning up, the after care." The women would stay with her for three or four days. "I keep them in bed and feed them. I determine when they are ready to go." She said that the "girls" would pay her ten dollars a day. She said that the only medications she would administer were aspirin and laxatives. When asked if she'd call a doctor if one of the "girls" got sick, Dowdy said, "I've never had that happen.
Brown was charged with first degree murder. She remained free on $7,500 bond until the trial. Her defense asserted that Joy had not bled to death but that "death resulted from a collection of mucus in her trachea." Brown convicted of manslaughter by abortion.
After the conviction, Inez filed $15,000 suit against brown on behalf of Vicky.
Sources:
- "Charge Manslaughter," Hutchinson (KS) News-Herald, May 28, 1950
- "Claim Abortion Was Not Cause of Death," Hutchinson (KS) News, November 20, 1950
- "$15,000 Suit Against Annas Brown," Hutchinson (KS) News-Herald, September 8, 1951
- Joy v. Brown, 173 Kan. 833 (1953)
Monday, May 25, 2026
May 25, 1928: Precursor to More Deaths to Follow
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| Dr. Guy E. Brewer |
Dr. Guy E. Brewer was a 1906 graduate of the University of Louisville Medical School. He had practiced medicine in Garber, Oklahoma, for 21 of his 29 years as a physician. Widely regarded as a philanthropist, he supported young men through their university studies by providing housing for them.
While Brewer helped those young men build brighter futures, at least six young women lost their futures under his care.
The first known women to suffer the downside of Dr. Brewer's philanthropy was 23-year-old Elizabeth Shaw of Roxana, Oklahoma. On May 25, 1928, Elizabeth died after an abortion performed by Brewer.
Elizabeth appears to have been the first of at least six women who died following abortions performed by Brewer. The others were:
- Ruby Ford, a 26-year-old homemaker, who died on April 1, 1934
- Hermoine Fowler, a 20-year-old coed, who died Jun 27, 1934
- Doris Jones, a 20-year-old mother of two, who died April 11, 1935
- Wanda Lee Gray, age 20, who died April 9, 1935
- Myrtle Helen Rose, age 21, who died December 23, 1931
When given the choice between supporting the young men Brewer had helped and seeking justice for the women he had killed, the Garber community made a clear choice in favor of the young men. Brewer's local influence was so strong that the husband of one of his abortion patients was reportedly fired from his job after notifying police of his wife’s death.
- "Murder Charges Multiply On Philanthropic Doctor," Miami (OK) Daily News-Record, May 5, 1935
- "Link Doctor in 2 New Deaths," The Oklahoma (Oklahoma City) News, June 6, 1935
Sunday, May 24, 2026
May 24, 1879: An Abandoned Wife
Twenty-year-old Jennie Fouts, separated from her husband, lived behind the First Presbyterian Church on New York Street in Cincinnati. On May 15, she collapsed on the street. When others attended to her, Jennie reported having suffered from a dull, aching pain for several days.
She took to her bed, where she was cared for until the evening of May 19, when she was admitted to City Hospital. There, she vomited a black fluid that tested positive for blood. Since this is a symptom of the yellow fever, which had killed three people in the previous few weeks, doctors treated her for that ailment.
She died on May 24, 1879. After her death authorities made contact with a doctor who had treated Jennie prior to her admission and found her to be suffering from an abortion. She would not divulge the name of her abortionist or of her baby's father.
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| Grok rendition of their meeting |
You state that you are the lawful husband of Jennie Fouts; that you obtained all the facts in relation to her unfortunate death through the Indianapolis papers. You ask: "Was she decently interred?" She was, in Crown Hill. She had some true friends who stood by her to the last, and they should be honored for fidelity to that unfortunate woman. Now, sir, let me thank you for your communication. It only confirms the main points in the verdict rendered at the inquest. .... You communication has completely vindicated the honor of your unfortunate wife. Truth, justice and manhood demand that the world should know all the facts and they must and should be told. I will give you a reasonable time to publish them in your own way.
- "Additional Local News," Cincinnati Enquirer, May 2, 1879
- "A Startling Report," Nashville Tennessean, May 27, 1879
- "Yellow Fever," Galveston Daily News, May 29, 1879
- "Additional Local News," Cincinnati Enquirer, Thursday, May 29, 1879
- "Indianapolis," Cincinnati Enquirer, June 10, 1879
- "Jennie Fouts," Indianapolis Journal, Jun. 16, 1879
May 24, 1912: Perpetrator's Profession Unknown
On May 24, 1912, 24-year-old homemaker Margaret Dwyer died at Englewood Union Hospital in Chicago, due to sepsis caused by an abortion perpetrated the previous day by Paulina Lindenson.
According to public records, Margaret had lived a sad life. When she was just one year old her baby brother died the day after he was born. When she was 7 years old, her one-year-old sister died.
Margaret married her husband, Edward, in 1906 when she was 18 and he was 19.
Edward, a conductor on the city railroad, was left to raise their 3-year-old son after Margaret's death.
Lindenson's profession is listed only as "abortion provider" so it is likely that she was a lay abortionist. She was held by the Coroner on May 24, and indicted by a Grand Jury on July 19, but as far as I can tell the case never went to trial.
Sources:
- Homicide in Chicago Interactive Database
- Death certificate

















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