Tuesday, March 17, 2026

March 17, 1976: Delayed Care Kills Woman in Florida

SUMMARY: Cycloria Vangates, a 32-year-old Black woman, died March 17, 1976 after an abortion performed by Paul Glassman in Miami, FL.

Cycloria Irene Watts Vangates, age 32, underwent an abortion on March 13, 1976, performed by Dr. Paul Glassman. She suffered a cervical laceration and began bleeding internally. 

The Florida Board of Osteopathic Medicine found that Glassman failed to adequately treat Cycloria's injury and should have intervened to ensure that blood would be available for her when she arrived at the hospital. As a result of the delay, she suffered organ damage. She died on March 17.

PaulGlassman.png
Dr. Paul Glassman
Glassman's license was finally revoked for three years beginning in 1981. He later recovered his license on the condition that he undergo close supervision and not perform any more abortions. Glassman moved to Missouri, but his attorney revealed to the Florida Board of Osteopathic medical Examiners that Glassman performed 17 abortions while visiting in Fort Lauderdale, in an effort to prove that the ban against Glassman performing abortions was unnecessary. 

Glassman complained about the damage to his income when he was unable to continue as a Florida abortionist, recalling the days when a streamlined business could gross the abortionist $750,000 a year (nearly $3 million in 2025). 

Glassman also faced a 1978 Florida conviction for felony grand larceny involving filing insurance claims for a faked automobile accident. 

Glassman paid out $386,875 to Cycloria's survivors, according to a malpractice liability search.

As you can see from the graph below, abortion deaths were falling dramatically before legalization. This steep fall had been in place for decades. To argue that legalization lowered abortion mortality simply isn't supported by the data.

Watch Another Woman Needlessly Bleeds to Death on YouTube.
Watch Another Woman Needlessly Bleeds to Death on YouTube.

external image Abortion+Deaths+Since+1960.jpg


Sources:


March 17, 1915: Another Unidentified Chicago Perp

Callie L. Sullivan Stewart, a 35-year-old homemaker, died in Chicago on March 17, 1915 after an abortion performed by an unidentified perpetrator.

Sources:

March 17, 1907: Doctor Implicated in Peoria

On March 17, 1907, Paulina Schneider died at St. Francis Hospital in Peoria, Illinois, from complications of a criminal abortion. 

Paulina gave a deathbed statement implicating Dr. Robert Emery in her abortion. Her mother had also fingered Emery. 

For reasons not given in the source document, Emery -- identified as "Old Doctor Robert Emery" -- was found not guilty.

Though the verdict might have indeed been a case of exonerating an innocent man, it might also reflect loopholes in the abortion law that made conviction difficult, such as a requirement that the prosecution prove that the woman was pregnant or had felt the baby move.

Note, please, that with overall public health issues such as doctors not using proper aseptic techniques, lack of access to blood transfusions and antibiotics, and overall poor health to begin with, there was likely little difference between the performance of a legal abortion and illegal practice, and the aftercare for either type of abortion was probably equally unlikely to do the woman much, if any, good. 



Sources: "Aged Peoria Doctor Acquitted of Grave Charge", The Quincy Daily Journal", July 10, 1907

Monday, March 16, 2026

March 16, 1981: Embolism Death in North Carolina

Grok AI illustration
Norma Jean Greene, a 34-year-old divorced secretary, went into cardio-respiratory arrest and died at North Carolina Baptist Hospital in Winston-Salem on March 16, 1981. 

Her death certificate indicates that the arrest was caused by a pulmonary embolism (tissue or air in the lungs) following a recent abortion.

March 16, 1973 Collapses at Home After Safe, Legal Abortion

Candid shot of a middle-aged Black man with a receeding hairline, dark-rimmed eyeglasses, and a short moustache
Dr. T.R. Mason Howard

Reports on death of Evelyn Dudley, age 38, alleged that she was treated at Friendship Medical Center in Chicago on March 16, 1973. Later, at home in Benton Harbor, MI, she collapsed in the driveway. She was taken to a hospital in Chicago, where attempts to save her failed.

Her death was due to shock, hemorrhage from a ruptured cervix and vagina, from "remote abortion." 

Civil rights leader Dr. T.R. Mason Howard (pictured) stated that Evelyn was treated at Friendship for infection sustained in an abortion in Detroit. Evelyn's brother, however, stated that Evelyn had traveled to Chicago specifically to have the abortion.

Julia Rogers and Dorothy Brown also died after abortions at Friendship Medical Center.

Watch One of Three Fatal Abortions at Friendship Medical Center on YouTube. 
Watch One of Three Fatal Abortions at Friendship Medical Center on YouTube

Sources: 



March 16, 1915: One Abortionist, Second Death, Two Days

On March 16, 1915, 19-year-old saleslady Hazel Wilcox, who also worked as a cabaret singer, died at a Chicago home from sepsis caused by an abortion believed to have been perpetrated that day by midwife Julia Patera.

Patera was held by the coroner on March 20 but the case never went to trial, despite the fact that Elinora Cassidy had died only the previous day after identifying Patera as her abortionist.

Note, please, that with overall public health issues such as doctors not using proper aseptic techniques, lack of access to blood transfusions and antibiotics, and overall poor health to begin with, there was likely little difference between the performance of a legal abortion and illegal practice, and the aftercare for either type of abortion was probably equally unlikely to do the woman much, if any, good.

In fact, due to improvements in addressing these problems, maternal mortality in general (and abortion mortality with it) fell dramatically in the 20th Century, decades before Roe vs. Wade legalized abortion across America.

external image MaternalMortality.gif

For more on pre-legalization abortion, see The Bad Old Days of Abortion

Sources:





March 16, 1915: An Unknown Perp in Chicago

On March 16, 1915, 26-year-old homemaker Hazel E. Carr died in her Chicago home from an abortion performed by an unknown perpetrator.

Note, please, that with overall public health issues such as doctors not using proper aseptic techniques, lack of access to blood transfusions and antibiotics, and overall poor health to begin with, there was likely little difference between the performance of a legal abortion and illegal practice, and the aftercare for either type of abortion was probably equally unlikely to do the woman much, if any, good.

In fact, due to improvements in addressing these problems, maternal mortality in general (and abortion mortality with it) fell dramatically in the 20th Century, decades before Roe vs. Wade legalized abortion across America.

external image MaternalMortality.gif

For more on pre-legalization abortion, see The Bad Old Days of Abortion

Sources:

March 16, 1875: A Bright Talent Snuffed Out

SUMMARY: On March 16, 1875, aspiring opera singer Annie Curtis, age 28, died in New York from an abortion perpetrated by midwife Annie Ihl.

Annie Curtis, age 28, had a mixed past behind her but a bright future ahead of her in March of 1875.

Who Was Annie Curtis?

Annie Josephine McKenzie was born in San Francisco to an American father and a mother from the Sandwich Islands. Accounts differ about her family. One said that her father was working as a notary of little financial means. The New York Times cites a San Francisco newspaper in identifying Annie's father as Col. J. W. McKenzie. The Washington DC National Republican says that Annie's father had been a county sheriff and had also been San Francisco chief of police for a while. San Francisco papers of the era and earlier show both a Colonel J. W. McKenzie and a J. W. McKenzie who was very active in musical circles. Given the course Annie's life took, I think that the last is most likely the case, since he arranged music lessons for his talented daughter.

AnnieMcKenzieConcertHeadliner.pngWhen young, Annie McKenzie married a Mr. Bradshaw who had money. After their daughter's birth Annie sought a divorce on the grounds of cruelty. I have been unable to determine what became of Annie's daughter.

“Mrs. Bradshaw, after her release, resumed her musical studies, and performed several successful operatic engagements on the San Francisco stage.” She might have resumed her maiden name, since she was listed as Annie McKenzie as a headliner in one concert and as a soloist in the Harmonic Society in others in 1872.

It was during her operatic career in San Francisco that she attracted the attention of Tyler Curtis, a widower and father of two daughters. He was wealthy, a politician who had served as a member of the San Francisco Board of Commissioners for several turns and ran an unsuccessful San Francisco mayoral campaign.

Curtis took Annie to Europe so that she could study Italian and music and he could, as one newspaper snidely put it, practice “devoting himself almost exclusively to drinking.”

Dark Times But Bright Prospects


Somehow they went broke while in Europe and returned to New York. Curtis left Annie and his daughters in lodgings in New York and left for San Francisco, saying he'd send for them shortly. At first he wrote regularly and sent sufficient money, but the letters and money slacked off. Annie contacted her father, who tracked down the neglectful husband and found him dissolute. Annie's father recommended that she give up on him.

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Max Strakosch

Annie tried to resume work in opera, and managed to attract the attention of prominent New York impresario Max Strakosch, well known for recruiting operatic talent including Emma Thursby, dubbed “the American Nightengale” in homage to "the Swedish Nightengale," Janny Lind.

Strakosch considered Annie to be very promising and arranged lessons for her with noted opera singer and instructor Achille Errani. He discouraged Annie from taking paying engagements with other opera companies, saying that he wanted to manage her career, which he believed would be spectacular.

AnchilleErrani.jpg
Achille Errani

Though Strakosch was arranging for Annie's training, he was not, evidently, arranging for her livelihood. Looking for work as a vocalist but off the operatic stage, she answered an ad and auditioned for a position in the choir of the Church of the Atonement. The choir was under the direction of the church organist, Benjamin Gregory. She won the job.

Benjamin Gregory's father, Dudley S. Gregory, had been mayor of Jersey City and a principal stockholder in the New Jersey Railroad. He had died shortly before his son met the aspiring opera singer, leaving an estate of seven million. His son was a patron of the arts.

Learning that Annie was living in substandard lodgings with her two stepdaughters, Benjamin Gregory paid the arrears on her rent and relocated the little family, at his own expense, to better quarters in an upper story in a more reputable neighborhood.

The two became lovers. In early 1875, Annie became pregnant.

Annie's Fatal Choice


Strakosch had scheduled Annie to debut at the Academy of Music in March of 1875. She was to perform Aida under the stage name Anna Cartez. Strakosch had also given Annie a five-year contract, planning to send her to Italy in May for further study. Pregnancy would derail all of this.

“She decided upon infanticide, despite the protest of the partner of her shame.”

She underwent the abortion on March 9, perpetrated by Annie J. Ihl, “a woman long under the surveillance of the Police,” whom Annie had found from a thinly-veiled ad in the New York Herald. Ihl performed several abortion attempts. Annie's friends became alarmed when she suddenly took terribly ill and called in Dr. Barry, who got the truth from her and alerted the authorities.

Convinced that Gregory had nothing to do with the abortion, police allowed him to remain at Annie's bedside as she died, though under police supervision. He was reportedly very attentive of Annie in her illness, staying at her bedside once peritonitis set in, there in the lodgings he had rented for her.

She made deathbed statement given to the coroner the night of March 15, 1875:

“A week ago yesterday I went to see Doctress Ihl. She lived at Third avenue and Forty-ninth street. The woman here present is the woman I went to. I am a bad woman for telling of her. God will punish me. My husband's name is Tyler Curtis. He is in San Francisco. He has been there fifteen months. I went of my own accord to Doctress Ihl. I met Mr. Gregory in the Church of the Atonement. He did not send me to Doctress Ihl. He did no know that I went. I have told the truth. If I were to go before my God this moment I would say the same.”

When asked who her baby's father was, she pointed to Benjamin Gregory. When asked “Who performed the operation of infanticide?” she “pointed to a gross, ugly picture of Sairey Gamp [an unsavory nurse in the novel //Martin Chuzzlewit// by Charles Dickens], who sat in the corner between two policemen.”

Annie died from peritonitis four hours after giving her statement, at 12:15 a.m. On March 16. Benjamin Gregory, overcome with grief, took to his bed.

As for Ihl, the papers had nothing good to say about her. Ihl “is about fifty years old, large, fat and repulsive looking. She is a professional midwife, having lately blossomed into an advertised abortionist, and has long been registered by the police as worth watching.” Ihl admitted that Annie had consulted with her, but says she only provided instruments and Annie did the abortion on herself.

An autopsy found that Annie's organs had been healthy, except for her uterus, which had suffered lacerations which allowed a massive infection to take hold.

The Husband who had Abandoned Annie


The Columbia, South Carolina Daily Phoenix, on April 29, paints Annie's absent husband in a highly sympathetic light:

TylerCurtis.png
Tyler Curtis

"Mr. Tyler Curtis, at one time a prominent citizen of San Francisco, Cal, and an early settler there, died at Barnum's Hotel, in New York, on Friday morning. He was the husband of Annie Josephine Curtis, who died a few weeks since from the effects of malpractice. Mr. Curtis had previously been married to a woman of considerable means, by whom he had three children, two of whom were living in New York. On the day of Mrs. Curtis' death, the husband, who was in San Francisco, was informed of the sad event. He hurriedly telegraphed to have the body placed in a receiving vault until his arrival. While packing up his effects, preparatory to leaving San Francisco, he got an evening newspaper, in which he read with grieved amazement the story of his wife's shame. Dazed and heartbroken, he took the train for New York, where he arrived on April 8. The sudden shock to his feelings was too much for him to bear, and he sank rapidly, dying on Friday last from grief and prostration under the blow which he had received."

The World's Loss


AnnieMcKenzieHarmonicSociety.png“In the untimely taking off of Mrs. Curtis, the operatic stage has lost a promising neophyte. Her voice, in the opinion of excellent judges, was a dramatic soprano of greater compass, strength, and sweetness than that of any performer on the stage. In person she was of medium size, with a gracefully-rounded classic figure. Her face was a study for an artist. It was not a perfect representative of any time of beauty. Neither a blonde nor a brunette, with a Roman nose, large, firm chin, shapely but oversized mouth, blue-gray eyes, and dark hair, shoe could not be assigned to any school. Every emotion was reflected in her countenance, and, backed by a cultivated intellect, made up a rarely attractive woman.” said the March 22,1875 Chicago Tribune.

Sources:

March 16, 1899: Town Rallies to Defend Doctor After Teacher's Abortion Death

Harriet "Hattie" Kennedey Reece was a 25-year-old primary school teacher in Browning, Illinois. Her husband, Frank, was also a teacher and principal at the school where Hattie taught. They had been married two and a half years in 1899, when the events unfolded that ended Hattie's life on March. 

On March 3, after dismissing class, Hattie took the night train from Browning to the town of Tennessee, Illinois. She met Dr. James W. Aiken, who took her to a room he had booked for her in a hotel. On March 15, Aiken brought in Dr. Lewis from Macomb, Illinois. The two of them were unable to save Hattie and she died on March 16. 

Grok AI illustration
Hattie's body was put on a train back to Browning, but it was stopped in transit by Coroner Stapp, accompanied by the state's attorney and two doctors from Macomb. The doctors conducted an autopsy in the freight room of the depot. An inquest was held, with the coroner's jury recommending the arrest of Aiken for murder by abortion.

Aiken seemed to be a bit of a George Tiller precursor -- somebody who could do no wrong in the eyes of his supporters. The June 8, 1899 Stronghurst Graphic praised his poise: "When the jury's verdict was read not a tremor was observed in Dr. Aikin. His expression was tranquil and serene. His bearing all through the trial has marked him as a man of iron nerve and wonderful fortitude." He evidently would find a "life of the mother" excuse in any pregnancy. 

But unlike Tiller, Aiken couldn't just buy his way out of trouble. He was found guilty. Six of the jurors wanted to see him hanged for Hattie's death, and the other six each recommended a prison sentence from 5 to 75 years, with the average request being 33. After many hours and ballots they agreed upon a sentence of 15 years. Aiken immediately appealed, but was denied a new trial. 

Aiken's friends rallied to protest. They passed out handbills reading:

A mass meeting of the citizens of Tennessee and vicinity will be held in the hall tonight. Action will be taken looking towards justice and equity to all concerning a matter of grave importance to our people.
By Order of Committee

The gathered supporters denounced Hattie's bereaved husband "and regarded him equally guilty with other parties."

Resolved, That we consider the penalty imposed upon our fellow townsman to be excessive; and be it further
Resolved, That we extend our sincere sympathy to Dr. Aiken and especially to his wife in the hour of their great trouble.

Sources:

March 16, 1905: One of Dr. Lucy Hagenow's Many Victims

On March 16, 1905, 27-year-old seamstress Mary Putnam (sometimes identified as May Putnam) died at Chicago's Monroe Street Hospital from infection caused by an abortion. 

A middle-aged white woman with small facial features and a sharp nose, wearing a sailor-style collar and hat and wire-rimmed eyeglasses
Dr. Lucy Hagenow

    Mary, unmarried and working as a manager at an art society, had been brought to the hospital two days earlier, in critical condition, and the police were notified. The party responsible for Mary's death is noted as Dr. Louise Hagenow, who did her abortions on her own premises and even had a preferred undertaker to haul away the bodies.

    Hagenow and a man identified as F. E. MacCordy were arrested by the Coroner's Jury on March 16. MacCordy was president of the MacCordy cigar Company and lived in the same building with Mary. He was about 40 years old.

    Hagenow had been linked to the abortion deaths of Louise DerchowAnnie Dorris,  Abbia Richards, and Emma Dep in San Francisco, and would go on to be linked to over a dozen Chicago abortion deaths:

    Hagenow, who originally used the first name Louisa, then Louise, and then finally Lucy, was typical of criminal abortionists in that she was a physician.

    Sources: 

    March 16, 1924: Accomplice Arrested but Not the Abortionist

    On March 16, 1924, 35-year-old Selma Hedlund died in Chicago's Jefferson Park Hospital (pictured) from complications of an abortion performed that day. 

    According to census records, Selma and her husband, Arvid, operated a small boarding house.

    The Homicide in Chicago Interactive Database says that she died at the crime scene. Nobody was ever positively identified as the abortionist. However, a Carl Carlson, indicated as a person known to Selma, was arrested as an accomplice.

    Sunday, March 15, 2026

    March 15 and 16, 1915: One Abortionist Two Deaths Two Days

    On March 15, 1915, 22-year-old homemaker Elenor Cassidy died at Cook County Hospital after being treated for two days for septicemia. 

    Before her death, Elinor named Dr. Julia Patera as the guilty abortionist, and indicated that the abortion had been done at Patara's house on March 6.

    Patara was indicted for Elinor's death on March 15 by a Grand Jury, but the case never went to trial, even though the very next day another woman, Hazel Wilcox, had died the very next day after an abortion attributed to Patera. 


    N.B.: Patera is sometimes identified as a doctor and sometimes as a midwife. In late 19th and early 20th century Chicago, female obstetricians were often identified as midwives even if they were physicians. 

    Watch One Doctor, Two Days, Two Deaths on YouTube.
    Watch One Doctor, Two Days, Two Deaths on Rumble.

    Sources:

    March 15, 1917: An Unknown Perp in Chicago

    On March 15, 1917, 24-year-old waitress Celia Steele died at Chicago's Jefferson Park Hospital from septicemia and purulent peritonitis caused by a criminal abortion. 

    The coroner was unable to identify the guilty party.

    Source: Homicide in Chicago Interactive Database

    Saturday, March 14, 2026

    March 14, 1989: Hemorrhage + Delay - Ambulance = Death

    Survivors of Glenda Davis, age 31, mother of two, said that she underwent a safe and legal abortion performed by Robert Hanson at Aaron Family Planning in Harris County, Texas on March 11, 1989. During the abortion, Glenda suffered a 1.5 - 2 inch long wound to her uterine artery and vein complex, causing massive bleeding.

    Grok AI illustration
    After a delay, staffers decided to transfer Glenda to the hospital. Glenda's husband, David, discovered staffers attempting unsuccessfully to transfer Glenda from a wheelchair to a staffer's car. He helped them get Glenda into the car. With the IV still in her arm, Glenda was driven to HCA Memorial Hospital. She had no blood pressure and almost no pulse upon arrival.

    Glenda fell into a coma, and died three days later.

    The family's attorney said, "Prior to the aforementioned breaches and negligence of these Defendants, Glenda H. Davis was a happy and healthy woman. ...  [Glenda's children] have suffered and will continue to suffer from the great loss of the care, ...guidance, protection, ... love, affection, solace, comfort, companionship, society and assistance from their mother. [The children] experienced the horror of watching the devastation of their mother's condition on a day to day basis. This horror was further complicated by their having to deal with the anguish of missing the love and attention of their mother. They were too young to understand what and why this had happened. They could only feel abandoned. ... Their family has been destroyed and the loving parent-child relationship they once had has been forever terminated."


    Watch A Deadly Equation on YouTube.
    Watch A Deadly Equation on Rumble.

    Source: Harris County District Court Case No. 89-028771

    March 14, 1930: Doctor Implicated in Fatal Chicago Abortion

    On March 14, 1930, Alberta Beard, age 29, died at the office of Dr. Davis Lucas from an abortion performed there that day. Lucas was arrested on May 24, on recommendation of the coroner. Lucas was indicted for felony murder in Alberta's death on August 7. I have been unable to determine the final outcome of the case.

    Source: Homicide in Chicago Interactive Database


    Who performed abortions before legalization? (images and names of various doctors who practiced criminal abortion) (Pie chart showing doctors performing 90% of illegal abortion and the remaining 10% broken down: self = 2%, untrained = 3%, others with training = 5%. Sources provided: "The Search for an Abortionist" by Nancy Howell Lee and Planned Parenthood 1955 Conference on Abortion in America

    March 14, 2004: It Took Her 16 Years to Die From Abortion Injuries

    Dr. Youl Choi

    Nina Gaston was 27 years old when she went to Dr. Youl Choi's facility in Michigan for a safe, legal abortion on January 2, 1988. 

    According to a lawsuit later filed on her behalf, Choi's clinic did not have proper emergency equipment on site. Staff did not properly monitor Nina while administering a paracervical block for the abortion. She went into cardiac arrest. 

    Staff failed to detect the cardiac arrest in a timely manner, then did not have the necessary skills or equipment to perform CPR properly. They did not intubate Nina or use oxygen. Even worse, they stopped their efforts to resuscitate Nina before emergency services arrived. 

    As a result of these failures, Nina was left comatose in a nursing home, where she remained for 16 years until her death at the age of 44 on March 14, 2004.

    Choi had also performed the fatal abortion on Angel Dardie.

    Other women who lingered in care facilities for years before dying from abortion injuries include:

    • Susanne Logan, who languished, mute and paralyzed, for three years until her death on December 1, 1992
    • Venus Ortiz, who remained in a vegetative state for five years until her death in 1998.
    • Shelby Moran, who was cared for in a nursing home for over 20 years until her death on September 16, 1999
    • "Gabriella Alonso," who spent six years in a coma until her death in the summer of 2002
    • Christi Stile, who spent nearly 22 years in a vegetative state until her death on March 29, 2015

    Source: Georgette Baker vs. Youl Choi

    Friday, March 13, 2026

    March 13, 1917: Doctor Implicated in Chicago Abortion Death

    On March 13, 1917, 33-year-old homemaker and Irish immigrant Minnie L. Schofield (misspelled as both Mannie and Hannie on the Homicide in Chicago Interactive Database) died at Cook County Hospital after an abortion performed that day by Fred L. Orsinger

    Press coverage indicates that Orsinger had been a butcher, was an ex-convict, and presented himself as a doctor. He had been implicated in the The March 14, 1917 Chicago Tribune indicates that Orsinger had graduated from a medical school, but Chicago papers indicate that though he passes himself off as a doctor, he was never licensed. He had been implicated in the 1910 abortion death of Paulina Sproc, but nothing came of that case.

    Both Orsinger and Minnie's husband, Thomas, were held by the coroner.  Thomas admitted that he had introduced Orsinger to his wife but had no knowledge of an abortion. Minnie had named Orsinger as her abortionist in a deathbed statement.

    Thomas never went to trial; Orsinger was acquitted on May 8, 1920. 

    Note, please, that with overall public health issues such as doctors not using proper aseptic techniques, lack of access to blood transfusions and antibiotics, and overall poor health to begin with, there was likely little difference between the performance of a legal abortion and illegal practice, and the aftercare for either type of abortion was probably equally unlikely to do the woman much, if any, good.

    In fact, due to improvements in addressing these problems, maternal mortality in general (and abortion mortality with it) fell dramatically in the 20th Century, decades before Roe vs. Wade legalized abortion across America.


    Watch Fake Doctor Implicated Twice on YouTube.
    Watch Fake Doctor Implicated Twice on Rumble.

    For more information about early 20th Century abortion mortality, see Abortion Deaths 1910-1919.

    external image MaternalMortality.gif

    For more on pre-legalization abortion, see The Bad Old Days of Abortion


    Sources:

    March 13, 1909: Fatal Misdiagnosis

    On March 13, 1909, Mrs. Lena Oppedal, age 37, died at Norwegian Tabitha Hospital in Chicago from peritonitis caused by a ruptured ectopic pregnancy complicated by an attempted abortion.

    A midwife named Carrin Bakke was held to a grand jury and indicted for murder but the source document doesn't indicate that there was a trial.

    Note, please, that with overall public health issues such as doctors not using proper aseptic techniques, lack of access to blood transfusions and antibiotics, and overall poor health to begin with, there was likely little difference between the performance of a legal abortion and illegal practice, and the aftercare for either type of abortion was probably equally unlikely to do the woman much, if any, good. 


    Sources: