A Georgia woman has been illegally arrested and had
her constitutional rights violated after a social worker told police
officers that she terminated her pregnancy by taking abortion pills.
23-year-old Kenlissa Jones of Georgia has been
arrested and charged with malice murder and possession of a dangerous
drug because she terminated her own pregnancy with LEGAL abortion
medication. She is being falsely imprisoned in the Dougherty County
jail.
In a statement, the group National Advocates for
Pregnant Women said that there are no criminal statutes back up the
arrest, “There are no criminal statutes in Georgia that permit
punishment of women based on pregnancy or pregnancy outcomes — and the
constitution, as well as human rights principles, prohibit such punitive
laws directed to pregnant women….We call on leading anti-abortion
organizations, who have publicly and repeatedly said that they oppose
punishing women for having abortions, to stand with Kenlissa Jones and
against the growing use of criminal laws to punish women for abortions
or pregnancy outcomes. People who seek medical attention for any aspect
of pregnancy — including prenatal care, labor and delivery, miscarriage,
stillbirth, or abortion — should not fear arrest. There is no role for
police or prosecutors in reproductive health. Public health, fairness to
pregnant women, and fundamental principles of human rights and dignity
prohibit the use of state power to arrest and punish women for being
pregnant and for the outcomes of their pregnancies.”
Jones is not alone. Anne Bynum in Arkansas was
arrested for “concealing a birth”, and “abuse of a corpse” after she
took medication to terminate her pregnancy at home. Purvi Patel of
Indiana was convicted and is serving 20 years in prison for what Indiana
called feticide.
Enough is enough.
Women
are having their constitutionally-protected rights violated and
further, being arrested and thereby falsely imprisoned to serve a
religious ideology that has no place overtaking
constitutionally-protected rights. What needs to happen here is Jones’
family need to sue the state of Georgia, the police department that is
illegally detaining her, the police officer who arrested her and
District Attorney Greg Edwards who continues to hold her, in spite of
being told that the law doesn’t support their charges or arrest.
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