Tuesday, September 09, 2025

September 9, 1921: The Mystery Abortion That Ruined an Innocent Man

In 1921, Roscoe "Fatty" Arbuckle (pictured, left) was one of the highest paid men in Hollywood. But on September 5 of that year, Arbuckle's life took a horrible turn nobody could have predicted. An aspiring actress, 25-year-old Virginia Rappe (pronounced ra-pay), took ill under strange circumstances at a weekend party Arbuckle was holding at a San Francisco hotel. Four days later, she was dead.

Arbuckle stood trial three times for Virginia's death. Two of the trials ended with hung juries. The third brought an unprecedented apology from the jury:

"Acquittal is not enough for Roscoe Arbuckle. We feel that a great injustice has been done him ... there was not the slightest proof adduced to connect him in any way with the commission of a crime. He was manly throughout the case and told a straightforward story which we all believe. We wish him success and hope that the American people will take the judgement of fourteen men and women that Roscoe Arbuckle is entirely innocent and free from all blame."

Arbuckle had done nothing to harm the girl. He was accused of murder by one Maude Delmont, aka "Madame Black." Delmont ran a blackmail scam, in which she'd provide young women to entertain men at Hollywood parties. A girl would claim that she was raped by some prominent man, who would then pay off Delmont to keep quiet. Delmont's story was so outrageous -- as was her character -- the prosecutors never called her as a witness.

But Arbuckle's name had already been dragged through the mud. The stories of bootleg liquor and wild women had done their damage. Arbuckle was banned from the screen. Although the ban was lifted in December of 1922, Arbuckle's career never recovered. He died of a heart attack in 1933, just as he was starting to recover financially and personally from his ordeal.

The allegations varied: that Arbuckle had raped Virginia, rupturing her insides with his 266-pound weight; that he was drunk and impotent and therefore angrily violated the girl with a wine bottle, or a Coke bottle, or a jagged piece of ice.

The booze-addled party-goers were not very consistent sources of information about exactly what happened. What is agreed upon is that Virginia (pictured, right) stumbled into a bathroom at some point on Monday. Arbuckle followed her. He later said that he found her hunched over the toilet, vomiting and in pain. He moved her to his bed, where he hoped she would sleep it off. He then rejoined the party.

Virginia's condition deteriorated. At some point, she became hysterical, screaming that she was dying and tearing her clothes off. Arbuckle and Delmont argued over what to do next.

The drunken party guests eventually decided to put the nude Virginia into a bathtub of ice water. Some reports have Arbuckle placing a piece of ice near or in Virginia's vagina, which may have contributed to the claim that he'd injured her insides with a sharp piece of ice.

Of course, this did nothing to help Virginia, who continued to scream. Arbuckle carried her to another room and summoned doctors. The guests, thinking Virginia was just hung over, continued to party.

Virginia was not taken to a hospital until Thursday. She taken not to a regular hospital, but to Wakefield Sanitorium, a maternity hospital known for performing quasi-legal abortions. Virginia died the next day, Friday, September 9. The cause of death was listed as peritonitis due to a ruptured bladder due to "external force."

The next day, Arbuckle was charged.

Arbuckle's defense attorney brought forth Josephine Roth, who testified that Virginia had five times availed her self of services at Roth's clinic: four times for abortions, and once to give birth to a baby. This information might seem to be unnecessarily slamming the victim, but turns out to be very relevant.

Although Virginia's ruptured bladder was produced as evidence in the trial, her reproductive organs had vanished after the autopsy. The autopsy was performed illegally on site at Wakefield Sanitorium, without consulting the coroner's office. One of the doctors overseeing the autopsy, Dr. Melville Rumswell, was reputed to be an abortionist.

Without the uterus and vagina, there was no way of knowing if Virginia had indeed suffered blunt vaginal trauma inflicted by Arbuckle.

Blunt-force trauma would have made a strong case against Arbuckle. But sharp instrument trauma would have cleared Arbuckle and pointed the finger at whoever performed a final, eventually fatal, abortion on Virginia Rappe.

There is also the mystery of why Delmont directed suspicion toward Arbuckle. She was a blackmailer. Why didn't she milk Arbuckle for money? Why didn't she simply allow the police to investigate the death of the young women? To these questions, we can add two others: Why had Virginia's uterus, ovaries, and vagina been removed and disposed of? And why was Virginia brought to a marginal facility like Wakefield Sanitarium?

One theory that answers the mysteries is this: Perhaps Delmont had a hand in arranging an illegal abortion that ruptured Virginia's bladder. When Virginia took ill, perhaps Delmont directed her to the Sanitarium, where the abortion may well have been performed -- where there would be accomplices who would also have a motive to keep the real reason for Virginia's death secret. And after the girl died, perhaps Delmont concocted the rape story to create a scandal that would divert attention away from herself.

This is, of course, speculation. But since an abortionist could face murder charges if a patient died -- and since an accomplice likewise would face a prison sentence -- it's the only scenario that explains the otherwise inexplicable behavior of Delmont and whoever got rid of Virginia's uterus and vagina.


Watch Who Really Killed Virginia Rappe? on YouTube. 
Sources: 

Monday, September 08, 2025

September 8, 2009: Planned Parenthood Brings Death to Another Black Woman

A smiling Black teenage girl with long, straightened hair, wearing a low-cut white sweather and holding up a bottle of sparking cider.
Roselle proudly celebrating non-alcoholic
just two months before her fatal abortion.

Roselle Owens was a vibrant 17-year-old high school student, thinking ahead to college, when she discovered that she was pregnant in 2009.

She made the mistake of entrusting herself to Planned Parenthood of New York City. She went to the Margaret Sanger Center for an abortion on the morning of April 11. Dr. Gerald Zupnick, who has a history of malpractice, performed the abortion under general anesthesia. The anesthesia was contracted out to employees of Somnia, also called Outpatient Anesthesia Services.


Zupnick noted in the operative report that the abortion was "uneventful," completing the procedure at 9:20 a.m. Shortly thereafter, staff found that Roselle's breathing was labored and her blood oxygen levels had fallen. A lawsuit filed by Roselle's half-brother on behalf of himself, Roselle's father, and her twin brother asserted that neither Somnia employees, Zupnick, or Planned Parenthood's other staff properly monitored Roselle. The ambulance was not summoned for her until 9:43 a.m., over 20 minutes after the abortion was completed. EMS services transported Roselle to St. Vincent's Medical Center at 10:05 a.m.


Staff at the hospital were able to stabilize Roselle, but the damage had already been done. Roselle remained on a ventilator at St. Vincent's until her death on September 8. She died when she should have been just getting settled into her new college life.


Both Zupnick and Planned Parenthood settled off-the-books, thus ending the paper trail.


Roselle Owens isn't the only woman to die from complications of a Planned Parenthood abortion. 


No Friend to Black Women


Taking Margaret Sanger's name off the clinic where Roselle suffered her fatal injuries does nothing to change a disturbing pattern at Planned Parenthood: It's disproportionately been Black women dying from Planned Parenthood abortions. According to Grok AI, Planned Parenthood reports that only about 14% of their abortion patients are black. So why do the deaths I've learned about disproportionately happen to black women? Of the 12 Planned Parenthood abortion deaths I know of, 5 of them -- 42% -- were black women.


Alexis "Lexi" Arguello was only 18 years old when she underwent an abortion at the Fort Collins, CO, Planned Parenthood in 2025. Planned Parenthood did an abortion her at 22 weeks even though their website says that they only do abortions up to 19 weeks and 6 days. She had developed a clotting disorder due to an amniotic fluid embolism -- a known possible complication that requires swift and decisive action to save the woman's life. Instead, Planned Parenthood requested an ambulance with no lights and sirens, delaying care. Her grandfather, who hadn't known about the pregnancy, rushed to the hospital as doctors did everything they could to save her, including multiple doses of epinephrine and seven liters of blood. She died as he watched helplessly. 

Alyona Dixon got abortion pills at a Nevada Planned Parenthood in September of 2022. Although research had shown that vaginal administration of misoprostol puts women at risk of sudden onset fatal toxic shock syndrome, Planned Parenthood instructed Alyona to take this risk. There's no evidence that she was informed of the risk of toxic shock syndrome, and there clearly was no arrangement for aftercare by a provider who would be alert to this deadly possibility. She ended up going septic and dying. Her death broke the streak of exclusively dead black woman at Planned Parenthood.

Cree Erwin-Shephard, age 24, suffered internal injuries during an abortion at Planned Parenthood in Kalamazoo, Michigan. When she suffered persistent pain, along with nausea and vomiting, she went to the hospital. They didn't provide adequate treatment  and sent her home. Her mother found her cold and stiff in the guest bedroom on the 4th of July, 2016. You can hear her mother's heartbreaking 911 call here. The autopsy found that she had a 1 1/2-inch full thickness tear in her uterus, and Planned Parenthood had somehow missed the fact that the doctor had done this to her and just sent her home to die. 

Tonya Reaves, age 24, left a one-year-old child motherless when she bled to death in July of 2012 after an abortion at a Chicago Planned Parenthood. The abortion had been performed at 11 am, but she wasn't transferred to a hospital until 4:30 pm. The CDC published an article back in 1983 explaining why there's no legitimate reason for a woman to bleed to death after a purportedly safe legal abortion. The article noted, "Deaths from hemorrhage can be eliminated by preventing uterine trauma during abortion and by rapidly diagnosing and treating hemorrhage if it occurs." Planned Parenthood, for some reason, failed to prevent the uterine trauma and failed to rapidly diagnose and treat Tonya's hemorrhage.

In 2008, 44-year-old Bonnie Hunt went to an Illinois Planned Parenthood and underwent an abortion. Afterwards she was hospitalized at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago, but they were unable to save her. Bonnie's mother sued. After the case dragged out in the courts, it was dismissed by stipulation or agreement.

     
When Edrica Goode went to Planned Parenthood for an abortion in 2007. A nurse examined her and noticed of obvious signs of a vaginal infection. The manufacturer of laminaria tents, used to dilate the cervix overnight, warns not to use them if the patient shows any sign of a vaginal infection, since laminaria absorb whatever moisture is in the area and would wick it directly into the uterus. Edrica was told to return the following day to get the laminaria removed and undergo her abortion. However, the infection spread into Edrica's uterus, and from there into her bloodstream, so quickly that by the following morning she was feverish, confused and disoriented. She didn't even know what day it was. Her family rushed her to the hospital, but since nobody knew about the abortion they didn't know to remove the laminaria and aggressively treat the infection. Edrica went septic and died.

Hoa Thuy "Vivian" Tran, age 22, went to Costa Mesa Planned Parenthood in late December of 2003. Six days later she was dead from sepsis. Her family sued Planned Parenthood, the Population Council (an organization that had pushed for fast-track approval of abortion pills), and the drug manufacturer, asserting that Vivian had not been adequately warned of the risks of a chemical abortion. 


Holly Patterson, age 18, died in mid-September of 2003 from sepsis caused by abortion drugs she got at a Planned Parenthood in Hayward, California. Instead of instructing Holly to place the second dose inside her cheek and letting it dissolve, as the FDA instructed, Planned Parenthood told her that she could insert it vaginally. Researchers believe that the vaginal insertion of this second drug makes otherwise healthy young women particularly vulnerable to sudden death from toxic shock syndrome. After his daughter's death, Holly's father, Monty, wanted to know why Planned Parenthood didn't follow the FDA-recommended regimen. He wanted to know why they sent her to the emergency room instead of to a specially trained doctor who would know how to treat abortion pill complications. He never got answers, and as we see from the death of Alyona Dixon, Planned Parenthood didn't stop using this dangerous protocol. 

Irene Stevenson underwent an abortion at a Chicago Planned Parenthood in 2002. She developed an infection and died on July 12. Her widower, Maurice, sued Planned Parenthood, Dr. Lloyd Gregg, Dr. Murray Pelta, and Michael Reese Hospital for malpractice, but the case was dismissed by stipulation in 2006. 

Diana Lopez was 25 years old and 19 weeks pregnant when she went to Planned Parenthood for an abortion in 2002. According to a lawsuit later filed by Diana's widowed husband, Dr. Mark Maltzer, who performed the abortion, had rushed through the abortion in just six minutes when even the website said that the procedure should take between 10 and 20 minutes. He managed to tear Diana's cervix, causing severe bleeding. Diana was rushed by ambulance to County Women's Hospital where doctors performed an emergency hysterectomy and transfused her with five units of blood. It was all in vain. Diana bled to death, leaving two young children motherless. This fatal abortion was funded by California taxpayers through the Medi-Cal program. 

In 1981 abortion patient Elise Kalat suffered a severe asthma attack after her abortion at a Massachusetts Planned Parenthood. When the medics arrived to take over Elise's care they found that nobody on site evidently knew how to perform even layman-quality CPR, much less the type of advanced CPR that would be expected of medical professionals. She had not been intubated. The person using the bag-valve mask was only inflating Elise's cheeks, not getting air into her lungs. The person performing the compressions was doing them on her abdomen rather than her chest. Nobody was monitoring her on an EKG, using a defibrillator, or administering cardiac medications. Thus it should be no surprise that Elise died. 
Watch Another Dead Black Woman on YouTube.

Source: Thurman Owens vs. Planned Parenthood of New York City et al., Kings County Index No. 18364/11

September 8, 1973: Teen Dies after Hospital Abortion

Inglewood Women's Hospital reopens as a clinic

Seventeen-year-old Kathy Murphy went to Inglewood Women's Hospital in Los Angeles County for an abortion on August 24, 1973. During the days after her abortion, Kathy suffered breathing problems and became semi-conscious, so Inglewood staff transferred her by ambulance to Centinela Hospital on September 7.

Later that night, Centinela transferred Kathy back to Inglewood, where John Dupont pronounced her dead at 1:20 on the morning of September 8. The autopsy found that Kathy had died of sepsis from the abortion; her cervix and uterus were infected, and her cervix covered with greenish-black pus.

The Inglewood facility was far better at evading responsibility than it was at providing adequate care. After Kathy's death, the next woman to die was 22-year-old Lynette Wallace, who underwent an abortion at "Inglewood Women's Hospital" on September 13, 1975, just a little over two years after Kathy Murphy's death.

Elizabeth Tsuji was the next to die. She had a saline abortion on February 2, 1978. The next to die was Cora Mae Lewis, age 23, following abortion under general anesthesia  in 1983.

Yvonne Tanner died next. The 22-year-old mother of one had an abortion performed July 10, 1984 at Inglewood. The last death I know about at Inglewood was Belinda Ann Byrd, a 37-year-old mother of three. She underwent an abortion by Steve Pine at Inglewood on January 24, 1987, when she was 19 weeks pregnant.

News clipping headshot of a smiling young Black woman
Belinda Byrd

Belinda's mother wrote to a Los Angeles district attorney: “I am the mother of Belinda Byrd, victim of abortionists at [Inglewood]. I am also the grandmother of her three young children who are left behind and motherless. I cry every day when I think how horrible her death was. She was slashed by them and then she bled to death ... and nobody cares. I know that other young black women are now dead after abortion at that address. ... Where is [the abortionist] now? Has he been stopped? Has anything happened to him because of what he did to my Belinda? Has he served jail time for any of these cruel deaths? People tell me nothing has happened, that nothing ever happens to white abortionists who leave young black women dead. I’m hurting real bad and want some justice for Belinda and all other women who go like sheep to slaughter.”

In the wake of the series of abortion deaths at Inglewood, the authorities inspected the place. Among other things, they caught an abortionist writing post-operative examination notes without even examining the patients. When the state closed Inglewood for numerous violations, the facility simply re-opened as Inglewood Women's Clinic; as a clinic rather than a hospital they were no longer subject to the same intense scrutiny and were able to remain in business.

Watch Deadly Abortion Hospital on YouTube.

Sources:

  • LA County Coroner Report 73-14675
  • Death certificate #47882
  • LA Superior Court Case No. C555261
  • "Officials order closure of abortion hospital," (San Pedro, CA) News-Pilot, February 12, 1988

September 8, 1923: Who Killed Madge?

Garfield Park Hospital

On September 8, 1923, 16-year-old Magdeline "Madge" Bowman died at Chicago's Garfield Park Hospital from an abortion performed there that day. 

It's actually likely, given errors in the Homicide in Chicago Interactive Database, that the abortion was perpetrated elsewhere and Madge was taken to Garfield Park Hospital.

According to Illinois death records, Madge was a Chicago native, the daughter of Charles C. and May Kowald Bowman. 

Midwife Kate Sauer, age 60, and a 20-year-old man named Walter Page were arrested on October 5 based on Madge's dying declaration, but Sauer's case didn't go to court until March of 1925. 

The Homicide in Chicago Database says that Seuer was acquitted. I don't see an outcome for Walter Page.




Sunday, September 07, 2025

September 7, 1989: She Wasn't Even Pregnant

Synthia Yvette Dennard

Twenty-four-year-old Synthia Dennard, a married mother of two, went to Biogenetics in Chicago for an abortion and tubal ligation on September 7, 1989. The surgery was performed by Inno Obasi.

Snythia had been described in her high school yearbook as "A pretty young lady with enough smiles to light up the world."

Synthia began to hemorrhage during the surgery. A medical investigation later found that Obasi had "failed to summon help in a timely manner; refused to allow trained and skilled paramedics to attend to Synthia; refused to allow paramedics to transport Synthia to a hospital in a timely manner," and otherwise "allowed Synthia to bleed to death."

Synthia's survivors had to file a court order to keep the facility from destroying her records. An autopsy revealed that instead of removing a section of Synthia's fallopian tube, Obasi had removed a portion of an artery. The autopsy also revealed that Synthia had not been pregnant at the time of her abortion.

The state suspended Obasi's license for five years for cases of malpractice including Synthia's death along with perforating the uterus of Krystal S in 1989 and of Michelle P in 1990. Obasi poo-poohed the board's concerns, saying, "There is a little saying in obstetrics and gynecology that you are not yet a gynecologist until you've perforated a uterus."

Watch She Hadn't Even Been Pregnant on YouTube.

Sources: Cook County Circuit Court Case No. 89L 13692; Illinois Department of Professional Regulation Case No. 80-2096; Cook County Autopsy Report Case No. 125 of September 1989; Obasi v. Department 639 N.E.2d 1318 (1994); Illinois Death Certificate No. 617111; "State acts against Loop doctor," Chicago Tribune, October 26, 1989; "Famous Quotes," Chicago Tribune, December 4, 1989; "Revoke doctor's license, board urges," Chicago Tribune, May 3, 1990; 6/13/90

September 7, 1996: Repeat-Offender's Fatal Screwup With Anesthesia

Black and white headshot of a middle aged man of Jewish descent with dark hair, a receeding hairline, large, dark 1980s style eyeglasses, and wearing a suit coat and tieThirty-five-year-old Tanya Williamson, aka "Patient A", had laminaria inserted at Moshe Hachamovitch's New York abortion facility on September 6, 1996, for an early second-trimester abortion. Hachamovitch estimated that she was almost 14 weeks pregnant. He instructed Tanya to return the next day for her abortion.

Too Much Brevitol

Tanya returned on September 7, as instructed. According to medical board documents, "At or about 11:00 a.m. Patient A was given Valium 10 mg." This medication was not noted on clinic documents that were given to Certified Registered Nurse Anesthetist (CRNA) Gori, who then administered 150 mg. of Brevitol at about 1:50 p.m., whereupon Hachamovitch performed the abortion.

The medical board then notes, "150 mg. of Brevital causes loss of consciousness and also potentially decreases the patient’s respiratory rate and blood pressure. The amount of Brevital administered to this patient would cause respiratory depression for approximately 30 minutes. The majority of that time Patient A was in the recovery room. The level of respiratory depression is tied into the amount of stimulation of the patient. Surgery is a very strong stimulus, once that is removed the respiratory depression increases."

Not Properly Monitored

The board noted that Tanya was still totally unresponsive from the effects of anesthesia when she was moved to the recovery room. Staff noted her pulse and oxygen saturation, then removed her pulse oximeter, which monitors pulse and oxygen saturation.

The medical board notes that at 2 p.m., after 5 minutes in recovery, Tanya'’s blood pressure was 96/80, and her pulse 68. This is within normal limits. At 15 minutes (2:10 p.m.), Tanya's blood pressure had fallen to 60/40, her pulse to 52, and her respirations were shallow. Such a sharp fall in blood pressure is an alarming sign that the patient might be going into shock or suffering other life-threatening problems. The falling blood pressure is especially alarming in combination with shallow breathing.

At 2:11 p.m., Tanya's pulse was noted as "thready," which means weak and erratic. Her blood pressure was so low that it could not be measured with a cuff. The medical board noted, "At this point, a patient without an obtainable blood pressure and a barely palpable pulse was functionally in cardiac arrest. Respondent was notified of the problem with Patient A at approximately 2:15 p.m."

The Medics' Shocking Discoveries

Hachamovitch examined Tanya in recovery, started a new IV with D5W and Ephedrine, then told the recovery room nurse to do CPR, and somebody to call Emergency Medical Services (EMS).

EMS Advanced Cardiac Life Support (ACLS) arrived at 2:41 to find Tanya blue and unresponsive, with no pulse or breathing and fixed pupils. ACLS took Tanya's vital signs, attached a cardiac monitor, and properly placed a breathing tube to help get oxygen into Tanya's lungs. An ACLS team member then hooked up Hachamovitch's bag-valve mask (used to pump air into the lungs) and found that it was broken and wasn't working. The ACLS team member switched over to the EMT’s ventilation unit.

The medical board said, "When respondent arrived in the recovery room, he should have immediately ascertained the patient’s pulse, blood pressure, and if there were vaginal bleeding. This should have taken between 20 seconds and, at the outside, two to three minutes. He should have realized that the patient was in cardiac arrest and started ACLS. The cause of the arrest was not relevant at that point; the immediate treatment was the same. Given the clinical picture of this patient at 2:15 p.m. when Respondent was called to the recovery room EMS should have been called immediately and the patient intubated. Even if Patient A were only in a near arrest situation Respondent should have immediately call EMS and instituted the rest of ACLS protocol. Advanced Cardiac Life Support consists of immediate call to EMS for transfer to hospital, intubation, EKG monitoring so that if the patient requires defibrillation, the rhythm and appropriate ACLS drugs are known. This patient’s condition had to be treated in a hospital setting, the sooner the patient were to get to the hospital, the better her chances of survival."

Despite the fact that Hachamovitch had the equipment to put a breathing tube into Tanya, she was being given oxygen with a face mask. There was no note that Hachamovitch had even inserted an airway, which is a small device that keeps the patient's tongue from blocking air from getting into the lungs. Though Hachamovitch had additional, necessary drugs on hand to help restore cardiac function, he didn't administer them to Tanya. Though he had an EKG machine, he never used it. "Such a failure deviated from accepted medical standards."

"A physician who performs surgical procedures, i.e. abortion, under general anesthesia in free standing outpatient facilities, has an obligation to recognize when a patient is in cardiac arrest and to know how to resuscitate the patient. Respondent did not recognize that Patient A was in cardiac arrest. Respondent did not carry out generally recognized resuscitation measures in this patient."

In spite of the medics' efforts, Tanya died that day.

Untrained Staff in Recovery Room

On the day Tanya died, Hachamovitch had one R.N. in the recovery room, along with a medical assistant, a sonographer and a receptionist from the front who went to the recovery room to help when the recovery room was busy. The sonographer was not trained to observe patients recovering from anesthesia. The receptionist had taken a medical secretary course, and did not have any special training in caring for patients recovering from general anesthesia.

At the time Tanya was brought into the recovery room, there were nine other patients in the room, and yet another patient was brought in a few minutes after Tanya. One of those nine patients already in the recovery room was shaking and almost convulsing.

The board noted that Hachamovitch's recovery room was not sufficiently staffed to adequately monitor patients recovering from general anesthesia.

The board also noted, "Respondent’s medical record did not accurately reflect the care and treatment rendered to patient A."

Actions Taken

The Committee slammed Hachamovitch for multiple violations of standards of care, particularly in how patients were monitored and cared for after general anesthesia, and the lack of training of the staff attending them. They slammed him for lack of adequate equipment and for failing to use what little equipment he had.

The board suspended Hachamovitch’s license, and added probationary requirements that he was to be supervised by an anesthesiologist who had no conflict of interest, that Hachamovitch maintain ACLS certification, and that he maintain at least one staffer in recovery who is ACLS certified.

Neither the First nor the Last

Tanya is not the only victim of Hachamovitch's quackery and slipshod clinic management:
  1. January 22, 1986: Luz Rodriguez dies after an incomplete abortion perpetrated at Hachamovitch's Bronx clinic.
  2. October 19, 1990: Christina Goesswein dies while Hachamovitch was doing emergency post-abortion surgery in his office rather than in a hospital.
  3. March 2, 1994: Jammie Garcia dies of sepsis after an abortion performed at a Hachamovitch clinic in Texas.
  4. February 17, 1995:  Lisa Bardsley was sent home to bleed to death after an abortion at a Hachamovitch clinic in Arizona.
  5. September 7, 1996: Tanya Williamson's death in the Bronx.
  6. April 17, 1998:  Lou Ann Herron bleeds to death in a Hachamovitch clinic under circumstances to appalling that both the abortionist and the nurse are convicted of manslaughter.
In spite of all this, Business Insider wrote a puff piece about Hachamovitch's clinic in 2024. Read my take on their enthusiasm for Hachamovitch here.


Saturday, September 06, 2025

September 6, 1989: Self-Induced With an Air Compressor

AI illustration by Grok
Legalization was supposed to eliminate dangerous self-induced abortions. Evidently there is something other than illegality driving women to these grisly acts. 

At around 10:30 pm on September 6, 1989, the husband of 33-year-old Laura France came home from work only to find her dead in the garage of their Mansfield, Ohio home.

Laura, a mother of four, had been part-owner of a bicycle repair shop. She had been an active parent volunteer at Stingel Elementary School and a volunteer in religious instruction at St. Peter's Church. 

Respondents to the scene found a portable air compressor set to 90 psi and an 18-inch length of tubing. The autopsy concluded that Laura, who had been about 12 weeks pregnant, had used the air compressor to attempt to dislodge the unwanted fetus. This caused air to get into her blood stream, resulting in her death. 

According to the Ohio Death Index, Laura had died at about 3:00 p.m.  

Other women who died from attempted self-induced abortions in the safe-and-legal era include:

In 1982, CDC staffers published "Illegal-Abortion Deaths in the United States: Why Are They Still Occurring?" in Family Planning Perspectives. They noted that illegal abortions ranged from "self-help" abortions done by women who reject the medical establishment, to the stereotypical "coat hanger" abortions. They concluded that women seek illegal abortions for "idiosyncratic" reasons, and dropped the issue.

Watch The Air-Compressor Abortion on YouTube.
Watch The Air-Compressor Abortion on Rumble.

Sources: 

September 6, 1917: From the Homicide in Chicago Interactive Database

According to the Homicide in Chicago Interactive Database, 29-year-old Lizzie Heimos died at Chicago's Wesley Hospital from a criminal abortion performed by an unknown perpetrator on September 6, 1917. 

According to Illinois death index, Lizzie had been born in Illinois to German immigrants William and Bertha (Tombler) Badfoss. Lizzie was a homemaker. 

Given the prevalence of physicians and midwives running abortion practices in Chicago at the time, it's likely that she availed herself of one of them.  

September 6, 1974: Abortion Survivor's Death Brings Victory to Abortion Advocates

 Louise Seeks an Abortion

Louise A. was 20 years old when in 1974. She lived in Hopkins, South Carolina, and worked at a commissary on a military base. She planned to enroll in technical school.

When her periods stopped, she went to her hometown doctor's office, where a nurse told her that she wasn't pregnant. The nurse was mistaken. This mistake delayed confirmation that Louise was indeed pregnant. She went to Dr. Jesse Floyd's South Carolina office in July of 1974.

Believing that she was 12 weeks pregnant, Louise checked in and paid the $175 fee for the abortion. A nurse checked Louise's vitals and administered pre-op medication. Then an employee identified as an "instrument technician" brought Louise to the procedure room, where for the first time Floyd examined her. He concluded that she was 20 weeks into her pregnancy, not 12, and informed Louise that the abortion method used in an outpatient clinic was not appropriate at 20 weeks. She would have to pay him a $450 fee for the abortion, which included hospital costs since at that time abortions that late in the pregnancy had to be done in a hospital setting for the woman's safety. Louise didn't have the money, so Floyd refunded her $150 of the $175 she had paid.

A week and a half later, Louise called the clinic to say she had the $450. She was admitted to Richland Memorial Hospital on September 3. If Floyd had been accurate in assessing the pregnancy at 20 weeks when he first saw Louise, she would have been 25 weeks pregnant

On September 4, Floyd injected Louise with prostaglandin to cause an abortion.

A Seven-Months Baby is Born Alive

In a deposition, Louise said that on September 6, "I started having real bad labor pains again and finally my baby was born. I called the nurse. Then about four or five of them came in the room at the time. The head nurse came in the same time the other nurses came in and she told me did I know that the baby was a seven-month baby. I told her no." 

"One of the nurses said that the baby was alive. They took the baby out of the room. He never did cry, he just made some kind of a noise."

The baby weighed 2 pounds 5 ounces.

A Doctor Provides Care

The first doctor summoned to the abortion ward was a young resident, who had been paged from the cafeteria. As the Inquirer said, "She did not hesitate. On detecting a heartbeat of 100, she clamped and severed the umbilical cord and had the baby sent to the hospital's intensive care unit."

"It was a shock, a totally unique emergency situation, very upsetting to all of us," said the woman, by the time of the Inquirer interview a practicing physician in California. "Some people have disagreed with me [about ordering intensive care for an abortion live birth] but that seems to me the only way you can go."

"It's like watching a drowning. You act. You don't have the luxury of calling around and consulting. You institute life-preserving measures first and decide about viability later on."

The Baby Loses His Fight for Survival

At first the baby's condition seemed to be improving. By the time he was ten days old he was prognosed as having a 50% chance of survival.

Louise, who never saw the baby, checked out of the hospital on September 8. "I kept calling this nurse," she said in a deposition. "I would call ... and get information from them about the baby, and they told me he was doing fine. They told me he had picked up two or three pounds. I started going to school, and one afternoon I called them and they told me the baby had died, but no one told me the cause of his death."

The baby had developed a tear in his small intestine and died of that and other complications on September 26, just 20 days old.

Floyd Turns Criminal Charges into Major Abortion Victory

Prosecutors were faced with a difficult case. Floyd himself never had any contact with the baby, nor was he involved in making decisions about the child's care. However, it struck the prosecutors as obvious that by proceeding with an abortion was illegal in that it was done outside a hospital after the first trimester, Floyd had taken action leading to the baby's death. 

Floyd was charged with both murder and criminal abortion, but eventually the abortion-rights arguments won out. The baby's mother wasn't eager to testify against the Floyd, and Floyd could claim not knowing that the baby had been past viability, and could even assert that under Roe and Doe, the state had no business meddling in his decision to perform an abortion even after viability, since it was the abortionist's judgment whether the baby was viable or not. The charges were dropped.

Floyd's appeal led to the state's abortion law being declared unconstitutional. Thus, abortion advocates managed to turn the death of an abortion survivor into permission to abort babies at any gestational age in South Carolina merely by the doctor asserting that he doesn't believe that the baby is viable.

Watch Baby's Death Leads to Abortion Advocacy Victory on YouTube.

Sources:

Friday, September 05, 2025

Business Insider's Priorities: Women's Lives Aren't Even on the Radar

Black and white headshot of a middle aged man of Jewish descent with dark hair, a receeding hairline, large, dark 1980s style eyeglasses, and wearing a suit coat and tieWhen I asked Grok for more information on the death of Tanya Williamson, or the involved parties, I was given a link to a typical hagiographic piece the mainstream news loves to do about abortionists, regardless of what sort of actual care they provide to their patients. To abortion supporters, Dr. Moshe Hachamovitch wasn't a dangerous quack. He was a crucial lifeline.

"A crucial abortion access lifeline is hanging by a thread," by Trisha Mukherjee, Business Insider, March 3, 2024 describes the prolifers offering options other than an abortion at the hands of a man with Hachamovitch's record are painted as disruptive, in contrast to the selfless and dedicated escorts who brave the weather to make sure the facility doesn't lose a sale.

The author had a serious passion for the abortion clinic where three women were fatally injured and inspectors found appalling conditions. The facility was run by a doctor who lost his license in two states because of the shoddy conditions of the clinics he owned there. But these realities did nothing to dampen Mukherjee's enthusiasm for Moshe Hachamovitch and his supporters.

Lest you think I'm exaggerating the praises lavished on Hachamovitch's minions, read this: 

Bronx Abortion was established in 1969, around the time New York State legalized the procedure. The red stucco corner building on Eastchester Road became a place people could go for safe abortions even before the Supreme Court's 1973 Roe v. Wade ruling.

Managed by a small staff, the independent clinic provided between one and two thousand abortions per year to mostly Black and Latinx patients. Clinic escorts said it was deeply loved by those who saw it as a pillar of reproductive justice.

Oh, those stalwart providers of vital reproductive healthcare services!

But then trouble arose: "Over the decades, employees came and went. Laws changed. But the clinic never stopped providing abortions to the patients who arrived at its doors — until last year, when one woman's sudden death brought Bronx Abortion to its knees."

The piece skips directly from this ominous note to tell us what a stand-up guy Hachamovitch is: 

The clinic's owner, Moshe Hachamovitch, founded Bronx Abortion while he was a trainee at Albert Einstein College of Medicine. "Whenever I went to the emergency room," he recalled, "it was cluttered with patients who had illegal abortions and were actually dying."

In its first few years, the clinic saw hundreds of patients. Eventually it grew, and Hachamovitch expanded and established abortion clinics across the country, from Long Island to Arizona to Texas.

Mukherjee then jumps into praise of the facility's director, Irene Sylvor. She's just a magnificent human being in every way, judging from how Mukherjee paints her. She's "sharp, funny, and generous." 

The piece goes on:

When Sylvor saw a job opening at Bronx Abortion, she applied without hesitation. A firm believer in a woman's right to choose, she had her work cut out for her. When Sylvor began working at the clinic about four decades ago, she became the "organizer, the leader, the mother of the clinic," said Destiney Kirby, a clinic escort. Hachamovitch described her as a "force." According to Sarah McNeilly, another clinic escort, Sylvor took on a workload proportional to multiple employees "to keep the lights on."

Four decades ago. Since roughly 1984. Sylvor was there for all those dead patients. In spite of how Hachamovitch treated his patients, Irene Sylvor remained dedicated to keeping him in business. No broken bag-valve mask, no lack of properly trained staff in the recovery room, could dampen her enthusiasm. She remained dedicated to, as Mukherjee puts it, keeping abortion "easy, fast, and affordable." Sometimes even free -- though Mukherjee didn't explore how the facility achieved this. Were these patients charitable cases, tax write-offs, or were Hachamovitch and the indomitable Ms. Sylvor tapping into abortion funds? The article laments that the Hyde Amendment forbade Hachamovitch forcing taxpayers to foot the bill for abortions in his substandard clinic.

Mukherjee notes that patients could call Sylvor any time day or night. Sylvor's daughter said that her mother kept a note pad by her bed to scribble notes. 

Now we get to the woman whose death was so devastating to the facility: It wasn't Luz Rodriguez, who died in January of 1986 after an incomplete abortion perpetrated at the clinic. It wasn't Christina Goesswein, who died in October of 1990 while Hachamovitch was doing emergency post-abortion surgery in his office rather than in a hospital. It wasn't Tanya Williamson, who died at the clinic from an anesthesia screw-up. 

It was Irene Sylvor, the woman who had kept the mill grinding through all the malpractice.

Hachamovitch, in his early 80s, preferred retirement to finding somebody else who could keep the doors open the way Irene could. He sold the property to commercial developers. 

Mukherjee laments the way the building, once bustling with business, now sits empty. The entire article makes no mention of the dead women at this Bronx location, or the others at other Hachamovitch-run clinics. No mention of Jammie Garcia, who died of sepsis in March of 1994 after an abortion performed at a Hachamovitch clinic in Texas. No mention of  Lisa Bardsley, who was sent home to bleed to death in February of 1995 after an abortion at a Hachamovitch clinic in Arizona. No mention of  Lou Ann Herron, who bled to death in a that same clinic under circumstances so appalling that both the abortionist and the nurse are convicted of manslaughter.

Those women's deaths are invisible and insignificant as far as  Mukherjee and Business Insider are concerned. The only woman whose death matters to them is the woman who kept Hachamovitch's doors open when women weren't safe. 

In closing, Mukherjee quotes Chelsea, one of the escorts: "Even in places that we think are safe havens for abortion, we can't take for granted that providers are secure."

Safe havens for abortion. Not for women. Because that's what Hachamovitch's clinic was. A haven where abortion practice was safe, even when the women weren't.


September 5, 1992: The "Uneventful" Death of a 13-Year-Old Girl

  Date of service 9-5-92, Uneventful D&C, Thank you [for the referral]! -- Dr. Steve Lichtenberg

The Family Gathers

Former abortion facility on Elston Avenue
It was September 5, 1992. Eighteen members of Deanna Bell's family were gathered in a Chicago abortion clinic at 5086 N. Elston Avenue, wanting to know why the 13-year-old girl was lying dead in a back room.

Dr. Steve Lichtenberg, who had performed the fatal abortion, left his clinic manager to field questions from Deanna's distraught relatives. Lichtenberg himself had joined the clinic manager earlier in talking to Deanna's mother and sister. Deanna had, they told the family, most likely died from an amniotic fluid embolism -- a known, dangerous, and difficult to treat complication of later abortions.

It was just one of those flukey things that happens sometimes. That's what the family members heard.

But What Actually Happened?

Somebody at the clinic -- Albany Medical Surgical Center -- notified the coroner about the death. Even though Deanna's death was attended by a physician, somebody thought to order an autopsy. Tests were performed that found no evidence of an amniotic fluid embolism.

So why was the child dead? She had been taken into the procedure room at about 7:40 that morning, a healthy girl. The abortion had taken 11 minutes. During the 11 minutes Lichtenberg had spent pulling her unborn baby out in pieces, something had gone wrong. She had been discharged to the recovery room at 7:51, rating only 9 favorable points out of 14 for color, respiration, and so on. Her pulse was alarmingly rapid -- between 130 and 135 beats per minute.

After only two minutes in the recovery room, at 7:53, Deanna was documented as lacking all vital signs -- pulse, respiration, blood pressure. But the first efforts to resuscitate her were not documented until 8:51. During that hour, Lichtenberg said, there were attempts at resuscitation, but nobody had documented them and nobody had called an ambulance so that properly-trained medics could resuscitate Deanna and bring her to a better-equipped facility.

Deanna "never regained productive cardiac activity or consciousness." She was pronounced dead at 8:52.

What had gone so terribly, terribly wrong?

The abortion hadn't gone well from the very start.

A Closer Look

laminaria tents
It was a multi-stage 21-week abortion that had begun on September 3 with the insertion of laminaria -- sticks of seaweed that absorb moisture, expand, and dilate the cervix. According to Deanna's records, she was "uncooperative" during this process -- which, Deanna's family said, had been performed by a non-physician -- so when the time came to change the laminaria the next day, Lichtenberg did it under general anesthesia. CRNA Larry Hill administered 400 mg of Brevital-- a drug not approved for pediatric use at the time -- when a sufficient dose for an adult would be 70 mg. And during the procedure, Lichtenberg accidentally ruptured the amniotic sac.

The next day Deanna's mother brought her back to the clinic. During the actual abortion procedure on the 5th, Deanna CRNA Arthur Goode administered at least 250 mg. of Brevital-- at least 3.6 times the therapeutic dose. She was not intubated, as per Brevital protocols. Oxygen was administered by waving the oxygen mask near Deanna's face.

CRNA Goode and Elizabeth Sturm put Deanna on a gurney and took her to the recovery room. Strum was referred to as a medical assistant although she had no formal medical education. Strum put a pulse oximeter on Deanna's finger and a blood pressure cuff on her arm, then Goode went to anesthetize another patient for an abortion.

As the lawsuit states, "Before obtaining a reading from either of Bell's monitoring devices in the recovery room, Sturm began to write on Bell's medical chart the vital signs Sturm expected to find, rather than Bell's actual vital signs. This practice is called 'precharting.' While Sturm was precharting, the pulse oximeter beeped, indicating that it was not getting a reading. Sturm removed the device from Bell's finger and checked its operation by making sure the light inside the device was on. Sturm then placed the device on another of Bell's fingers, but still did not receive a reading. Sturm looked at Bell's appearance for evidence of a problem, but she noticed only that Bell was 'a black girl.' When Sturm was still unable to get a reading on on the pulse oximeter, she summoned the nurse, Dolly Barnett."

ambu-bag
Nurse Barnett assessed Deanna and determined that she was pulseless and not breathing. She sent Strum to fetch Goode while she initiated CPR. Goode joined her, using an ambu-bag and supplemental oxygen.

At around 8:00, Lichtenberg finished with the patient he was operating on and joined Goode and Barnett in the recovery room.  He took over chest compressions while Goode attached the EKG machine. About 15 minutes later Goode intubated Deanna. Lichtenberg administered epinephrine six times and shocked Deanna's heart four times. An expert for Deanna's family indicated that, like the dose of Brevital, the jolts of electricity were higher than indicated for a patient of Deanna's size.

Lichtenberg pronounced Deanna dead.

Was the massive dose of Brevital the reason Deanna's heart stopped? The coroner drew no conclusions, merely noting that Deanna had congested lungs, a uterus full of clotted blood, and a lot of Brevital in her system. There were no signs of an amniotic fluid embolism

The Family Seeks Answers

Deanna's family wanted answers. They sued. And in their investigation they found evidence that Lichtenberg's staff failed to monitor Deanna. The facility had no protocols for dealing with cardio-respiratory arrest. Nobody on the clinic staff who attended to Deanna was current in their advanced cardiac life support protocols. 

They also found that Deanna wasn't the first patient to die after an abortion at a Family Planning Associates Medical Group facility. Denise HolmesMary PenaPatricia ChaconJosefina GarciaLaniece DorseyTami SuematsuJoyce Ortenzio, and Susan Levy had already died under the ministrations of Allred and his team of abortionists. And Allred admitted in a deposition that he had never done any sort of preventability study after any of these deaths. He said that he could find no fault with his staff in their handling of Deanna.

Deanna's family lost their lawsuit in 1999 but won a new trial on the grounds that the judge had excluded vital evidence showing malpractice. In 2004, however, a judge ruled that the case would not go back to trial because of the amount of time that had elapsed since Deanna's death. As of 2005, there has been no update on the case.

After Deanna's death, Christine MoraTaTanisha WessonMaria LehoKimberly NeilNakia JordenMaria RodriguezChanelle Bryant, and "Kyla Ellis" also perished under FPA's dubious care. That makes a total of 17 deaths I'm personally aware of.

Russian Roulette

At a National Abortion Federation Risk Management Seminar (Lichtenberg is always in attendance, and frequently a presenter), Planned Parenthood Medical Director Michael Burnhill scolded Lichtenberg when he boated of his exploits in performing risky abortions in an outpatient facility and treating life-threatening complications on-site instead of transporting patients to fully-equipped facilities. Burnhill called this "playing Russian roulette with patients' lives.

It appears that in Lichtenberg's little game, Deanna Bell was the loser.

Deanna has been dead twenty-two years now, seven more years than she'd spent walking this earth. Allred, Lichtenberg, and the FPA attorneys stalled the family's lawsuit, and eventually succeeded in thwarting their efforts to get justice for a young girl who died at the hands of a risk-taker.

Watch "Deanna Bell's Uneventful Death" on YouTube.

Sources: Cook County Circuit Court Case No. 94L05372; "Girl dies in abortion clinic after surgery," Chicago Tribune September 6, 1992; "Mom sues area abortion clinic after her 13-year-old girl dies," Chicago Tribune, May 5, 1994; "Mother Can Sue Abortion Business Over Daughter's Abortion Death," LifeNews.com, June 10, 2005

Thursday, September 04, 2025

September 4, 1871: A Professional Lay Abortionist

 On Wednesday, August 23, 1871, 22-year-old Mary Russell, who worked at a New York envelope factory, went to the home of her brother-in-law, William Albright, "a highly respectable gentleman, who is foreman in a printing office." Mary confessed to her family that she was pregnant and sick, and "threw herself upon the mercy of her relatives. They did not cast her off, but instead summoned Dr. Warren A. James and treated her with every possible kindness."

When Dr. James first saw her, Mary admitted to an abortion, saying that she'd taken an abortifacient a Dr. Tully had provided to her on August 23. Dr. James had to leave the city for some reason, and turned the care over to Dr. Jeremiah P. Bliven, a former police surgeon. Bliven quickly became suspicious, and succeeded in urging Mary's family to ask her to come clean.

AI illustration by Grok
In the mean time, Mary's health took a turn for the worse. On Sunday, August 27, Bliven went to the police and reported his reasons to suspect an abortion. A coroner's detective was dispatched to the house. He questioned Mary. As she was too weak to write, Detective Walker wrote a dying declaration for her based on the information he'd gotten.

Mary had been pregnant for about two months. Two weeks before the interview with Detective Walker, she'd gone to a Mrs. Burns for an abortion. While a housekeeper held her up against a wall, Mrs. Burns had used instruments on Mary, without producing any immediate effect. Burns told Mary that if anybody questioned her, she was to blame the abortion on a Dr. Tully. She then sent Mary home.

Mary took ill immediately "with severe pain in my head, accompanied by vomiting." She expelled her dead baby three or four days later. Then she grew sicker and went to her family for care.

Mary reported that the baby's father was Harry Pullen, who had given her $10 (slightly less than $260 in 2023) to pay for the abortion and then evidently vanished from her life.

In the early morning hours of Monday, September 4, Mary died.

The police quickly went to Mrs. Burns' house and arrested Ann Brice, the housekeeper, and found out from her that Mrs. Burns had gone to her other home in Long Island. Before going after her, the police arrested Mary's lover, Harry Pullen, and Mary's roommate, Nellie Ryan, who had gone with her for the abortion.

Off to Long Island the police went. "They found the abortionist living in an elegant mansion, furnished throughout in the most splendid manner, of which she was the owner, as also of one hundred acres of fine land adjacent to it, all of which was in a high state of cultivation."

Mrs. Burns didn't seem at all alarmed to see the police, and had no evident thought of Mary Russell. Instead, Burns seemed to be operating under the assumption that she was wanted in connection with "the trunk tragedy" (almost certainly the abortion death of Alice Bowlsby), which she'd not been involved in. The police allowed Mrs. Burns to operate under this assumption until they had her at the station, at which point they informed her that she was actually being arrested for Mary Russell's death. "Without giving any explanation of her deed, or almost without taking the trouble to deny it, she was taken away to a cell and locked up."

The coroner performed the autopsy on Mary, and confirmed that she'd died of an infection caused by the abortion.

Watch A Professional Lay Abortionist on YouTube.

Sources: