[Congressional Record Volume 141, Number 191 (Monday, December 4, 1995)]
[Senate]
[Pages S17881-S17903]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]




                     PARTIAL-BIRTH ABORTION BAN ACT

  The PRESIDING OFFICER. Under the previous order, the Senate will now 
proceed to the consideration of H.R. 1833, which the clerk will now 
report.
  The legislative clerk read as follows:

       A bill (H.R. 1833) to amend title 18, United States Code, 
     to ban partial-birth abortions.

  The Senate proceeded to consider the bill.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Utah is now recognized.
  Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I rise today to speak in support of H.R. 
1833, the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 1995.
  I understand that many people on both sides of this issue have very 
strongly held beliefs. I respect those whose views differ from my own. 
And, I condemn the use of violence or any other illegal method to 
express any point of view on this issue.
  This bill, however, presents a very narrow issue: whether one rogue 
abortion procedure that has probably been performed only by a handful 
of abortion doctors in this country, that is never medically necessary, 
that is not the safest medical procedure available under any 
circumstances, and that is morally reprehensible, should be banned.
  This bill does not address whether all abortions after a certain week 
of pregnancy should be banned, or whether late-term abortions should 
only be permitted in certain circumstances. It bans one particular 
abortion procedure.

[[Page S 17882]]

  I chaired the Judiciary Committee hearing on this bill that was held 
on November 17. After hearing the testimony presented there, as well as 
seeing some of the submitted material, I must say that I find it 
difficult to comprehend how any reasonable person could examine the 
evidence and continue to defend the partial-birth abortion procedure.
  That procedure involves the partial delivery, in the late second or 
third trimester of pregnancy, of an intact fetus into the birth canal. 
The fetus is delivered from its feet through its shoulders, so that 
only its head remains in the uterus. Then, either scissors or another 
instrument is used to poke a hole in the base of the skull. This is a 
living baby at this point, in a late trimester of living. Once they 
poke that hole in the base of the skull, at that point, a suction 
catheter is inserted to suck out the brains. This bill would simply ban 
that procedure.
  The bill was first brought up on the Senate floor in early November. 
On November 8, the Senate voted to commit the bill to the Judiciary 
Committee for a hearing and a report of the bill within 19 days, which 
included a holiday recess.
  We held a comprehensive, 6\1/2\-hour hearing on the bill on November 
17. To facilitate consideration on the floor, I have directed that a 
hearing record be printed on an expedited basis.
  In addition, so that all Senators can have immediate access to the 
testimony and other evidence adduced at the hearing, last week I had 
the committee distribute to each Senator a photocopied set of the 
entire hearing record, including inserts and written submissions.
  The committee heard testimony from a total of 12 witnesses presenting 
a variety of perspectives on the bill. I wanted to ensure that both 
sides of this debate had a full opportunity to present their arguments 
on this issue, and I think that the hearing bore that out.
  Brenda Shafer, a registered nurse who worked in Dr. Martin Haskell's 
Ohio abortion clinic for 3 days as a temporary nurse in September 1993, 
testified as to her personal experience in observing Dr. Haskell 
perform the procedure that would be banned by this bill. Dr. Haskell is 
one of only two--maybe four doctors who have acknowledged performing 
the procedure--only two have acknowledged it, but there may be four of 
them who do this procedure.
  The committee also heard testimony from four ob-gyn doctors--two in 
favor of the bill and two against, from an anesthesiologist, from an 
ethicist, and from three women who had personal experiences either with 
having a late-term abortion or with declining to have a late-term 
abortion. Finally, the committee also heard from two law professors who 
discussed constitutional and other legal issues raised by the bill.
  The hearing was significant in that it permitted the issues raised by 
this bill to be fully aired. I think that the most important 
contribution of the hearing to this debate is that the hearing record 
puts to rest a number of inaccurate statements that have been made by 
opponents of the bill and that have unfortunately been widely covered 
in the press.
  Because the Judiciary Committee hearing brought out many of the facts 
on this issue, I would like to go through the most important of those 
for my colleagues to clear up what I think have been some of the major 
misrepresentations--and simply points of confusion--on this bill.


                        Misrepresentation no. 1

  The first and foremost inaccuracy that we must correct once and for 
all concerns the effects of anesthesia on the fetus of a pregnant 
woman. I must say that I am personally shocked at the irresponsibility 
that led some opponents of this bill to spread the myth that anesthesia 
given to the mother during a partial-birth abortion is what kills the 
fetus.
  Opponents of this measure presumably wanted to make this procedure 
appear less barbaric and make it more palatable. In doing so, however, 
they have not only misrepresented the procedure--which is bad enough--
but they have spread potentially life-threatening misinformation that 
could prove catastrophic to women's health.
  By claiming that anesthesia kills the fetus, opponents have spread 
misinformation that could deter pregnant women who might desperately 
need surgery from undergoing surgery for fear that the anesthesia could 
kill or brain-damage their unborn children.
  Let me illustrate how widespread this misinformation has become:
  In a June 23, 1995, submission to the House Judiciary Constitution 
Subcommittee, the late Dr. James McMahon, the other of the two doctors 
who has admitted performing the procedure, wrote that anesthesia given 
to the mother during the procedure caused fetal demise.
  Syndicated columnist Ellen Goodman wrote that, when statements of 
supporters of the bill are reviewed, ``You wouldn't even know that 
anesthesia ends the life of such a fetus before it comes down the birth 
canal.''
  Let me note also that, of course, if the fetus was dead before being 
brought down the birth canal, then this bill by definition would not 
cover the procedure performed to abort that fetus. The bill covers only 
procedures in which a living fetus is partially delivered.
  All but the head of this living fetus is outside, and then they 
puncture the back of the skull and suck out the brain so that the skull 
collapses and the baby can then be pulled out. There is no doubt in my 
mind that the reason the head is in is so that they will not be accused 
of infanticide.
  An editorial in USA Today on November 3, 1995, also stated, ``The 
fetus dies from an overdose of anesthesia given to its mother.''
  In a self-described fact sheet circulated to Members of the House, 
Dr. Mary Campbell--the medical director of Planned Parenthood who 
testified at the Judiciary Committee hearing--wrote:

       The fetus dies of an overdose of anesthesia given to the 
     mother intravenously. A dose is calculated for the mother's 
     weight which is 50 to 100 times the weight of the fetus. The 
     mother gets the anesthesia for each insertion of the 
     dilators, twice a day. This induces brain death in a fetus in 
     a matter of minutes. Fetal demise therefore occurs at the 
     beginning of the procedure while the fetus is still in the 
     womb.

  When that statement was referenced to the medical panel at the 
Judiciary Committee hearing by Senator Abraham, the president of the 
American Society of Anesthesiologists, Dr. Norig Ellison, flatly 
responded, ``There is absolutely no basis in scientific fact for that 
statement.''
  The American Society of Anesthesiologists was invited to testify at 
our hearing precisely to clear up this obvious misrepresentation. They 
sought the opportunity to set the record straight.
  What was terribly disturbing about this distortion was that it could 
endanger women's health and women's lives. The American Society of 
Anesthesiologists has made clear that they do not take a position on 
this legislation, but that they came forward out of concern for this 
harmful misinformation.
  The spreading of this misinformation strikes me as a very sad 
commentary on the lengths that those who support abortion on demand, 
for any reason, at virtually any time during pregnancy, and apparently 
regardless of the method, will do to defend each and any procedure, and 
certainly this procedure. The sacrifice of intellectual honesty is very 
disheartening.
  As Dr. Ellison testified, he was

       Deeply concerned . . . that the widespread publicity given 
     to Dr. McMahon's testimony may cause pregnant women to delay 
     necessary and perhaps lifesaving medical procedures, totally 
     unrelated to the birthing process, due to misinformation 
     regarding the effect of anesthetics on the fetus.

  He stated that the American Society of Anesthesiologists, while not 
taking a position on the bill,

       . . . have nonetheless felt it our responsibility as 
     physicians specializing in the provision of anesthesia care 
     to seek every available forum in which to contradict Dr. 
     McMahon's testimony. Only in that way, we believe, can we 
     provide assurance to pregnant women that they can undergo 
     necessary surgical procedures safely, both for mother and 
     unborn child.

  Dr. Ellison also noted that, in his medical judgment, in order to 
achieve neurological demise of the fetus in a partial-birth abortion 
procedure, it would be necessary to anesthetize the mother to such a 
degree as to place her own health in jeopardy.
  In short, in a partial-birth abortion, the anesthesia does not kill 
the fetus. The baby will generally be alive after 

[[Page S 17883]]
partly being delivered into the birth canal and before having his or 
her skull opened and brain sucked out.
  That is also consistent with evidence provided by Dr. Haskell 
describing his use of the procedure. In his 1992 paper presented before 
the National Abortion Federation, which is part of the hearing record, 
Dr. Haskell described the procedure as first involving the forceps-
assisted delivery into the birth canal of an intact fetus from the feet 
up to the shoulders, with the head remaining in the uterus. He does not 
describe taking any action to kill the fetus up until that point.
  In a 1993 interview with the American Medical News, Dr. Haskell 
acknowledged that roughly two-thirds of the fetuses he aborts using the 
partial-birth abortion procedure are alive at the point at which he 
kills them by inserting a scissors in the back of the head and 
suctioning out the brain.
  Finally, in a letter to me dated November 9, 1995, Dr. Watson Bowes 
of the University of North Carolina Medical School wrote,

       Although I have never witnessed this procedure, it seems 
     likely from the description of the procedure by Dr. Haskell 
     that many if not all of the fetuses are alive until the 
     scissors and the suction catheter are used to remove brain 
     tissue.

  Simply put, anesthesia given to a mother does not kill the baby she 
is carrying.


                        Misrepresentation No. 2

  Let me move on to the next misrepresentation. Another myth that the 
hearing record debunks is that the procedure can be medically necessary 
in late-term pregnancies where the health of the mother is in danger or 
where the fetus has severe abnormalities.
  Now, there were two witnesses at the hearing who testified as to 
their experiences with late-abortions in circumstances in which Dr. 
McMahon performed the procedure. Both women, Coreen Costello and Viki 
Wilson, received terrible news late in their pregnancies that the 
children they were carrying were severely deformed and would be unable 
to survive for very long.
  I would like to make it absolutely clear that nothing in the bill 
before us would prevent women in Ms. Costello's and Ms. Wilson's 
situations from choosing to abort their children. That question is not 
before us, and it is not one that we face in considering this narrow 
bill.
  I also would like to point out that I have the utmost sympathy for 
women--and their husbands and families--who find themselves receiving 
the same tragic news that those women received.
  Regardless of whether they aborted the child or decided to go through 
with the pregnancy, which is what another courageous witness at our 
hearing, Jeannie French of Oak Park, IL, chose to do--and as a result, 
her daughter Mary's heart valves were donated to other infants--their 
experiences are horrendous ones that no one should have to go through.
  The testimony of all three witnesses was among the most heart-
wrenching and painful testimony I have ever heard before the committee. 
My heart goes out to those three women and their families as well as 
any others in similar situations.
  However, the fact is that medical testimony in the record indicates 
that even if an abortion were to be performed under such circumstances, 
a number of other procedures could be performed, such as the far more 
common classical D&E procedure or an induction procedure.

  When asked whether the exact procedure Dr. McMahon used would ever be 
medically necessary--even in cases like those described by Ms. Costello 
and Ms. Wilson, several doctors at our hearing explained that it would 
not. Dr. Nancy Romer, a practicing Ob-Gyn and clinical professor in 
Dayton, Ohio, stated that she had never had to resort to that procedure 
and that none of the physicians that she worked with had ever had to 
use it.
  Dr. Pamela Smith, the director of medical education in the department 
of obstetrics and gynecology at the Mount Sinai Medical Hospital Center 
in Chicago, stated that a doctor would never need to resort to the 
partial-birth abortion procedure.


                        Misrepresentation No. 3

  This ties in closely to what I consider the next misrepresentation 
made about the partial-birth abortion procedure: the claim that in some 
circumstances a partial-birth abortion will be the safest option 
available for a late-term abortion. Testimony and other evidence 
adduced at the Judiciary Committee hearing amply demonstrate that this 
is not the case.
  An article published in the November 20, 1995, issue of the American 
Medical News quoted Dr. Warren Hern as stating, ``I would dispute any 
statement that this is the safest procedure to use.'' Dr. Hern is the 
author of ``Abortion Practice,'' the Nation's most widely used textbook 
on abortion standards and procedures. He also stated in that interview 
that he ``has very strong reservations'' about the partial-birth 
abortion procedure banned by this bill.
  Indeed, referring to the procedure, he stated, ``You really can't 
defend it. I'm not going to tell somebody else that they should not do 
this procedure. But I'm not going to do it.''
  In fairness to Dr. Hern, I note that he does not support this bill in 
part because he feels this is the beginning of legislative efforts to 
chip away at abortion rights. We have included a statement from him in 
the Record. His opinion on the procedure, however, is highly 
instructive.
  I think Dr. Nancy Romer, a professor in the department of obstetrics 
and gynecology at the Wright State University School of Medicine and 
the vice chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Miami 
Valley Hospital, both in Dayton, OH, explained it best. I will quote 
her entire statement on this point:

       If this procedure were absolutely necessary, then I would 
     ask you, why does no one that I work with do it? We have two 
     high-risk obstetricians, and a medical department of about 40 
     obstetricians, and nobody does it. We care for and do second-
     trimester abortions, and we have peer review. We are watching 
     each other, and if we truly were doing alternative procedures 
     that were killing women left and right, we would be out there 
     looking for something better. We would be going to Dr. 
     Haskell and saying, please, come help us do this. And we 
     are not. We are satisfied with what we do. We are watching 
     each other and we know that the care that we provide is 
     adequate and safe.

  I think that says it all as far as safety is concerned.


                        Misrepresentation no. 4

  Another misrepresentation that should be set straight concerns claims 
that the partial-birth abortion procedure that would be banned by this 
bill is in fact performed only in late-term pregnancies where the life 
of the mother is at risk or where the fetus is suffering from severe 
abnormalities that are incompatible with life.
  I certainly do not dispute that in a number of cases the partial-
birth abortion procedure has been performed where the life of the 
mother was at risk or where the fetus was severely deformed.
  Substantial available evidence indicates, however, that the procedure 
is not performed solely or primarily where the mother's life is in 
danger, where the mother's health is gravely at risk, or where the 
fetus is seriously malformed in a manner incompatible with life.
  The fact of the matter is--and I know this is something that 
opponents of the bill have not faced--this procedure is being performed 
where there are only minor problems with the fetus, and for purely 
elective reasons.
  Dr. Haskell stated in testimony given under oath last month, on 
November 8, 1995, in Federal district court in Ohio, that he performs 
the procedure on second trimester patients for some medical and some 
not so medical reasons. [See Dist. Ct. Tr. at 104.] That court 
transcript is part of the hearing record.
  In transcripts from Dr. Haskell's 1993 interview with the American 
Medical News--also part of the hearing record--Dr. Haskell states 
``most of my abortions are elective in the 20-24 week range. In my 
particular case, probably 20 percent are for genetic reasons [and] the 
other 80 percent are purely elective.'' Meaning that 80 percent of 
those kids that are destroyed are normal kids.
  Dr. Romer testified that she has cared for patients who had received 
a partial-birth abortion from Dr. Haskell for reasons that were purely 
based on the woman not wanting a baby, for--as she put it--social 
reasons.
  Most important, however, medical testimony at our hearing indicated 
that a health exception in this bill is 

[[Page S 17884]]
not necessary because other abortion procedures are in fact safer and 
better for women's health.
  As for examples of overly broad health rationales for this procedure, 
Dr. McMahon indicated--in a 1995 letter submitted to Congress and in a 
1993 interview with the American Medical News--that, although all of 
the third trimester abortions he performed were nonelective, 
approximately 80 percent of the abortions he performed after 20 weeks 
of pregnancy were therapeutic.
  Dr. McMahon then provided the House Judiciary Committee with a 
listing of the so-called therapeutic indications for which he performed 
the procedure. That list is a real eye opener.
  The single most common reason for which the partial-birth abortion 
was performed by him was maternal depression. He also listed substance 
abuse on the part of the mother as a therapeutic reason for which he 
performed the procedure.
  In terms of fetal so-called abnormalities, Dr. McMahon's own list 
indicates that he performed the procedure numerous times in cases in 
which the fetus had no more serious a problem than a cleft lip.
  Dr. Haskell has similarly acknowledged that he is not performing the 
procedure in critical instances of maternal or fetal health. In Dr. 
Haskell's testimony in Federal district court in Ohio last month, Dr. 
Haskell stated: ``Patients that are critically ill at the time they're 
referred for termination, I probably would not see. Most of the 
patients that are referred to me for termination are at least healthy 
enough to undergo an operation on an outpatient basis or else I would 
not undertake it.''

  When asked about the specific health-related reasons for which he 
performed the partial-birth abortion procedure, Dr. Haskell specified 
that he has performed the procedure in cases involving high blood 
pressure, diabetes, and agoraphobia on the part of the mother. [See 
Dist. Ct. Tr. at 105.] Of course, agoraphobia is the fear of going 
outside. Dr. Haskell acknowledged that in district court. That, to me, 
is outrageous.
  Now, let me be perfectly clear that I do not doubt that in some cases 
this procedure was done where there were life-threatening indications.
  However, I simply must emphasize two points.
  First, those cases are by far in the minority. We should get the 
facts straight so that our colleagues and the American people 
understand what is going on here.
  Second, the most credible testimony at our hearing--confirmed by 
other available evidence--indicates that even where serious maternal 
health issues exist or severe fetal abnormalities arise, there will 
always be other, safer abortion procedures available that this bill 
does not touch.


                        Misrepresentation No. 5

  Finally, the next misrepresentation I would like to correct concerns 
whether this procedure exists. That claim should be put to rest once 
and for all.
  Some opponents of this measure still insist on claiming that the 
procedure banned by this bill--the partial-birth abortion procedure--
does not exist solely because the two doctors who have admitted 
performing the procedure--the late Dr. McMahon of Los Angeles and Dr. 
Haskell of Ohio--used different terms for the procedure.
  The bill clearly defines the term partial-birth abortion as ``an 
abortion in which the person performing the abortion partially 
vaginally delivers a living fetus before killing the fetus and 
completing the delivery.'' I think that the term partial-birth abortion 
does provide an accurate, shorthand description of that full 
definition.
  Dr. Haskell refers to the procedure as a D&X, while the late Dr. 
McMahon referred to the procedure as an intact D&E. As medical 
witnesses at the hearing pointed out, the procedures--by whatever 
name--are virtually unheard of in the medical and scientific 
literature.
  As Dr. Watson Bowes of the University of North Carolina at Chapel 
Hill wrote to me, ``The term `partial-birth abortion' is accurate as 
applied to the procedure described by Dr. Martin Haskell in his 1992 
paper. There is no standard medical term for this method.''
  I submit that there is no medically accepted terminology for the 
procedure because the procedure has not been medically accepted.
  There can be no question, however, that the procedure banned by this 
bill does exist and has been performed repeatedly. That is disturbing. 
It is troubling.
  We should be confronting the ethical dilemmas the procedure raises 
rather than sticking our heads in the sand and quibbling about whether 
the procedure exists under any particular name or another.

  On that note, I would like to close by highlighting a statement made 
at our hearing by Helen Alvare of the National Conference of Catholic 
Bishops. She remarked that opponents of this bill keep asking whether 
enacting it would be the first step in an effort to ban all abortions.
  In her view, however, the real question should be whether allowing 
this procedure would serve as a first step toward legalized 
infanticide. I urge the bill's opponents to ask themselves this 
question. What is the real purpose of this procedure?
  That is the fundamental problem with this procedure. It involves 
killing a partially delivered baby.
  The previous debate on this bill ended when the Senate voted to 
require a Judiciary Committee hearing. Let me say to my colleagues in 
the Senate that the testimony presented during this hearing more than 
confirmed my view that this procedure is never medically necessary and 
should be banned.
  This testimony, regardless of one's view on the broader issue of 
abortion, provides ample justification for an ``aye'' vote on H.R. 
1833.
  Mr. SMITH addressed the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Grams). The Senator from New Hampshire.
  Mr. SMITH. Thank you very much, Mr. President. Senator Boxer and I 
have an informal agreement that after approximately 30 minutes I would 
yield the floor to her, if the Chair would be kind enough to remind me 
if I get carried away.
  Mr. President, I rise today in very strong support of H.R. 1833, the 
Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 1995. I at this time would like to 
express my sincere gratitude to the Senator from Utah, Senator Hatch, 
first, for his splendid leadership on the issue of protecting the 
rights of the unborn. He has long been a champion of that issue, long 
before this Senator came to the Senate. But, also, I thank him for 
conducting the hearing, doing it in a fair manner, allowing all 
witnesses on both sides of the issue to be heard. He certainly 
performed a very valuable service, and I very much owe him a debt of 
gratitude for that.
  Mr. President, as I am sure you know, initially I opposed the motion 
to refer this bill to the Senate Judiciary Committee for a hearing 
given the full record developed during the House's consideration of the 
bill. I did not really believe that the Senate needed to have a 
hearing. The House had extensive hearings on the bill, as you know, and 
quite a bit of debate.
  Ultimately, however, I agreed to support the motion to refer the bill 
to the committee for the hearing because I was convinced that the more 
my colleagues could learn about this procedure about the brutality and 
the inhumaneness of it, the so-called partial-birth abortion procedure, 
I believed that the more my colleagues learned, the more I would have 
an opportunity to get more votes, frankly, in opposition to it. I 
believe that the bill will garner support, in other words, garner 
support to outlaw this procedure.

  Later in my remarks today I am going to comment in some detail about 
the excellent hearing held by Senator Hatch and the Judiciary Committee 
on H.R. 1833. That hearing was held on November 17.
  But first, Mr. President, I would like to remind my colleagues of 
just why it is that we are here. I want to focus again one more time on 
exactly what a partial-birth abortion is. The term ``birth'' involved 
in this procedure is somewhat interesting in the sense that it is 
called a partial birth, yet it is an abortion. I want to remind my 
colleagues of why a supermajority, a two-thirds majority, of the House 
of Representatives voted to pass this bill on November 1--two-thirds. 
And I would also like to remind my colleagues of why that supermajority 
encompassed both party and ideological lines on both sides, why it 
crossed those party 

[[Page S 17885]]
and ideological lines, why it included such people as House minority 
leader Richard Gephardt, Speaker Gingrich, House minority whip David 
Bonior, and House majority leader Dick Armey, pro-choice Democrat 
Patrick Kennedy, and pro-choice Republican Susan Molinari.
  Mr. President, the sole purpose of H.R. 1833 is to ban a very 
specific method of abortion that is performed at a time in the 
gestation period of about 5 months and continues on through the ninth 
month of gestation. So at any period of time between the fifth and the 
ninth month of gestation right up until the day of birth, these 
abortions can be and are performed.
  These are late-term babies, Mr. President. There really is not any 
other term for it. You can cover it up and coat it a little bit by 
using other terms. But they are late-term babies, the youngest of 
whom--the youngest of whom--at 5 months may have a fighting chance to 
live on their own outside of the womb, and the older of whom 
unquestionably, unless there were severe abnormalities or birth 
defects, could live outside the womb.
  So this specific abortion method called partial-birth abortion--that 
is what it is called--it is a straightforward, plain English term for a 
procedure in which a living baby's body is brought entirely into the 
birth canal, except for the child's head, which the abortionist holds 
inside the mother's womb, in other words, keeps the child from coming 
completely out of the womb, restrains the child, keeping the head 
inside the womb before he punctures the baby's head with scissors and 
inserts a suction catheter inside that incision and literally sucks the 
brains out of the child.

  It is understandable that the defenders of partial-birth abortions do 
not like the clearly descriptive and entirely accurate term ``partial-
birth abortion.'' I think most people on both sides of the aisle would, 
if they do not always agree with, certainly respect the words of 
Pulitzer Prize winning commentator George Will, who points out in an 
excellent column in the latest issue of Newsweek--he says, ``Pro-
abortion extremists object to that name, preferring,'' instead now of 
partial-birth abortion, ``preferring `intact dilation and evacuation' 
for the same reason that the pro-abortion movement prefers to be called 
pro-choice.''
  Mr. Will goes on to conclude that what is intact here is a baby. That 
is what is intact, a baby. So, instead of ``partial-birth abortion,'' 
we call it ``intact dilation and evacuation,'' the removal of a child 
from the womb after taking the child's life by inserting a catheter 
into the back of the head through an incision made by scissors, with no 
anesthetic, and suck the brains out.
  As I remind my colleagues today what a partial-birth abortion is, I 
am going to again use a series of illustrations that depict the 
partial-birth abortion procedure. I have done this before on the floor. 
I have been criticized for it. The press has not gotten it right. Some 
of them have not gotten it right. I was accused of showing photographs 
of aborted babies. I was accused of displaying a rubber fetus, whatever 
that is, all kinds of distortions of the record.
  But what I have here are simple medical diagrams. That is all they 
are. They simply say what the procedure is and simply show it in 
pictures. I am going to show it again briefly here to show what we mean 
by partial-birth abortion because I think we should understand what it 
is.
  As I do it, keep in mind that these illustrations have appeared in 
the American Medical Association's official newspaper, the AMA News. 
These are not my drawings. They are not drawn by the pro-life movement. 
They are not drawn by anyone other than they appeared in the AMA News. 
So they are medically accurate, they are straightforward, they are 
honest depictions of the partial-birth abortion procedure as described 
in an 8-page paper written in 1992 by Dr. Martin Haskell who has 
confessed, admitted, to performing more than 1,000--1,000--of these 
abortions--1,000 by one doctor, 1,000 abortions between the 5th and 9th 
month, Mr. President. Dr. Haskell's papers are included in the 
Judiciary Committee's official record of its November 17 hearing on 
this bill.
  In a tape recorded interview with the AMA News on July 5, 1993, Dr. 
Haskell himself said:

       The drawings are accurate from a technical point of view.

  Moreover, during a June 15, 1995 hearing before the House Judiciary 
Committee's Constitution Subcommittee, Johns Hopkins University Medical 
School Prof. Courtland Robinson, testifying on behalf of the National 
Abortion Federation, was questioned by Congressman Charles Canady about 
the same illustrations of the partial-birth abortion procedure that I 
will be showing my colleagues again today. Dr. Robinson agreed that 
they were technically accurate, commenting ``this is exactly probably 
what is occurring at the hands of the physicians involved.''
  This is a person who testified for the National Abortion Federation. 
So I think we ought to lay to rest the misrepresentations and the 
distortions and, frankly, the outright lies that have been perpetrated 
about me and about what I have presented on this floor. These are 
medically approved drawings that even the other side says are 
technically accurate.
  Dr. Watson Bowes, a professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the 
medical school of the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill, also, 
in his own right, an internationally recognized expert on fetal and 
maternal medicine, wrote a letter to Congressman Canady:

       Having read Dr. Haskell's paper, I can assure you that 
     these drawings accurately represent the procedure described 
     therein.

  Let us look at the first illustration. With the aid of ultrasound, 
the abortionist determines the position the baby is in, and after he 
determines that, he reaches in with the forceps and takes the child by 
the feet with the forceps and turns it around inside the womb. Keep in 
mind that this is a late-term living baby.
  Then, as you can see, Mr. President, the baby's leg is pulled out 
into the birth canal with the aid of the forceps. The baby is turned 
around so that it is a breech birth, because, obviously, if the head 
comes out first, it becomes a breathing child. If the feet come out 
first, it can be aborted, not a living thing. That is what we are told.
  So the abortionist has to turn the child around. Usually it is the 
other way around, but now we turn the child around and make a breech 
birth here. So the baby's leg comes through the cervical opening and 
into the birth canal.
  In the third illustration, we see that the abortionist now has the 
child enough removed from the forceps to be able to take the child in 
his or her hands from, as you can see in the drawing here, somewhere 
about midtorso. The abortionist takes ahold of this child, and he or 
she begins to pull the child all the way out of the womb and into the 
birth canal, with the exception of the head.

  Let me just pause here for a moment to reflect on what is happening. 
If this were a doctor and this were a happy time, a woman wanting this 
child for whatever reason, this little child would be a patient--a 
patient, Mr. President. But this child is not a patient here, not in 
this procedure. There is no choice of his or her own. This child is not 
a patient. This child is a victim of the abortionist's hands. What 
could be kind, loving, gentle hands are now the hands of death, 
because, sadly, the abortionist's purpose we now see coming in the 
fourth illustration.
  The horror of this is beyond all imagination, as far as I am 
concerned, having witnessed the birth of three of my own children, 
knowing what a beautiful experience that is to see. The abortionist 
holds the baby by the shoulders--I mean holds the baby by the 
shoulders--to prevent the child from being born, because the moment the 
head comes through the birth canal and out into the world, it has the 
protection of the Constitution of the United States.
  So this doctor has to be very sure that this little head does not 
slip out, so he holds the child, he prevents the child from being born, 
because--and this may be a little girl or a little boy, but let us, 
just for the sake of argument, call it a little girl--if her head slips 
out, she is born alive. We cannot let that happen if we are 
abortionists, can we? That is a problem.
  The columnist, John Leo, pointed out in his excellent article in the 
November 20 issue of U.S. News & World Report:


[[Page S 17886]]

       Stopping the head just short of birth is a legal figleaf 
     for a procedure that doesn't look like abortion at all. It 
     sounds like infanticide.

  So, as I said, Mr. President, the abortionist holds the baby's head 
with the hand tightly. Obviously, the muscular action here, the 
contractions move this child from the womb. That is natural. But after 
the gripping at the shoulders with these hands in an unspeakably brutal 
act of, I believe, inhumanity, the abortionist jams a pair of scissors 
into the baby's skull. This is a late-term baby, fully capable of pain 
and feeling pain, and before he withdraws those scissors, which he 
opens to separate the wound, he enlarges that hole at the base of the 
baby's skull and inserts that catheter.
  As you can see in the last drawing, what was moments before a living 
baby now hangs limp in the hands of the abortionist.
  Remember what happens: Catheter in, suck out the contents of the--it 
is interesting, some of the pro-choice, pro-abortion people call it the 
contents, the contents of the head, not the brains.
  You see, it sounds too much like a baby or a child to say ``brains,'' 
so you say ``contents,'' as if we were talking about a can of beans or 
something that you empty. Then in order to kill this baby, he uses that 
suction catheter to suck the baby's brains out--not the contents of 
some inanimate object--and the dead baby then is removed.
  I ask my colleagues, if that is not a baby there, what is it? I ask 
anybody who wants to take the floor today and say to me that you 
support this procedure, tell me what it is if it is not a baby. And if 
it is a baby, then we are killing it, are we not? If it is not a baby, 
what is it? What is it?
  I ask my colleagues and anyone else who may be listening, if you 
picked up the newspaper tomorrow morning in your hometown, wherever 
that may be--Anywhere, U.S.A.--and the front page of that paper said 
that the local pound decided to kill 100 unwanted puppies and kittens, 
with no anesthetic, by putting scissors in the back of the neck, by 
inserting a catheter in the back of the head and sucking the brains 
out, what would you think? My colleagues, ladies and gentlemen, 
American people, I think you would be outraged, I think you would be 
protesting probably in front of the SPCA; you would be calling it 
horrible, disgraceful, and saying, ``What are we doing? Why would I put 
my dog to sleep in such an inhumane manner?''
  Well, Mr. President, we are doing it to children. We are doing this 
to children. There you have it. But for the decision of someone else, 
not the baby, what could have been that beautiful journey in the 
process of birth, through the birth canal and into the world, which 
each and every one of us took because nobody got here without being 
born--there may have been other procedures, I grant, such as a 
cesarean, where you may have been born, but in most cases through the 
birth canal. But that beautiful journey from our mother's safe, warm 
womb in the birth canal and out into the wonderful world. But that is 
not what happens here. It is perverted by the abortionist into a savage 
rendezvous with death. That is exactly what it is. It is a rendezvous 
with death.
  Do you know what? I have been called an extremist because I have said 
that, because I have been down here on the floor showing these 
drawings, pointing out to the American people what this is. I am 
accused of being an extremist. What is the person who performs this 
act? What is that person? In a partial-birth abortion, the journey of 
life, the beautiful process of birth--birth--this is not the average 
abortion we are talking about. They are bad enough, and everybody knows 
how I feel about those, but that is not the issue here. This is the 
issue of late-term abortions, which is why so many pro-choice, clear-
thinking, sensible Democrats and Republicans, liberals and 
conservatives, in the House of Representatives voted to stop it, 
because they were horrified by it.
  The people who do it are the extremists. That is who the extremists 
are. This journey of life is interrupted in the ultimate act of violent 
oppression. The abortionist uses his brute strength, his powerful 
hands, against an innocent little child, helpless, defenseless child. 
He stops her journey into life, holds her by the shoulders and jams 
scissors into her head and removes her brains.
  Mr. President, this is the United States of America. When I came to 
the Senate in 1991, I never really dreamed that I would have to take 
the floor of the Senate and defend the right of a child, perhaps as old 
as 8\1/2\ to 8\3/4\ months in the uterus, to have to stand here and 
defend this child. What a sick, horrible perversion.

  How could this be in this country? How could we possibly stand by in 
this country and let this happen? But then, again, there is great 
precedent for this, Mr. President, because we saw it in the Civil War, 
prior to the Civil War, a couple hundred years prior to the Civil War--
almost 300 years prior to the Civil War--well, 200 anyway. Slavery, 
which was a brutal act against our fellow mankind. We stood around for 
a couple hundred years before we stopped that. But here we are.
  What have we come to as a people? We stand here on the floor day 
after day, month after month, year after year and talk about the great 
issues of the day--the deficit, the debt, whether or not we ought to 
send troops to Bosnia, the Persian Gulf, nominations of Supreme Court 
Justices, great issues. We have had some great debates here. But what 
have we come to, to be here on the floor, to have to try to stop 
something as barbaric as this? It should be stopped. It should not be 
happening. We should not have to be here.
  A little baby has a right to be born. In a partial-birth abortion, a 
doctor who swore to the Hippocratic oath ``to do no harm'' does the 
worst possible harm to the youngest, most defenseless little patient 
that he could ever have. No wonder the foremost expert practitioner of 
this procedure, Dr. Martin Haskell, the man who admittedly performed a 
thousand of them, did not have the guts to accept Chairman Hatch's 
invitation to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee to defend 
his procedure.
  Mr. President, we spent hours on the floor of the Senate in the early 
part of November with my colleagues on the other side of this issue 
demanding a hearing. ``We must have a hearing,'' I heard said. ``We 
must have these people come in and tell us about this procedure, 
because we can defend it.'' But Dr. Haskell did not come.
  In the November 20 issue of the American Medical Association's AMA 
News, one of Dr. Haskell's fellow abortionists really told us why Dr. 
Haskell did not have the guts to appear at the Senate Judiciary 
Committee hearing. Here is what he said, speaking of the procedure, and 
this is Dr. Warren Hearn, author of ``Abortion Practice,'' the Nation's 
most widely used textbook on abortion standards and procedures: ``You 
can't defend it.'' He said, ``You can't defend it.''
  That is why he did not show up. You cannot defend it.
  Thankfully, however, Mr. President, a nurse who once witnessed one of 
Dr. Haskell's partial-birth abortions, Brenda Pratt Shafer, did have 
the guts to appear before the Judiciary Committee. This is how she 
described what she saw:

       I am Brenda Pratt Shafer, a registered nurse with 13 years 
     of experience. One day in September, 1993, my nursing agency 
     assigned me to work at a Dayton, Ohio, abortion clinic. I had 
     often expressed pro-choice views to my two teenage daughters, 
     so I thought this assignment would be no problem for me. But 
     I was wrong. I stood at a doctor's side as he performed the 
     partial-birth abortion procedure, and what I saw is branded 
     forever on my mind. The mother was 6 months pregnant. The 
     baby's heartbeat was visible, clearly, on the ultrasound. The 
     doctor went in with forceps and grabbed the baby's legs and 
     pulled them down through the birth canal. Then he delivered 
     the baby's body and the arms, everything but the head. The 
     doctor kept the baby's head just inside the uterus. The 
     baby's little fingers were clasping and unclasping and his 
     feet were swinging.
       Then the doctor stuck the scissors through the back of his 
     head, and the baby's arms jerked out in a flinched, startled 
     reaction, like a baby does when he thinks he might fall. The 
     doctor opened up the scissors, stuck a high-powered suction 
     tube into the opening, and sucked the baby's brains out. Now, 
     the baby was completely limp.

  Then, the last line--and I am going to end here and yield the floor 
to Senator Boxer--the last, most compelling line, ``I never went back 
to that clinic, but I am still haunted by the face of that little boy--
it was the most perfect, angelic face I have ever seen.'' Brenda Pratt 
Shafer. 

[[Page S 17887]]

  I yield the floor.
  Mrs. BOXER. Mr. President, it is a privilege for me to take to the 
floor this evening in a tough debate and one that I hope will lead the 
Senate to amend this bill.
  This bill is flawed because it makes no exception, even for the life 
of the mother. It criminalizes a procedure, which means that doctors, 
by virtue of using it without having a chance to even explain it, will 
be hauled into court, perhaps into jail. It sets us on a slippery slope 
that greatly concerns me.
  I speak as a mother. I speak as a grandmother. I speak as someone who 
came here in part to protect people without a voice, the most 
vulnerable among us.
  We hear similar arguments that my friend engaged in the last time 
that this was brought to the floor, and the Senate wisely referred it 
to the Judiciary Committee. I want to thank my colleagues for voting 
with us on that. We had to fight to get an agreement. This was going to 
be rushed through, without hearing from the women who had a story to 
tell, without hearing from the doctors who think it is necessary, 
without hearing from the constitutional lawyers.
  Very wisely, we took a deep breath and we sent this to the committee. 
It was a good hearing. It was a balanced hearing. I hope Members will 
read the record very closely. Then I hope they will support amending 
this bill.

  I want to make a couple of comments before I go into a presentation 
that I hope will pinpoint my arguments.
  Mr. President, not every birth is a beautiful journey. We pray to God 
that everyone we know and love--everyone, every woman, every family--
can experience the beautiful journey of birth without problem. I know a 
lot of women have had problems. It is not always easy. Not every fetus 
finds a safe and warm womb. No, they do not. Some are born very early. 
Some develop terrible diseases and problems. Some women are diagnosed 
with serious cancer, and they know they could lose their life if they 
proceed to term.
  Life is not always, as somebody once said, a bowl of cherries. 
Sometimes it is very hard.
  Here we stand as Senators--not as doctors--outlawing a procedure, a 
medical procedure. I daresay if you were at home and you had never 
heard anything about this before and you came back from, say, another 
planet, and you turned on your TV and you were channel surfing and came 
to a station and were watching us, you would probably think this is a 
medical school lecture. I watched the beginning of this debate on TV, 
and it was just like a medical lecture. There was talk about what 
anesthesia does. There was talk about what kind of instruments are 
used. There was talk about things that we have no knowledge of. We see 
medical drawings--admittedly, done by physicians--medical drawings. 
What are we doing? This is not a medical school. This is not an ethical 
panel of a medicine school.
  Senator Kennedy, I thought, had a very important sentence in his 
prepared remarks. He said some Senators could be accused of practicing 
medicine without a license. That is not our job. I was not sent here to 
be a physician, to judge medical procedures, or to be God. That is for 
sure.
  I also take great exception to certain things that were said in this 
debate. I want to put those right out there because this will be a 
long-heated argument. I just want to go on record. It will not make a 
bit of difference that I am particularly offended, but I want to put it 
on the record.

  I want to say to my friends on the other side who are leading the 
charge for criminalizing a medical procedure, that doctors who perform 
abortions are doctors. They are not abortionists. They are physicians. 
Many of them have saved women's lives. And you call them abortionists?
  Abortion is legal in this country. They are doctors who perform 
abortions. They are being harassed. They are being threatened. This 
kind of rhetoric on this floor adds to the problem.
  Case in point: My colleague said Dr. So-and-so confessed that he 
performed abortions. He confessed. Notice the word. Who confesses? 
Somebody who is guilty of a crime. Abortion is not a crime in this 
Nation.
  Yes, there are those who want to make it a crime. They want to put 
the women in jail. We will get to that another day, I assure you. If 
they win this one, that is coming down the road.
  I say to my colleagues on the other side of this issue, do not use 
the term ``abortionist'' if you can help yourself. Say doctors who 
perform abortion. And do not say, he confessed. Then, my colleague 
said, He admitted.
  Yes, you are right, this doctor did not come before the panel. Other 
doctors did. They defended this procedure, said it was the safest 
procedure, and said that other procedures were 14 times more dangerous 
for the woman.
  Maybe you do not care about the woman. We do not see on that chart 
the face of the woman. Why is that? I say it is on purpose. It is a 
woman carrying a baby. I say the word ``baby.'' It is a woman carrying 
a baby who finds out in the late term some horrible thing she is faced 
with, with her family.
  So do not talk about confessing, and do not talk about admitting.
  I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record a letter from 
Dr. Haskell's attorney at this point.
  There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

         The Center for Reproductive Law & Policy,
                                                     New York, NY.
     Senator Orrin G. Hatch,
     Chairman, Committee on the Judiciary, U.S. Senate, 
         Washington, DC.
       Dear Senator Hatch: I am writing on behalf of Martin 
     Haskell, M.D., whom I currently represent in litigation 
     challenging Ohio House Bill 135, which like H.R. 1833, bans 
     certain methods of abortion. Because of the pending 
     litigation, Dr. Haskell must decline your kind invitation to 
     testify before the Senate Judiciary Committee on Friday, 
     November 17, 1995 about the federal ban on ``partial birth 
     abortions.'' Nevertheless, he asked me to convey you his 
     ardent opposition to the legislation, which will prevent him 
     from providing safe and appropriate medical services to his 
     patients needing second trimester abortions.
       Unfortunately, over the last several years, Dr. Haskell has 
     been the object of unlawful violence and intimidation by 
     those who oppose abortion. In addition to physical harassment 
     at home and work, which have included blockages and threats 
     by abortion opponents, he has been the victim of a firebomb 
     that extensively damaged one of his clinics. As a result, Dr. 
     Haskell has recently refused public and media appearances 
     that my increase the risk of violence against him.
       While Dr. Haskell is mindful that his appearance before 
     your Committee might clarify much of this misinformation 
     currently circulating about his medical practice and about 
     the purpose and effect of his legislation, he regrets that he 
     will be unable to attend. Please feel free to contact me if I 
     may be of further assistance to you.
           Very truly yours,
                                                  Kathryn Kolbert,
                                                   Vice President.

  Mrs. BOXER. In this, the attorney explains why the doctor did not 
come and references the fact that this doctor, unfortunately, has been 
the object of unlawful violence and intimidation by those who oppose 
abortion. In addition to physical harassment at home and at work, which 
have included blockades and threats by abortion opponents, he has been 
the victim of a firebomb that extensively damaged one of his clinics, 
and he has not made public appearances because there are some people 
who happen to love him.
  So, please choose your words carefully here. It could have an impact 
well beyond your meaning.
  I read the committee's hearing, the transcript, every word. I am very 
glad we had that hearing. It is not surprising, the doctors who 
testified were split on the issue. Some said it is not a necessary 
procedure. Others said it is quite necessary, it is the safest 
procedure. Some said we need to have that procedure to save a woman's 
life. Others said, ``We disagree.''
  We do know one thing. The 35,000-member organization of the OB/GYN's, 
the obstetricians and gynecologists, say no to this bill. The experts, 
the legal experts are split on the constitutionality.
  So, I say we need to look at the real-life people who have had this 
procedure because they come to us with a real story, not some 
philosophical point of view--and we all have them. As a matter of fact, 
one of these women who came before us describes herself as a 
conservative Republican pro-life person. Imagine. And that testimony 
cannot be derided by anyone in this Chamber, regardless of his or her 
view. Those people told the truth about their lives, and they were 
backed up by their families, and no one could contradict them. 

[[Page S 17888]]
That is the face that has been missing from this debate, the face that 
has been missing, the mother's face.
  I was very glad that we had the hearing because this mother came out 
and told her story. I am going to show you a photograph of this woman 
and her family: Coreen Costello, of Agoura, CA, she is 31, a full-time 
wife and mother of two. Her husband Jim is 33. He is a chiropractor. 
Children: Chad 7, Carlin 5. She is now pregnant. She is in the third 
month of her pregnancy. I want you to keep that face in mind and the 
faces of this family in mind. I want to tell you about her and her 
story.
  This is her statement. I am going to read it. It is brief. I want you 
to listen to the words and then I want you to think about what has been 
said here, the cruelty expressed toward the medical profession that 
took a Hippocratic oath to help a family like this.

       Ms. Costello. Senator Hatch, Senator Kennedy, and members 
     of the committee, I would like to really thank you for 
     allowing me to speak to you today. My name is Coreen 
     Costello. I live in Agoura, California, with my husband, Jim; 
     my son, Chad; and my daughter, Carlin. Jim is a chiropractor 
     and I am a full-time wife and mother.
       I am a registered Republican and very conservative. I do 
     not believe in abortion. Because of my deeply held Christian 
     beliefs, I knew that I would never have an abortion. Then on 
     March 24th of this year when I was 7 months pregnant, I was 
     having premature contractions and my husband and I rushed to 
     the hospital.
       During an ultrasound, the physician became very silent. 
     Soon, more physicians came in. I knew in my heart that there 
     was something terribly wrong. I went into the bathroom and I 
     sobbed. I begged God to let my baby be okay. I prayed like I 
     have never prayed before in my life. My husband reassured me 
     that we could deal with whatever was wrong. We had talked 
     about raising a child with disabilities. We were willing to 
     take whatever God gave us. I had no problem with that.
       My doctor arrived at 2:00 in the morning. He held my hand 
     and informed me that they did not expect our baby to live. 
     She was unable to absorb any amniotic fluid and it was 
     puddling into my uterus. That was causing my contractions. 
     This poor precious child had a lethal neurological disorder 
     and had been unable to move for almost 2 months. The 
     movements I had been feeling over the past months had been 
     nothing more than bubbles and fluid.
       Her chest cavity had been unable to rise and fall to 
     stretch her lungs to prepare them for air. Therefore, they 
     were left severely underdeveloped, almost to the point of not 
     existing. Her vital organs were atrophying. Our darling 
     little girl was dying.

  A peri--peri--a specialist recommended terminating the pregnancy. 
This is not a medical school class, so I do not know the names of the 
specialties.

       A perinatologist recommended terminating the pregnancy. For 
     my husband and me, this was not an option. I chose to go into 
     labor naturally. I wanted her to come on God's time. I did 
     not want to interfere. It was so difficult to go home and be 
     pregnant and go on with life knowing my baby was dying. I 
     wanted to stay in bed. My husband looked at me and said, 
     Coreen, this baby is still with us; she is still alive; let's 
     be proud of her; let's make these last days of her life as 
     special as possible. I felt her life inside of me and somehow 
     I still glowed.
       At this time, we chose our daughter's name. We named her 
     Katherine Grace, Katherine meaning pure, Grace representing 
     God's mercy. Then we had her baptized in utero. We went to 
     many more experts over the next 2 weeks. It was discovered 
     that Katherine's body was rigid and she was stuck in a 
     transverse position. Due to swelling, her head was already 
     larger than that of a full-term baby. Natural birth or 
     induced labor were not possible; they were impossible.
       I considered a Cesarean section, but experts at Cedars-
     Sinai Hospital were adamant that the risks to my health and 
     possibly my life were too great. There was no reason to risk 
     leaving my children motherless if there was no hope of saving 
     Katherine. The doctors all agreed that our only option was 
     the intact D&E procedure.

  That is the procedure this bill will outlaw.

     I was devastated. The thought of an abortion sent chills down 
     my spine. I remember patting my tummy, promising my little 
     girl that I would never let anyone hurt or devalue her.
       After Dr. McMahon explained the procedure to us, I was so 
     comforted. He and his staff understood the pain and anguish 
     we were feeling. I realized I was in the right place. This 
     was the safest way for me to deliver. This left open the 
     possibility of more children, it greatly lowered the risk of 
     my death, and most important to me, it offered a peaceful, 
     painless passing for Katherine Grace.
       When I was put under anesthesia, Katherine's heart stopped. 
     She was able to pass away peacefully inside my womb, which 
     was the most comfortable place for her to be. Even if regular 
     birth or a Cesarean had been medically possible, my daughter 
     would have died an agonizing death.
       When I awoke a few hours later, she was brought in to us. 
     She was beautiful. She was not missing any part of her brain. 
     She had not been stabbed in the head with scissors. She 
     looked peaceful. My husband and I held her tight and sobbed. 
     We stayed with her for hours, praying and singing lullabies. 
     Giving her back was the hardest moment of my life.
       Due to the safety of this procedure, I am again pregnant 
     now. Fortunately, most of you will never have to walk through 
     the valley we have walked. It deeply saddens me that you are 
     making a decision having never walked in our shoes.
       When families like ours are given this kind of tragic news, 
     the last people we want to seek advice from are politicians.

  I am going to read it again.

       When families like ours are given this kind of tragic news, 
     the last people we want to seek advice from are 
     politicians. We talk to our doctors, lots of doctors. We 
     talk to our families and other loved ones, and we ponder 
     long and hard into the night with God.
       What happened to our family is heart-breaking and it is 
     private, but we have chosen to share our story with you 
     because we hope it will help you act with wisdom and 
     compassion. I hope you can put aside your political 
     differences, your positions on abortion, and your party 
     affiliations and just try to remember us. We are the ones who 
     know. We are the families that ache to hold our babies, to 
     love them, to nurture them. We are the families who will 
     forever have a hole in our hearts. We are the families that 
     had to choose how our babies would die. Each one of you 
     should be grateful that you and your families have not had to 
     face such a choice. I pray that no one you love ever does.
       Please put a stop to this terrible bill. Families like mine 
     are counting on you. Thank you very much.

  I say we need to look at the real-life people who have had this 
procedure. We have to put a mother's face on that drawing and into this 
debate because we know what will happen.
  Some doctors say that this procedure is absolutely necessary to save 
a woman's life and protect her health. Others say no. What if the ones 
who say it is necessary are right? You know who is going to pay the 
price. Not the doctor, because he or she is going to stop doing this 
procedure. There is no exception in this bill for the life and health 
of the mother. There is an affirmative defense. That means the doctor 
has to go into court and defend himself or herself. The burden is on 
the physician to prove that he was acting or she was acting to save the 
woman's life and health. So the doctors will stop doing this procedure.
  That is what this bill is all about. So who is left with fewer 
options? The women. It is like telling women--we have seen this--they 
had better not take a mammogram. We are going to say you do not really 
need it until you are 50. We faced that debate. Well, that is the only 
tool we have to save her life. And we fought against that 
recommendation, and we said to women who are 40 to go get those 
mammograms. Maybe we will only save 15 percent of you instead of a 
larger number when you are 50. But that is the only tool we have.
  So when we take a tool away, who will be hurt? Not the doctor. It 
will be your wives. It will be your sisters. It will be your children 
and mine and their families.
  We are over 90 percent men in this Senate. And I want to appeal to 
those men in this Senate who talk about the beauty of the baby going 
through the birth canal as if they have ever experienced this 
themselves. I take offense when you say you are the only ones who care 
about babies and you denigrate people on the other side and say that we 
will not talk about the babies. Well, I want to talk about the babies. 
And I want to talk about these babies who could have lost their mother, 
a pro-life Republican woman who came here to testify.
  So what I am going to do during this debate is concentrate on putting 
a mother's face on the screen and putting her family's face on the 
screen, and tell her story because it has been left out of this debate. 
I plan to talk about the chamber of horrors a doctor would have to go 
through if he did feel that this was the only option--and when he took 
his Hippocratic oath, he said, to save the life of his patient--and if 
he feels that is the only procedure; the chamber of horrors that he 
would have to go through to protect a woman's health and even her life. 
I will lead you through what would happen to such a physician.
  This is America. What are politicians doing in the hospital room? 
What are 

[[Page S 17889]]
politicians doing telling this religious woman how to lead her life and 
what to do? It is an outrage to me.
  Roe v. Wade clearly says in late term the State shall regulate 
abortion, and here is a crowd who comes in here saying we are going to 
make welfare be run by the State. Fine. Medicaid by the States--we are 
going to have medical savings accounts. We are going to let Medicare 
``wither on the vine,'' a well-known quote of Newt Gingrich. We do not 
need a Federal Government. But now all the doctors in here--as far as I 
know we only have one, and he was never an ob-gyn--are going to decide 
what procedure should be banned and what procedure should not be 
banned.
  So I am going to put the face of the mother on this debate. I have 
many other stories we will tell in the course of time. I am going to 
take you through what happens to a physician--physicians most of whom 
who have brought thousands of babies into this world but may believe 
that this is the safest procedure to use so that this beautiful mother 
can get pregnant again and can stay alive for her husband and her 
children.
  My colleagues, we have a lot of work to do. We do not even have a 
budget, and they are talking over there in the House about shutting the 
Government down again. Why do we not do what we are supposed to do? Why 
do we not stay out of things that are better left to the family? As she 
said, the last thing she wants is a politician involved in this 
tragedy. I think she wants us to do our job. Get a budget. Get a 
budget. Sit down around the table. Let us negotiate. Let us decide if 
Medicare and Medicaid are important. Let us decide if environmental 
protection and education are important. Let us decide how to balance 
this budget in 7 years with a touch of humanity. So, yes, babies and 
kids can get health care and can get an education.
  That is what we are supposed to do. But, no. We are here with medical 
drawings. And do you want to know why people on the other side voted 
overwhelmingly for this bill? Because they never had a chance to amend 
it. We will give you that chance. We will give you the chance to show 
your support for States rights. We will give you that chance to stand 
up for the life and health of the mother.
  This is a different place than the House where the Speaker controls 
the way things come to the floor. I know. I served there for 10 years. 
It is real difficult.
  We have a chance. We have a chance to think about these women and 
their families and craft a bill that will not put people like this at 
risk.
  Thank you very much, Mr. President. I yield the floor.
  Mr. SIMON addressed the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Illinois.
  Mr. SIMON. Mr. President, I rise in opposition to this legislation 
that I know is well intended. But I think it is wrong. Our colleague 
from California mentioned one witness. Let me read just a part of the 
testimony of another witness, Mrs. Viki Wilson.
  Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that her full statement be 
printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the material was order to be printed in the 
Record, as follows:

     Testimony of Viki Wilson to the Senate Judiciary Committee in 
           Opposition to H.R. 1833/S. 939, November 17, 1995

       I'd like to thank the Judiciary committee for allowing me 
     to testify today. My name is Viki Wilson. I am a registered 
     nurse, with eighteen years experience, ten in pediatrics. My 
     husband Bill is an emergency room physician. We have three 
     beautiful children: Jon is 10, Katie is 8, and Abigail is in 
     heaven with God.
       In the spring of 1994 I was pregnant and expecting my third 
     child on Mother's Day. The nursery was ready and we were 
     excited anticipating the arrival of our baby. Bill had 
     delivered our other two children, and he was going to deliver 
     Abigail. Jon was going to get to cut the cord and Katie was 
     going to be the first to hold her. She had already become a 
     very important part of our family.
       At 36 weeks of pregnancy all of our dreams and happy 
     expectations came crashing down around us. My doctor ordered 
     an ultrasound that detected what all my previous prenatal 
     testing, including a chorionic villus sampling, an 
     alphafetoprotein and an earlier ultrasound had failed to 
     detect, an encephalocoele. Approximately 2/3 of my daughter's 
     brain had formed on the outside of her skull. I literally 
     fell to my knees from the shock. I immediately knew that she 
     would not be able to survive outside by womb. My doctor sent 
     me to a perinatologist, a pediatric radiologist and a 
     geneticist all desperately trying to find a way to save her. 
     My husband and I were praying that there would be some new 
     surgical technique to fix her brain. But all the experts 
     concurred. Abigail would not survive outside my womb. And she 
     could not survive the birthing process, because of the size 
     of her anomaly her head would be crushed and she would 
     suffocate. Because of the size of her anomaly, the doctors 
     also feared that my uterus would rupture in the birthing 
     process most likely rendering me sterile. It was also 
     discovered that what I thought were big healthy strong baby 
     movements were in fact seizures. They were being caused by 
     compression of the encephalocoele that continued to increase 
     as she continued to grow inside my womb. I asked, ``What 
     about a c-section?'' Sadly, my doctor told me ``Viki, we do 
     c-sections to save babies. We can't save her. A c-section is 
     dangerous for you and I can't justify those risks.
       The biggest question for me and my husband was not ``Is she 
     going to die?'' A higher power had already decided that for 
     us. The question now was ``How is she going to die?'' We 
     wanted to help her leave this world as painlessly and 
     peacefully as possible, and in a way that protected my life 
     and health and allowed us to try again to have children. We 
     agonized over these options, and kept praying for a miracle. 
     After discussing our situation extensively, our doctors 
     referred us to Dr. McMahon. It was during our drive to Los 
     Angeles that we chose our daughter's name. We named her 
     Abigail, the name my grandmother had always wanted for a 
     grandchild. We decided that if she were named Abigail, her 
     great-grandma would be able to recognize her in heaven.
       My husband grilled Dr. McMahon with all the same questions 
     that many of you probably have asked about the procedure. We 
     would never have let anything happen to our baby that was 
     cruel, or unnecessary . . . and Bill as my husband, loving 
     me, wanted to be sure it was safe for me.
       Dr. McMahon and this procedure were our salvation. My 
     daughter died with dignity inside my womb. She was not 
     stabbed in the back of the head with scissors, no one dragged 
     her out half alive and then killed her, we would never have 
     allowed that to happen.
       Losing Abigail was the hardest thing that's ever happened 
     to us in our life. After we went home, I went into the 
     nursery and sat there holding her baby clothes crying and 
     thinking she'll never get to hear me tell her that I love 
     her.
       I've often wondered why this had happened to us, what we 
     had done to deserve such pain. I am a practicing Catholic, 
     and I couldn't help believing that God had to have some 
     reason for giving us such a burden. Then I found out about 
     this legislation, and I know then and there that Abigail's 
     life had a special meaning. God knew I would be strong enough 
     to come here and tell you our story, to try to stop this 
     legislation from passing and causing incredible devastation 
     for other families like ours. There will be families in the 
     future faced with this tragedy because pre-natal testing is 
     not infallible. I urge you, please don't take away the safest 
     procedure available.
       I told the Monsignor at my parish that I was coming here, 
     and he supports me. He said, ``Viki, what happened to you 
     wasn't about choice. You didn't have a choice. What you did 
     was about preserving your life.'' I was grateful for his 
     words. This issue isn't about choice, it's about a medical 
     necessity. It's about life and health.
       My kids attend a Catholic school where a playground was 
     built and named in Abigail's honor. I believe that God gave 
     me the intelligence to make my own decisions knowing I'm the 
     one that has to live with the consequences. My husband said 
     to me as I was getting on the plane to come to Washington 
     ``Viki, make sure this Congress realizes this is truly a 
     Cruelty to Families Act.''

  Mr. SIMON. Mr. President, here is what she said.

       My name is Viki Wilson. I am a registered nurse with 
     eighteen years experience, ten in pediatrics. My husband Bill 
     is an emergency room physician. We have three beautiful 
     children. Jon is 10. Katie is 8, and Abigail is in heaven 
     with God.
       At 36 weeks of pregnancy all of our dreams and happy 
     expectations came crashing down around us. . . . . 
     Approximately 2/3 of my daughter's brain had formed on the 
     outside of her skull. I literally fell to my knees from shock 
     [when told about this by the doctor]. I immediately knew that 
     she would not be able to survive outside my womb. . . . My 
     husband and I were praying that there would be some new 
     surgical technique to fix her brain. But all the experts 
     concurred. Abigail would NOT survive outside my womb. And she 
     could not survive the birthing process. Because of the size 
     of her anomaly her head would be crushed and she would 
     suffocate. Because of the size of her anomaly, the doctors 
     also feared that my uterus would rupture in the birthing 
     process most likely rendering me sterile. It was also 
     discovered that what I thought were big, healthy, strong 
     baby movements were in fact seizures.
       . . . My daughter died with dignity inside my womb. She was 
     not stabbed in the back of the head with scissors. No one 
     dragged her out half alive and then killed her. We would 
     never have allowed that to happen.
       Losing Abigail was the hardest thing that's ever happened 
     to us in our life. After we 

[[Page S 17890]]
     went home, I went into the nursery and sat there holding her baby 
     clothes crying and thinking she'll never get to hear me tell 
     her that I love her.
       I've often wondered why this had happened to us, what we 
     had done to deserve such pain. I am a practicing Catholic. I 
     couldn't help believing that God had to have some reason for 
     giving us such a burden. Then I found out about this 
     legislation, and I knew then and there that Abigail's life 
     had a special meaning. God knew I would be strong enough to 
     come here and tell you our story, to try to stop this 
     legislation from passing and causing incredible devastation 
     for other families like ours.
       . . . My kids attend a Catholic school where a playground 
     was built and named in Abigail's honor. I believe that God 
     gave me the intelligence to make my own decisions knowing I'm 
     the one that has to live with the consequences. My husband 
     said to me as I was getting on the plane to come to 
     Washington, ``Viki, make sure this Congress realizes this is 
     truly a Cruelty to Families Act.''

  What we are asked to do in this legislation is to say to the 
physicians that helped Viki Wilson and Coreen Costello and their 
families, if you assist these families, you will go to prison for 2 
years.
  That is a decision we should not make.
  In the hearing, I said to the one physician who testified against 
this bill, who incidentally served 11 years as a missionary in Korea, 
who now is on the faculty at Johns Hopkins, I have been thinking about 
it, done exactly 30 minutes of research, and maybe we should--because a 
brain tumor is a life and death matter, just as this is a life and 
death matter--maybe we should introduce legislation that says what kind 
of brain tumor surgery physicians can perform. And I said to him, what 
do you think about that? He said, of course, it would be a terrible 
idea. And he followed through because he recognized the analogy that I 
was making.
  For the first time in the history of the United States, if this is 
adopted, we will be saying to physicians, this is what you have to do; 
these are the procedures you have to follow.
  I frankly have no ability to make that decision.
  I wrote to the departments of obstetrics and gynecology of the 
medical schools in Illinois and asked the people who were in charge 
what they thought of this legislation. I enclosed a copy of the 
legislation, and I asked three questions.
  I ask unanimous consent that all of these letters be printed in the 
Record, Mr. President.
  There being no objection, the letters were ordered to be printed in 
the Record, as follows:

         The University of Chicago, Department of Obstetrics and 
           Gynecology, the Chicago Lying-In Hospital,
                                   Chicago, IL, November 14, 1995.
     Hon. Paul Simon,
     U.S. Senator, U.S. Senate, Dirksen Building, Washington, DC.
       Dear Senator Simon: Thank you very much for your letter of 
     November 9 regarding H.R. 1833, the ``Partial-Birth 
     Abortion'' bill. I shall address your questions in order.
       1. The term ``partial birth abortion'' appears in the bill 
     to be a loosely defined entity and that makes interpretation 
     difficult. There is a procedure known as ``Dilatation and 
     Evacuation'' (D & E) which is done to interrupt late second 
     trimester pregnancies. Presumably this medically acceptable 
     procedure is not being addressed in the bill, but the 
     language is sufficiently vague that I cannot be certain. 
     Unquestionably, that procedure should never be outlawed. I 
     believe there have been rare instances in which some 
     physicians have done early third trimester interruption of 
     pregnancy, presumably for late-discovered lethal or serious 
     genetic defects, but I am not familiar with this procedure. 
     However, I assume these are done for medically appropriate 
     reasons.
       2. I am strongly opposed and extremely concerned about the 
     Federal Government deciding the acceptability of medical 
     procedures in practice. These should be decided based on 
     medical information and not by a legislative process. It 
     appears ironic to me that the current emphasis in Washington 
     is to reduce the Federal Government's involvement in our 
     lives. The proposed legislation goes alarmingly in the 
     opposite direction.
       3. A physician should obviously practice medicine ethically 
     and legally. I oppose the notion that criminal or civil 
     penalties be introduced into the practice of medicine in the 
     United States.
       Thank you very much for the opportunity to comment on these 
     issues. Please do not hesitate to contact me again, should 
     you desire.
           Sincerely yours,
     Arthur L. Herbst, M.D.
                                                                    ____

         Washington University School of Medicine at Washington 
           University Medical Center, Department of Obstetrics and 
           Gynecology,
                                 St. Louis, MO, November 22, 1995.
     Hon. Paul Simon,
     U.S. Senate, Dirksen Building, Washington, DC.
       Dear Senator Simon: Thank you very much for your letter of 
     November 9, 1995, concerning the legislation H.R. 1833. I 
     will attempt to answer the questions as you have posed them.
       One, I am familiar with the procedure, even though I have 
     never performed it myself. I do not agree with those who 
     support the bill. There are instances in which I think that 
     this procedure is appropriate. Two specific instances come to 
     mind. One would be when the life of the woman is in danger 
     and the most expeditious delivery of the fetus would be the 
     safest method for her. This method allows for that, since the 
     fetus can be delivered through a partially dilated cervix. 
     The other instance would be a fetus that is doomed to die 
     after delivery or has a series of severe malformations. 
     Examples of this would be fetuses that have no lungs or no 
     kidneys. Again, this technique of abortion can be safest for 
     the mother because it can be performed when the cervix is not 
     fully dilated. I believe it is cruel to force a woman to 
     carry a fetus to term when she knows that the baby will die 
     after delivery. One can imagine the psychological distress 
     that a woman would have when she is obviously pregnant and 
     people continuously inquire how she and the baby are doing. 
     Imagine having either to hide the problems of the fetus or to 
     not tell the inquiring person. Many times, the inquiries to 
     the pregnant woman are simply part of a normal conversation 
     between persons, but a woman who is carrying a fetus doomed 
     to die would find this a very stressful situation. The 
     instance in which this procedure would be useful is when the 
     discovery is made after 20-22 weeks of pregnancy. It can 
     become the safest procedure for the mother. I must also add 
     that I find it appropriate to perform this procedure when the 
     mother and fetus are both normal. I personally would never do 
     that, and I would have difficulty watching such a procedure 
     being performed on a normal fetus as an elective termination.
       In answer to your second question, I have great worries 
     about the federal government having a say on what medical 
     procedures can and cannot be performed. This procedure is an 
     excellent example of why I think the federal government would 
     have problems directing the care of individual patients. 
     There are so many possibilities concerning threats to the 
     pregnant woman's life or fetal malformations that may or may 
     not lead to problems in the future. This also becomes even 
     more complicated because the state of medical art is 
     continually changing and what would be a threat to a woman's 
     life one year might cease to be one in future years, as 
     medical technologies improve. I believe that the federal 
     government is simply too cumbersome to micro-manage the care 
     of individual patients by individual physicians.
       In answer to your third question, I have worries about the 
     imposition by Congress of criminal and civil penalties on 
     doctors performing certain medical procedures. It really is 
     tied to the answer to the second question, in that this is a 
     complex area and it is difficult to micro-manage from a 
     distance. I must say that I am very troubled by Section (e) 
     on page 3 of the bill. Physicians would find very little 
     comfort from the fact that ``it is an affirmative defense to 
     a prosecution or a civil action under this section, which 
     must be proved by a preponderance of evidence, that the 
     partial-birth abortion was performed by a physician who 
     reasonably believed the partial-birth abortion was necessary 
     to save the life of the mother; and no other procedure would 
     suffice for that purpose.'' Very few physicians would risk 
     prolonged civil or criminal proceedings, particularly in an 
     area that is so charged as abortion. The other problem with 
     this is that it is absolute in that no other procedure would 
     suffice for that purpose. It would be difficult in any 
     clinical situation to come to the conclusion the only one 
     procedure would suffice.
       My greatest problem with this legislation is that we could 
     so frighten physicians that the best procedure for the 
     pregnant woman would be precluded by the legislation. We 
     physicians always wish to place the welfare of our patients 
     first, and bills such as this would make us weigh what we 
     believe to be best for patients against protection for 
     ourselves. I, as a physician, would like never to be put in 
     such a position. The welfare of the patient should always 
     come first.
       I hope that my thoughts have been helpful to you, and I 
     appreciate it very much and am indeed honored that you would 
     seek my thoughts on this important and controversial issue. 
     If I can be of further help to you, please feel free to 
     contact me about this or any other medical issue concerned 
     with Obstetrics and Gyncelogy.
           Sincerely,

                                     James R. Schreiber, M.D.,

                                               Professor and Head,
     Obstetrics and Gynecology.
                                                                    ____

                                           Rockford Health System,


                                   Rockford Memorial Hospital,

                                  Rockford, IL, November 14, 1995.
     Hon. Paul Simon,
     U.S. Senator, Dirksen Building, Washington, DC.
       Dear Senator Simon: This letter is a response to your 
     inquiry of November 9, 1995, regarding Bill H.R. 1833 which 
     is to be discussed on November 17, 1995. You raised three 
     issues concerning the legislation and the procedure which I 
     will attempt to respond to.

[[Page S 17891]]

       Although I am not an obstetrician, I am somewhat familiar 
     with the procedure. The procedure that is performed is 
     generally done somewhat differently than described in the 
     Bill that was attached to your letter. The procedure 
     apparently is rarely done and is not done at all at this 
     institution. However, there are solid medical indications for 
     doing this procedure when it is deemed safer to perform this 
     than an operative procedure to remove the fetus either if it 
     is non-viable or the mother's life is in danger. Abortions 
     are not performed at this institution for a variety of 
     reasons. Therefore, the outcome of this legislation will have 
     very little impact at this level.
       You did raise the question about how I feel about the 
     federal government having a say in what medical procedures 
     can and cannot be performed. I, as my colleagues do, feel 
     quite strongly that the role of the government should not 
     stray into the medical arena regarding what is appropriate or 
     nonappropriate therapy. As you know, all of the ramifications 
     from legislating at this level simply cannot be understood or 
     realized prior to the event and the results may be completely 
     different than those intended. Determining which medical 
     procedures should and should not be done should lie within 
     the confines of the institution performing these procedures. 
     This should be decided by sound medical judgement and where 
     appropriate, the ethical and moral considerations will be 
     discussed at a local level with the Ethics Committee.
       In a similar vein, I feel that Congress imposing criminal 
     and civil penalties upon physicians performing medical 
     procedures borders on the ridiculous. If Congress begins to 
     legislate at this level, where can it possibly end?
       I hope these comments are of help, and if I can be of any 
     further assistance, please do not hesitate to ask me.
           Sincerely,
                                          Donald E. McCanse, M.D.,
     Vice-President, Medical Affairs.
                                                                    ____

                                          Evanston Hospital Corp.,


                      Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology,

                                  Evanston, IL, November 13, 1995.
     Hon. Paul Simon,
     Dirksen Building,
     Washington, DC.
       Dear Senator Simon: In response to your letter of November 
     9th, I offer the following comments to your questions:
       (1) Yes I am familiar with the procedure described in 
     legislation, HR 1833, but have not seen or done one. We do 
     not perform this procedure at this institution. In proper 
     hands (i.e. qualified physician) the procedure does have a 
     place in the armamentarium of termination procedures.
       (2) The basic question is, does the federal government have 
     a place in deciding what medical procedures should or should 
     not be performed. I feel strongly not. This is a medical 
     decision.
       (3) Similarly, Congress has no business imposing penalties 
     on physicians for performing a certain procedure. If any 
     government sanction would be appropriate, it might be at the 
     State Department of Professional Regulation.
       The overall issue of freedom of choice in pregnancy 
     termination should not be clouded or interfered with by 
     dictation of how the termination is performed.
       I appreciate the opportunity to provide input into this 
     important matter and thank you for asking for my opinion.
           Respectfully,
     David W. Cromer, M.D.
                                                                    ____

         Michael Reese Hospital and Medical Center, Department of 
           Obstetrics and Gynecology,
                                   Chicago, IL, November 21, 1995.
     Hon. Paul Simon,
     U.S. Senate, Dirksen Building, Washington, DC.
       Dear Senator Simon: I am an Associate Professor of Clinical 
     Obstetrics and Gynecology at the University of Illinois and 
     currently in active practice of Maternal Fetal Medicine or 
     ``high risk'' obstetrics at both Michael Reese Hospital and 
     the University of Illinois Hospital. Therefore, the issue at 
     hand has great importance to me and to the patients for whom 
     I provide care.
       I would like to answer your questions by telling you that I 
     am unfamiliar with the term ``Partial Birth Abortion.'' After 
     reading about it from descriptions in the press, I do not 
     find that it results in an outcome that is any different from 
     other techniques of abortion and, therefore, since abortion 
     is a legal procedure, I have no objection to it. I feel very 
     strongly that the federal government should not have a say in 
     defining which medical procedures should be performed. I also 
     believe that the Congress should not impose criminal and 
     additional civil penalties on doctors because they perform 
     one medical procedure and not another to accomplish the same 
     outcome for their patient.
       Prior to discussion of H.R. 1833, I was unaware of the term 
     ``Partial Birth Abortion.'' It is neither a term found in the 
     ICD-9 catalog of medical diagnoses or medical procedures 
     published by the American Medical Association nor can it be 
     found in any medical text book with which I am familiar. 
     After reviewing statements that have appeared in the press, I 
     understand that the term has been used to describe one of 
     several techniques that obstetric surgeons have used to 
     accomplish an abortion by enlargement of the opening of the 
     cervix or mouth of the womb (dilation) and removal of the 
     fetus (evacuation). Dilation and evacuation (D&E), the 
     accepted terminology, is used to perform an abortion after 
     the first thirteen weeks (first trimester) of pregnancy. 
     While many physicians perform abortions and have been 
     required to be trained to do that procedure by the American 
     Board of Obstetrics and Gynecology, only a few physicians 
     perform D&E for which they have received additional training.
       I present the option for D&E when I find, through the use 
     of ultrasound and other prenatal diagnostic procedures, that 
     the patient is carrying a fetus with severe congenital or 
     chromosomal anomalies. These abnormalities would leave the 
     fetus with severe structural or intellectual deficits, often 
     being incompatible with life after birth. Since these 
     diagnoses cannot be made until after the first trimester 
     of gestation, the patients who have chosen to end their 
     pregnancy require termination either by D&E or by 
     induction of premature labor. The latter procedure 
     requires agents to soften the cervix of the womb and then 
     use of additional medication to cause uterine contractions 
     which expel the fetus.
       There are only two physicians of whom I am aware in the 
     Chicago area who perform D&E on patients beyond 20 weeks 
     gestation. I do not know if they at times use the technique 
     of D&E referred to as ``Partial Birth Abortion.'' Most often 
     D&E results in destruction of the fetus; however, one 
     physician to whom I send patients is adept at surgically 
     removing a fetus of late gestation (24 weeks or less) either 
     intact or with only minimal distortion. This has great 
     benefit for the patient because we are able to perform an 
     autopsy on the fetus and confirm any of the suspected 
     abnormalities for which the patient was referred. This 
     information might have an influence on the patient's future 
     childbearing since genetic patterns of inheritance may be 
     identified. It also may provide the mother with an 
     opportunity to see and hold this fetus if she wishes. This 
     brief contact may help her with mourning and ease the burden 
     of losing a pregnancy.
       You have asked if I ``share the sense of those who support 
     the bill that this procedure should not be allowed under any 
     circumstance?'' I read the bill and found the definition of a 
     ``Partial Birth Abortion'' contained within it extremely 
     vague. Since this is not a medical term with which I am 
     familiar and the description in the legislation lacks 
     exactness, I cannot give you an answer.
       I have another sense of the issue from reading accounts of 
     the procedure in the press and understand that the term has 
     been used to describe a D&E whereby the cervix is partially 
     dilated and extraction of a fetus is performed by pulling 
     down on the legs until the fetal head is just above the open 
     cervix. Since the fetal head is larger that its chest, it 
     does not pass through. An instrument is then used to compress 
     the fetal head so that it can then be delivered without 
     further opening of the cervix. It is unlikely that 
     manipulation of the fetal skull takes place on a fetus that 
     is alive since the umbilical cord which is attached to the 
     fetal abdomen below the cervix and the placenta above has 
     been compressed between the tight cervix and the fetal head 
     resulting in fetal death prior to head decompression. It is 
     true that this entire procedure results in fetal death, but 
     how does this method differ from any of the other techniques 
     of abortion? If abortion is allowed, this technique should 
     not be singled out as being any different than any other 
     technique that achieves the same end.
       In fact, D&E may be more desirable as an abortion procedure 
     in that it takes only about 30 minutes to perform; less time 
     to accomplish than the 9 to 12 hours required for induction 
     of labor. This is an advantage to the mother since there is 
     less chance for blood loss and infection. In the past, the 
     Center for Disease Control in Atlanta, Georgia found D&E to 
     be the safest technique for abortion after the first 
     trimester. With particular reference to a D&E where 
     compression of the fetal head is performed, one can 
     hypothesize that there is less trauma to the mother's cervix 
     from further opening which would be required to deliver the 
     fetal head without decompression. Greater trauma to the 
     cervix has been implicated as a cause of an ``incompetent 
     cervix'' which results in repeated pregnancy loss. I 
     mentioned above the advantages of retrieving an intact 
     specimen for pathologic diagnosis and also in some cases 
     the possibility of helping the mother with the process of 
     mourning.
       I feel very strongly that the federal government should not 
     have a say in the type of medical procedures performed by a 
     physician. The advantages of one treatment plan, either 
     medical or surgical, must be left to the process of peer 
     review. It is only by this method that those procedures which 
     have the greatest benefit and carry the least risk to the 
     patient can be identified. Medicine is a discipline founded 
     upon scientific principles and these principles would be 
     superseded if government intervened.
       I feel equally as strong about Congress imposing criminal 
     and additional civil penalties upon doctors because of a 
     certain procedure that he or she performs. If the goal of the 
     procedure is to accomplish an end that is within the law, how 
     can Congress possibly call one procedure legal and another 
     illegal? The value of the procedure must be determined by the 
     medical community who can best judge its merit by its risk 
     and benefit to the patient. If the procedure endangers the 
     patient, the medical community, through 

[[Page S 17892]]
     the process of peer review, will prohibit that procedure from being 
     performed. Physicians who perform procedures outside of the 
     standard of care can and do face civil and, even at times, 
     criminal penalties; but, the issue does not have to do with 
     the procedure they perform, it concerns the adherence to the 
     standard of care.
       I hope my response has been of help. As I have indicated, 
     the term ``Partial Birth Abortion'' is not a medical term 
     with which I am familiar. If abortion is legal, I favor the 
     technique that will accomplish the goal with the least risk 
     and the greatest benefit to the mother. I feel strongly that 
     the federal government cannot decide the scientific merit of 
     one medical procedure over another and, therefore, should not 
     have jurisdiction over which medical procedures should or 
     should not be performed. Congress certainly should not impose 
     civil or criminal penalties on a physician for performing one 
     or another procedure.
       I am most grateful to have the opportunity to respond to 
     this issue.
           Cordially,

                                          Laurence I. Burd, MD

                                     Associate Professor, Clinical
     Obstetrics & Gynecology.
                                                                    ____

         The University of Illinois at Chicago, Department of 
           Obstetrics and Gynecology (M/C 808) College of 
           Medicine,
                                   Chicago, IL, November 20, 1995.
     Hon. Paul Simon,
     U.S. Senate, Dirksen Building, Washington, DC.
       Dear Mr. Simon: I regret to have been unable to answer your 
     recent letter sooner but I was away and only today on my 
     return in the office, I found your letter.
       I am still responding to your request just in case in view 
     of a budget impasse, the hearings of your committee have been 
     held as yet. Thus, I hope that this letter may be helpful to 
     you and your committee.
       As to the issues raised in your letter regarding ``Partial 
     Birth Abortion, yes I am familiar with the procedure. Such 
     procedures are used very rarely and its proposed prohibition 
     is a thinly disguised assault on the women's reproductive 
     freedom and the physician's freedom in his or her profession. 
     Such a proposed legislation would be injurious to women's 
     health.
       I vividly recall a patient many years ago who presented 
     herself to the labor room in premature labor, infected, sick 
     with high fever, and with her premature fetus partially 
     expelled in the vagina through an incompletely dilated 
     cervix. After administration of antibiotics, the baby had to 
     be delivered as rapidly as possible of this clearly now 
     viable fetus. Thus, a head decompression measure such as the 
     one described in the partial-birth abortion bill was used. In 
     addition, the baby turned out to be hydrocephalic. If the 
     proposed legislation was in effect, not allowing this 
     procedure under any circumstances, the woman would have had 
     to be exposed to a Cesarean Section for a non-viable fetus. 
     The invasive operative objective abdominal delivery would 
     have increased significantly for risk of spreading infection, 
     affecting her future fertility and perhaps compromising her 
     life. The democratic system of this Country expressed through 
     our federal government in its three branches, has permitted 
     the realization of a society that, if certainly not perfect, 
     is clearly admired by most nations in the World. However, it 
     is clearly inappropriate and dangerous for the federal 
     government to try to regulate the practice of medicine. 
     Professionals must be permitted to use their judgment on what 
     is best in the care of the individual patients rather than 
     fitting everyone in a procrustean bed made in Washington! 
     Imposing criminal and civil penalties on doctors performing a 
     medical procedure would have clearly a chilling effect on the 
     performance of any procedure, even when ``the physician 
     reasonably believed that the procedure was necessary to save 
     the life of the mother and no other procedure would 
     suffice.'' The law would clearly expose the physician's 
     judgment to second guessing by others whose opinions may be 
     colored by ethical standards not universally shared. This 
     legislative approach has no place in a pluralistic society 
     such as ours and it may result in health damage to many women 
     among our citizens.
       Again, I apologize for the lateness in my response and hope 
     that this letter is useful for you and the committee in which 
     you serve.
           Sincerely yours,
     Antonio Scommegna, MD.
                                                                    ____

         Cook County Hospital, Department of Obstetrics and 
           Gynecology
                                   Chicago, IL, November 21, 1995.
     Hon. Senator Paul Simon,
     Dirksen Building,
     Washington, DC.
       Dear Senator Simon:  Thank you very much for asking me to 
     comment on H.R. 1833, the bill which address vaginal delivery 
     of late abortions. I am sorry that I was out of the office 
     last week and could not answer your letter in an appropriate 
     time and hope that this will not deter you from asking my 
     thoughts on future issues.
       To answer your specific questions:
       1. Yes, as you can see I am familiar with the procedure. 
     The issue of the vaginal extraction of late second trimester 
     abortions is an important one, and an issue that cannot, 
     because of its social, religious, and philosophical 
     implications be considered solely on the basis of its medical 
     justification. If we were to only judge the procedure on its 
     medical merits and compared it to other methods of late 
     second trimester abortion, it would be judged the safest 
     method for the mother when carried out by an experienced 
     operator. It is not however, an esthetically ``clean'' 
     procedure, and not one that a caring physician would do 
     except in the most demanding medically indicated situation. I 
     do not agree with those who supported this bill that the 
     procedure should not be allowed under any circumstance.
       2. How do I feel about the federal government having a say 
     in what medical procedure can and cannot be preformed? I feel 
     that they should not dictate medical care and should not 
     intervene between a person seeking medical care and the 
     practitioner prescribing that care. Intervention of this 
     type, in which a particular procedure is chosen to solve a 
     medical problem, can only escalate to other procedures and 
     situations that others find morally or religiously 
     objectionable. There are many in this country who find male 
     circumcision reprehensible, should we ban those also?
       3. My thoughts on imposing criminal and additional civil 
     penalties on doctors performing a medical procedure? Doctors 
     performing procedures that are medically indicated, carried 
     out without complication, and to the satisfaction of the 
     patient and or their families, should not be subjected to 
     criminal or civil penalties. The tort system, although 
     decidedly not perfect, imposes strict penalties on physicians 
     performing legal procedures in less than a satisfactory 
     manner.
       Senator Simon, you can see that I do feel strongly about 
     government intervention between patient and physician. It 
     simply should not occur. Thank you again for asking for my 
     opinions and thoughts regarding H.R. 1833.
           Sincerely yours,
                                         Donald M. Sherline, M.D.,
                                                         Chairman.

  Mr. SIMON. Let me read just a few paragraphs from some of the 
letters. Dr. Arthur Herbst, who is the chairman of the department at 
the University of Chicago:

       I am strongly opposed and extremely concerned about the 
     Federal Government deciding the acceptability of medical 
     procedures in practice. These should be decided based on 
     medical information and not by a legislative process. It 
     appears ironic to me that the current emphasis in Washington 
     is to reduce the Federal Government's involvement in our 
     lives. The proposed legislation goes alarmingly in the 
     opposite direction.

  The chair of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at 
Washington University in St. Louis, just across the border from 
Illinois, Dr. James R. Schreiber:

       In answer to your second question, I have great worries 
     about the federal government having a say on what medical 
     procedures can and cannot be performed. This procedure is an 
     excellent example of why I think the federal government would 
     have problems directing the care of individual patients. 
     There are so many possibilities concerning threats to the 
     woman's life . . .
       My greatest problem with this legislation is that we could 
     so frighten physicians that the best procedure for the 
     pregnant woman would be precluded by the legislation.

  The vice president for medical affairs of the Rockford Health System, 
which is affiliated with the University of Illinois Medical School, 
writes:

       You did raise the question about how I feel about the 
     federal government having a say in what medical procedures 
     can and cannot be performed. I, as my colleagues do, feel 
     quite strongly that the role of the government should not 
     stray into the medical arena regarding what is appropriate or 
     nonappropriate therapy. As you know, all of the ramifications 
     from legislating at this level simply cannot be understood or 
     realized prior to the event and the results may be completely 
     different from those intended.
       . . . I feel that Congress imposing criminal and civil 
     penalties upon physicians performing medical procedures 
     borders on the ridiculous. If Congress begins to legislate at 
     this level, where can it possibly end?

  Dr. David Cromer, of Evanston Hospital, which is affiliated with 
Northwestern University's Medical School, writes:

       The basic question is, does the federal government have a 
     place in deciding what medical procedures should or should 
     not be performed. I feel strongly not. This is a medical 
     decision.
       Similarly, Congress has no business imposing penalties on 
     physicians for performing a certain procedure.

  The head of the department of obstetrics and gynecology at Michael 
Reese Hospital, which is affiliated with the University of Illinois 
College of Medicine, writes:

       You have asked if I ``share the sense of those who support 
     the bill that this procedure should not be allowed under any 
     circumstance?'' I read the bill and found the definition of a 
     ``Partial Birth Abortion'' contained within it extremely 
     vague. Since this is not a medical term with which I am 
     familiar and the description in the legislation lacks 
     exactness, I cannot give you an answer.
       . . . I feel very strongly that the federal government 
     should not have a say in the 

[[Page S 17893]]
     type of medical procedures performed by a physician.
       . . . I feel equally as strong about Congress imposing 
     criminal and additional civil penalties upon doctors because 
     of a certain procedure that he or she performs.

  Dr. Antonio Scommegna heads the department of obstetrics and 
gynecology at the University of Illinois at Chicago:

       As to the issues raised in your letter regarding Partial 
     Birth Abortion, yes I am familiar with the procedure. Such 
     procedures are used very rarely and its proposed prohibition 
     is a thinly disguised assault on the women's reproductive 
     freedom and the physician's freedom in his or her 
     profession. Such a proposed legislation would be injurious 
     to women's health.

  And a very similar letter from Dr. Donald M. Sherline, who heads that 
department at Cook County Hospital, which is a huge hospital in 
Chicago.
  I think, Mr. President, that what we have here is something that is 
well-intended. I do not question the motivation of my colleague from 
New Hampshire. I would ask every Member of this body to read the 
testimony of these two women who testified before the Judiciary 
Committee. Anyone who reads that testimony and believes we should deny 
these women their right to safe health and put the physicians who give 
them their health and save their lives, put them in prison for 2 years, 
I think you have a hard heart indeed. At least I do not have the 
courage to say to those families, ``We're not going to let you protect 
yourselves.''
  I think this is an example of the Federal Government running amok. If 
this passes--and I know politically maybe it is going to pass 
tomorrow--I trust that the President of the United States has the 
courage to veto this legislation and that we will protect the families 
of America from this political interference.
  Mr. HATCH. Mr. President, I rise to address one aspect of the debate 
over the partial-birth abortion bill: the argument that the bill is 
unconstitutional.
  Opponents of this bill raise arguments challenging its 
constitutionality that, I believe, reflect a fundamental 
misunderstanding of constitutional principles and of the Supreme 
Court's abortion jurisprudence. This is not only my view, but the view 
of numerous respected constitutional scholars at our Nation's finest 
law schools, such as, just to name a few, Michael McConnell, the Graham 
professor of law at the University of Chicago, and Douglas Kmiec of the 
Notre Dame Law School, and of other authorities on constitutional law, 
such as William Barr, former Attorney General of the United States. I 
believe that H.R. 1833 is constitutional.
  Because of the timing in the birth process in which these abortions 
occur, these fetuses may actually qualify as persons under the 
Constitution. As such, they are entitled to all of the protections of 
the law that all other American citizens receive under the Bill of 
Rights, particularly the 5th and the 14th amendments to the 
Constitution.
  This bill only applies to fetuses which are partially delivered. As 
such these partially born fetuses do not fall under the framework of 
Roe versus Wade and Planned Parenthood versus Casey, which apply only 
to the unborn.
  Although State laws on homicide and infanticide generally protect 
only fully born children, at least 36 States allow recovery under 
wrongful death statutes for postviability prenatal injuries that cause 
stillbirth, and another one-third of the States consider killing an 
unborn child, other than through an abortion, as some form of homicide.
  Given these statutes, some States logically have promulgated laws 
that protect children in the process of being born, such as Texas and 
California. In light of this existing law, as Professor Kmiec, a former 
Assistant Attorney General for the Office of Legal Counsel, testified 
before the Judiciary Committee, it is entirely appropriate for Congress 
to pass a statute protecting such partially born children to clarify 
their status under the Constitution.
  Opponents of this bill would have us believe that 3 inches and 3 
seconds can make all the difference. In other words, they would have us 
believe that a living infant, capable of life outside the mother's 
womb, and actually in the process of birth, is not a person, entitled 
to the full panoply of constitutional protections and rights, because 
it is 3 inches and 3 seconds from birth. Would the Constitution fail to 
protect a fetus 2 inches and 2 seconds from life? One second and one 
inch?
  Even if one believes that these children qualify as unborn, the 
Supreme Court's jurisprudence on abortion, principally articulated in 
Planned Parenthood versus Casey, fully permits Congress to pass this 
ban on partial-birth abortion. In Casey, the Court, speaking through a 
three-Justice plurality, Justices O'Connor, Kennedy, and Souter, tossed 
out Roe versus Wade's trimester framework and articulated three 
principles to guide courts in abortion cases. First, the woman has a 
right to terminate her pregnancy before fetal viability.--Casey, 112 
S.Ct. at 2804.
  Second, the interest of the State in promoting prenatal life permits 
the State to regulate, and even prohibit, abortions after fetal 
viability, subject to exceptions for the life or health of the mother.
  Third, the State has legitimate interests throughout pregnancy in 
protecting the health of the mother and the life of the fetus.
  Under this framework, this bill is constitutional because it only 
prohibits the abortion of living, viable fetuses, and only by one 
abortion procedure.
  The medical testimony we heard in the Judiciary Committee indicated 
that about two-thirds of the fetuses aborted in this manner are alive, 
and that this procedure is generally used largely, if not exclusively, 
during the period of viability.
  Further, H.R. 1833 is limited only to abortions in which a living 
fetus is partially delivered and then killed. The Casey right to a an 
abortion before viability is not implicated in this bill, because the 
bill exempts the abortion of nonviable fetuses and applies only to 
abortions after viability.
  Opponents of the bill reduce our great Constitution to trivialities 
if they argue that the Constitution guarantees a right to a specific 
abortion procedure.
  Nor does this bill somehow impose an undue burden upon the right to 
abortion, the test adopted by the three-Justice plurality which, I 
might add, is not the law of the Supreme Court until it receives a 
majority.
  As Prof. Michael McConnell has written in a November 29, 1995, letter 
to the Judiciary Committee:

       Since this bill would ban only one method of abortion--one 
     that, according to testimony by medical experts, is quite 
     rare--it seems evident that it meets this standard. It can 
     hardly be an ``undue burden'' to require abortionists to 
     conform to standard and accepted medical practice.

  Although the undue burden standard is rather unclear, it is still 
difficult, if not illogical, to conclude that prohibiting one method of 
abortion, infrequently used, will interpose a ``substantial obstacle in 
the path of a woman seeking an abortion.''--112 S.Ct. at 2820.
  Women seeking abortions previability still may resort to D&C and D&E 
procedures, which account for most abortions in this country. And, of 
course, women will have available the other methods of postviability 
abortion, which our hearings have shown are safer and more widely used.
  The Justice Department and the bill's opponents have espoused two 
main criticisms of the bill.
  First, they claim that the bill must have an explicit exception for 
abortions performed to preserve the health of the mother, which it 
currently does not have.
  Second, they claim that the bill's provision for an exception for the 
life of the mother is unconstitutional because it is structured only as 
an affirmative defense.
  Both arguments are, in the words of former Attorney General William 
Barr, meritless.
  I will respond to them in turn, but let me note that legal experts of 
the highest reputation and credentials find these objections to be 
unconvincing and unsuccessful.
  Let me take up the fist argument. In Casey, the Court rejected the 
trimester framework in favor of a bifurcated approach based on fetal 
viability, while reaffirming the core holding of Roe.
  According to the Supreme Court, after the fetus becomes viable, the 
Government can prohibit abortion except in cases where the life or 
health of the mother is threatened.

[[Page S 17894]]

  This bill does not threaten a woman's right to have an abortion, nor 
does it threaten a woman's life or safety, because it leaves open 
alternative methods of abortion both before and after viability--
methods which the top experts in the field have testified are safer 
than Dr. Haskell's method.
  By banning this rogue method, we actually enhance the woman's safety, 
not injure it.
  I think it is worth quoting the experts on this point, due to the 
great weight that opponents of this bill have placed on this weak 
argument.
  As Professor Kmiec testified before the Judiciary Committee:

       The bill by its focussed, targeted structure implicitly 
     provides for the health of the mother by not banning all 
     abortion procedures at this later stage of the pregnancy, but 
     only the one seen as patently and inhumanely offensive.

  As Professor McConnell of Chicago concludes:

       In light of authoritative medical testimony that partial 
     birth abortions are not necessary for preservation of the 
     mother's health, the bill could not be invalidated on that 
     ground.

  According to Former Attorney General Barr:

       Congress could reasonably conclude from the record that the 
     partial-birth abortion procedure is not safer for a mother's 
     health than other available--and well-established--
     alternatives. It would therefore be pointless to include a 
     health exception in H.R. 1833 because this exception could 
     not be legitimately invoked.

  It seems clear that a written exception for the health of the mother 
need be included only if Congress attempted to ban all postviability 
abortions, not just this single, rare, offensive method of killing 
partially born children.
  The Supreme Court has recognized many legitimate interests that may 
justify abortion statutes such as the one before the Senate:
  First, safeguarding health, maintaining medical standards, and in 
protecting potential life;
  Second, protecting immature minors, promoting general health, 
promoting family integrity, and encouraging childbirth over abortion;
  Third, protecting human life, protecting the dignity of human life, 
preventing both moral and legal confusion over the role of physicians 
in our society, and
  Fourth, preventing cruel and inhumane treatment.
  Clearly, this bill furthers these interests--recognized as 
constitutional by the Supreme Court.
  The Clinton administration argues that this bill would force an 
increased medical risk on women, and hence would violate the 
Constitution.
  The administration relies upon two cases, Thornburg versus American 
College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists, and Planned Parenthood 
versus Danforth, for the proposition that any State regulation of 
abortion that might increase the medical risk to the woman is 
unconstitutional.
  First, the factual basis for this argument is absent because there is 
no evidence that partial-birth abortions are ever necessary to preserve 
the life or health of the mother.
  In fact, the evidence presented before the Senate Judiciary Committee 
and before the House Judiciary Committee demonstrated that this 
procedure is often more dangerous to the life or health of the mother 
than the other procedures used for late-term abortions.
  Second, it is unclear whether Thornburgh and Danforth are any longer 
good law. Casey overruled much of the holdings of these cases, and 
scholarly commentary--not to mention pro-abortion activists--initially 
attacked Casey for overruling several such abortion cases.
  Indeed, the very trimester framework employed by Thornburgh and 
Danforth was clearly overruled by Casey.
  Third, the statutes in Thornburgh and Danforth were clearly and 
utterly different from the bill before us. The State law in Thornburgh 
required that a second physician be present during a postviability 
abortion and that a physician performing a postviability abortion had 
to attempt to preserve the life and health of the unborn child.
  This bill does not place such an obligation upon the physician. 
Indeed, the physician is free to use any other abortion procedure he or 
she sees fit to protect the life and health of the mother, aside from 
the partial-birth method.
  Indeed, should the life of the mother be threatened, this bill even 
permits the physician to employ partial-birth procedures.
  In Danforth, the state law outlawed the safest and most common 
abortion procedure for first trimester abortions. The Court struck down 
that statute because it constituted a barely veiled attempt to outlaw 
first-trimester abortions entirely.
  Here, there is nothing of the sort. In fact, the bill permits the 
continued use of the more popular, and safe, methods of late-term 
abortions.
  Turning to the second main criticism, the administration and other 
opponents claim that the bill is unconstitutional because it permits a 
doctor to justify a partial-birth abortion only as an affirmative 
defense to a prosecution.

  The fact that the bill provides the exception required by the caselaw 
in an affirmative defense does not unduly burden the right to an 
abortion.
  As I noted when I spoke about this bill last month, many of our 
constitutional rights arise only as an affirmative defense. Many of the 
protections of the Bill of Rights sometimes can only be raised as a 
defense to a prosecution.
  To claim that the right to an abortion is not protected by an 
affirmative defense demeans the explicit protections of the Bill of 
Rights; and it raises abortion above any other right in the 
Constitution.
  Again, top legal experts I have consulted agree that there is nothing 
unusual in having one's personal rights evaluated by means of an 
affirmative defense.
  As Professor Kmiec testified before the Judiciary Committee, the 
Supreme Court has approved the common practice of States to place upon 
criminal defendants the burden of proving affirmative defenses, such as 
insanity or killing in self-defense.
  In fact, as both Professor Kmiec and former Attorney General Barr 
note, it makes sense for this burden to fall upon the doctor, for it is 
the doctor who is uniquely well-positioned to establish that he or she 
reasonably believed both that the abortion was necessary to save the 
mother's life and that no other procedure would suffice.
  Let me address two other minor arguments that have arisen.
  First, there are those who argue that Congress lacks power under the 
interstate commerce clause to regulate the practice of abortion.
  It is incredible to me that those who were in favor of the Freedom of 
Choice Act and the Access to Clinics Act would raise such an argument. 
Nonetheless, I will give it the swift dismissal that it deserves.
  Whatever one might think about the expansion of Federal power under 
the commerce clause, whether H.R. 1833 falls within this power ``poses 
an easy case under current interpretation,'' as Professor McConnell 
puts it.
  We can all agree that the provision of medical services are 
commercial activities and that abortions are medical services. Even 
after the decision last Term in Lopez, the Court has been fairly clear 
that Congress may regulate all commercial activities, because they 
frequently involve an interstate market.
  If Congress can regulate health care, which it does today in myriad 
different ways, it can regulate abortions. And, if this bill is 
unconstitutional, then a whole host of other laws, starting with the 
Access to Clinics Act, are unconstitutional as well.
  Second, some argue that this bill will unfairly punish nonphysicians, 
even though only those performing the partial-birth abortion are 
subject to its criminal penalties. They claim that Federal aiding-and-
abetting laws or misprison laws will hold liable nurses, 
anesthesiologists, or even rape counselors.
  This argument does not even qualify as makeweight. For example, to be 
guilty of a misprison of felony, one must not just fail to report a 
crime; one must actually engage in an affirmative, overt act of 
concealment of a felony.
  As Professor Kmiec concludes, ``Logic, prosecutorial discretion under 
the policies of the Department of Justice, and the strict scienter 
element necessary to prove beyond a reasonable doubt the underlying 
offense, all suggest that any possible criminal liability . . . under 
freestanding conspiracy, 

[[Page S 17895]]
misprison, or aiding and abetting statutes is highly speculative, if 
not farfetched.'' One cannot help but agree with him.
  The weight of both evidence and logic lead us to the conclusion that 
constitutional objections to this legislation are mere red herrings 
designed to throw the debate off of the real issue--whether or not this 
horrible procedure is justified.
  Mr. DeWINE addressed the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Ohio.
  Mr. DeWINE. Mr. President, I rise today in strong support of H.R. 
1833, the partial-birth abortion ban bill. Mr. President, as you and 
the Members of the Senate know, on November 8, after 2 days of very 
spirited debate, this Senate voted to commit this bill to the Judiciary 
Committee for hearings. There were a number of concerns that had been 
raised on the Senate floor. A number of these concerns, quite frankly, 
were addressed during the Judiciary Committee hearing that I attended. 
So I would like for a moment to take the Members of the Senate back to 
the debate that we had on the Senate floor in regard to several of the 
points that were made by the opponents of this bill and see how the 
points that were made on that date, November 8, were, in fact, answered 
by the testimony that our Judiciary Committee, under Chairman Hatch, 
heard, the testimony that we heard at that committee, how it relates to 
the arguments made by the opponents.
  Let me start, Mr. President, with Brenda Shafer. Brenda Shafer, as my 
colleagues will recall, is the nurse from the Dayton area who has 
described in great detail exactly what this procedure consists of. My 
colleague, Senator Smith, has in great detail described that as well.
  While we were debating this issue on the Senate floor the last time 
it was up, on November 8, Brenda Shafer's credibility was attacked, was 
attacked by the opponents of this bill. Let me say, Mr. President, 
after having watched Brenda Shafer testify, I do not believe anyone 
could have watched her testimony, could have listened to her testimony, 
could have observed her demeanor, and not come away with the conclusion 
that she was not only telling the truth, but that what she saw was 
etched and will be etched in her memory for the rest of her life.
  Like some other Members of this body, Mr. President, I have been 
involved as an attorney in lawsuits. I was a county prosecutor for 4 
years, assistant for 2\1/2\ years prior to that. I have seen hundreds, 
probably thousands, of witnesses on the stand. I cannot recall a more 
compelling witness than Brenda Shafer. If anyone doubts that, I would 
invite them to go back--do not just read the transcript that is 
available, but go back and get a video tape from C-SPAN of her 
testimony.
  Let me take a couple points where nurse Shafer was attacked on this 
floor and talk about how those particular attacks were rebutted by her 
testimony. Nurse Shafer said that the partial-birth abortion procedure 
was performed past the 24th week of pregnancy. She was attacked on the 
Senate floor for saying that.
  One Senator quoted from a letter from a supervising nurse at the 
clinic where Brenda Shafer worked to the effect that ``Dr. Haskell does 
not perform abortions past 24 weeks of pregnancy.'' This is a document 
entitled ``Second Trimester Abortion: From Every Angle, Fall Risk 
Management Seminar, September 13-14, 1992, Dallas, Texas.''
  On page 27 of this transcript, there was a paper delivered by Dr. 
Martin Haskell, ``Dilation and Extraction for Late Second Trimester 
Abortion, presented at the National Abortion Federation Risk Management 
Seminar, September 13, 1992.''
  On page 28 of this document--this is Dr. Haskell's own words--this is 
what he said, the author--now remember this is the same person that 
Brenda Shafer observed performing the abortion. ``The author,'' Dr. 
Haskell, referring to himself, ``performs the procedure on selected 
patients 25 through 26 weeks LMP.''
  So Dr. Haskell, in his own writing, confirms what nurse Shafer said.
  Let me turn to another point. The nurse was attacked also for her 
comments about ultrasound. On this floor from the same letter, a 
Senator quoted, ``Dr. Haskell does not use ultrasound.'' Again, in Dr. 
Haskell's own report, this is what he says: ``The surgical assistant 
places an ultrasound probe on the patient's abdomen * * *.'' Again, Dr. 
Haskell's own comments.
  In conclusion, I would simply say that again I would invite my 
colleagues to listen to her testimony. Her testimony is compelling. It 
is shocking. It is sickening. And it also is backed up by the doctor 
who performed that abortion, that is, Dr. Haskell, in his own words.
  Let me turn to another issue that was raised on this floor in the 
last debate. Anesthesia. After the bill was introduced, bill opponents 
argued, without medical evidence, that the anesthesia that was 
administered to the mother killed the baby, so the baby felt no pain. 
That was the statement that was made. One U.S. Senator said the 
following. Let me read directly from the Congressional Record. ``The 
fetus dies during the first dose of anesthesia.'' That is from the 
Congressional Record. That was said on this floor.
  Further, Dr. Mary Campbell of Planned Parenthood in a fact sheet said 
the following, in answer to a question, ``When does the fetus die?'' 
``The fetus dies of an overdose of anesthesia given to the mother 
intravenously.''
  Further, Kate Michelman of NARAL, at a NARAL news conference, 
November 7, 1995, here is what she said. ``There has been expert 
testimony by physicians who do this procedure stating that the 
anesthesia that is given to the pregnant women prior to the procedure 
causes fetal demise, the death of the fetus, prior to the procedure.''
  Now, Mr. President, in spite of these three comments, in spite of the 
three assertions that were made on this floor, the facts are directly 
contrary to this.
  This was brought out very clearly--very clearly--in the Judiciary 
Committee hearing. Again, I invite my colleagues to examine the record.
  The confusion raised by these statements was so great in fact, Mr. 
President, that the American society came forward to set the record 
straight, a society of people who do this every day, who administer 
anesthesia.
  Mr. Norwig Ellison, president of ASA, came forward and testified at 
the Judiciary Committee hearing. This is his written statement that was 
presented that day, and then he gave an oral statement where he stated 
it again. This is what he had to say:

       The widespread publicity given to this view may cause 
     pregnant women to delay necessary and perhaps lifesaving 
     medical procedures.

  He further said:

       Pregnant women are routinely heavily sedated during the 
     second and third trimester for the performance of a variety 
     of necessary medical procedures with absolutely no adverse 
     effect on the fetus, let alone death or brain death.

  Also at the hearing, when confronted with this fact, Dr. Campbell, 
who I quoted earlier, changed her position. At the hearing, Senator 
Spence Abraham from Michigan asked her about the position, referring to 
the fact sheet that the fetus dies of an overdose of anesthesia. 
Senator Abraham said, ``This is no longer your position?''
  Dr. Campbell replied: ``I believe that is true.''
  In other words, she no longer holds the position that the fetus dies 
from anesthesia.
  Further, Dr. Haskell, who performed this procedure on numerous 
occasions, himself had no doubts on this issue. The American Medical 
News asked Dr. Haskell the following question: ``Let's talk first about 
whether or not the fetus is dead beforehand.''
  Dr. Haskell responded: ``No, no it's not. No, it's really not. A 
percentage are for various number of reasons and probably the other 
two-thirds are not.''
  Again, one of the allegations that was made on this floor that the 
hearings clearly showed was wrong.
  Some of the opponents of the bill would have the Members of this 
Senate and the American people believe that this debate is about 
whether we ban all abortions. It is sad that this bill is really not 
about partial-birth abortions, that what it really is is a covert 
assault on the decision in Roe versus Wade. This is totally false. Look 
at some of the people lining up behind this legislation: Congressman 
Dave Bonior, Susan Molinari, Patrick Kennedy, Dick Gephardt. These 
individuals are pro-choice. No one has questioned their pro-choice 
credentials. 

[[Page S 17896]]
 They voted for this bill because they believe this is, in fact, a 
legitimate public policy issue.
  Mr. President, this is a legitimate public policy issue. This 
procedure is especially cruel, it is unusual, it is inhumane, and it 
should be abolished.
  It is perfectly possible and intellectually consistent and coherent 
to endorse this legislation and simultaneously support the Supreme 
Court decision in Roe versus Wade. This bill is not a ban on abortions. 
It is not even a restriction on when an abortion may be performed. 
Restrictions of that kind were actually envisioned by Roe versus Wade, 
based as it was on the differences of three trimesters of a pregnancy, 
but this bill does not do that.

  Even so, even though Roe v. Wade allowed for that kind of 
restriction, this bill does not restrict the timeframe for a woman 
contemplating an abortion. All this bill does is abolish one particular 
procedure.
  By now, we have all heard this procedure described in considerable 
detail. I hope that we can agree that this procedure is especially 
cruel, unusual, and inhumane. This debate is about a very, very, very 
limited number of abortions. It is a narrow, and should be narrowly 
structured, debate. To my friends on the other side who argue that we 
simply have to continue to allow this particular procedure to exist I 
simply say, is there not any limit to what we as a society will 
tolerate, what we as a society will accept? How close to an actual 
birth do we have to get in seconds, in inches, before we say, no?
  Mr. President, the two witnesses who testified in front of our 
committee--my colleague from Illinois and my colleague from California 
have referenced them--gave some very heart-wrenching testimony. No one 
could have sat through that hearing without being moved, touched--
really those terms are not adequate for how anyone would feel, 
certainly as I felt as I listened to the testimony.
  I think, though, that what we need to remember is that neither of 
these two tragic situations would have been affected by the bill we are 
debating. H.R. 1833 covers only living fetuses, not fetuses that have 
died in the womb. In both the cases, in both the tragedies that were 
related by the witnesses, their babies had died prior to birth. Their 
babies had died in the womb. So this bill simply would not cover them.
  We will continue to hear, I am sure, on this floor the argument made 
that we should look at these two heart-wrenching situations. I simply 
remind my colleagues, whether in the Chamber or back in their office 
listening to this debate, that we all agree these are just heart-
wrenching situations. But we also should understand, and I ask my 
colleagues to keep in mind, that these two situations are simply not 
covered by this bill, and so it is really a bogus argument.
  Mr. President, I yield the floor.
  Mrs. BOXER addressed the Chair.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. DeWine). The Senator from California.
  Mrs. BOXER. Thank you, Mr. President. The Senator from Ohio raises a 
very important question--and I am paraphrasing it and if I do not do it 
right, he will let me know--when he asked this rhetorical question: How 
close do you get to a birth before you just say no to abortion?
  I think, clearly, that is a crucial question to be raised. That was 
the question raised in Roe versus Wade when, in 1973, the Supreme Court 
looked at the entire issue and tried to answer that question. What they 
basically said was that in the first 3 months of a woman's pregnancy, 
she is going to have the right to choose and she is going to make that 
decision with her God. Government is going to stay out of that 
decision. That is between her and her God. And as the pregnancy 
develops, the State has an interest. Clearly, States may regulate later 
in the pregnancy, and they do. But always under Roe versus Wade, the 
life and health of the mother is paramount.
  When my friend from Ohio says the most compelling testimony was from 
a nurse, it shows his point of view here because I have heard back from 
members of that Judiciary Committee, even on the other side of the 
issue, who said they were riveted to Coreen Costello and to Viki 
Wilson. They were riveted to hear a story from a pro-life Republican 
about how she faced this and had to choose this procedure for her life 
and her health and because of her deep and abiding love, not only 
because she wanted to live on this planet but for her beautiful 
children.
  So I guess, to me, what is more compelling than someone who served in 
the clinic for 3 days and comes away and talks about it--I ask 
unanimous consent to have printed in the Record at this time a letter 
from Nurse Shafer's supervisor, Christie Gallivan, an R.N.
  There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the 
Record, as follows:

                                       The Women's Med+Center,

                                    Cincinnati, OH, July 17, 1995.
       Dear Congresswoman Schroeder: I am a registered nurse and 
     have worked since July, 1993, in the Dayton office of Dr. 
     Martin Haskell. In this capacity, I was the nurse that 
     supervised the training of Brenda Pratt during her brief 
     temporary employment at the Women's Medical Center of Dayton. 
     As you know, we initially conducted a search of our 
     employment records under the name ``Brenda Shafer,'' as this 
     was the name she signed to the letter which was given to us. 
     When provided with the correct last name, we did in fact find 
     the record of her three-day employment at our Dayton 
     facility.
       The information provided by Ms. Pratt as to our practices 
     at the Women's Medical Center of Dayton is largely 
     inaccurate. First, she describes Dr. Haskell performing one 
     25-week and one 26-week abortion procedure. Dr. Haskell does 
     not perform abortions past 24 weeks of pregnancy. This is a 
     self-imposed limit to which he has scrupulously adhered 
     throughout the time I have worked for him.
       Second, Dr. Haskell does not use ultrasound in the 
     performance of second-trimester procedures. We use ultrasound 
     only to determine the pregnancy's gestation. Therefore, her 
     entire description of her experience when viewing a second-
     trimester abortion, which includes Dr. Haskell's using the 
     ultrasound while doing the procedure, is clearly 
     questionable.
       Finally, at no point during a dilatation and extraction or 
     intact D&E is there any fetal movement or response that would 
     indicate awareness, pain or struggle. Ms. Pratt absolutely 
     could not have witnessed fetal movement as she describes. We 
     do not train temporary nurses in second trimester dilatation 
     and extraction, since it is a highly technical procedure and 
     would not be performed by someone in a temporary capacity. 
     If, indeed, Ms. Pratt entered the operating room at any point 
     during a D&X procedure, she clearly either is misrepresenting 
     what she saw or remembers it incorrectly.
       If you have any further questions, please feel free to 
     contact our office.
           Sincerely,
                                            Christie Gallivan, RN.

  Mrs. BOXER. In this letter, Nurse Gallivan says:

       We do not train temporary nurses in second trimester 
     dilatation and extraction, since it is a highly technical 
     procedure and would not be performed by someone in a 
     temporary capacity. If, indeed, Ms. Pratt entered the 
     operating room at any point . . . she clearly either is 
     misrepresenting what she saw or remembers it incorrectly.

  Since we are talking about compelling testimony from a nurse, I think 
it is very compelling that the American Nurses Association has written 
as follows:

       I am writing to express the opposition of the American 
     Nurses Association to H.R. 1833 . . . which is scheduled to 
     be considered by the Senate this week. The legislation would 
     impose Federal criminal penalties and provide for civil 
     actions against health care providers who perform certain 
     late-term abortions.
       In the view of the American Nurses Association this 
     proposal would involve an inappropriate intrusion of the 
     Federal Government into a therapeutic decision that should be 
     left in the hands of a pregnant woman and her health care 
     provider.

  They go on to say:

       This legislation would impose a significant barrier to 
     these principles.
       . . . The American Nurses Association is the only full-time 
     professional organization representing the nation's 2.2 
     million Registered Nurses through its 53 constituent 
     associations.

  They respectfully urge us to vote against this bill. I ask unanimous 
consent that this letter be printed in the Record.
  There being no objection, the letter was ordered to be printed in the 
Record, as follows:

                                  American Nurses Association,

                                 Washington, DC, November 8, 1995.
     Hon. Barbara Boxer,
     U.S. Senate, Washington, DC.
       Dear Senator Boxer: I am writing to express the opposition 
     of the American Nurses Association to H.R. 1833, the 
     ``Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act of 1995'', which is 
     scheduled to be considered by the Senate this week. This 
     legislation would impose Federal criminal penalties and 
     provide for civil actions against health care providers who 
     perform certain late-term abortions.
       It is the view of the American Nurses Association that this 
     proposal would involve an 

[[Page S 17897]]
     inappropriate intrusion of the federal government into a therapeutic 
     decision that should be left in the hands of a pregnant woman 
     and her health care provider. ANA has long supported freedom 
     of choice and equitable access of all women to basic health 
     services, including services related to reproductive health. 
     This legislation would impose a significant barrier to those 
     principles.
       Furthermore, very few of those late-term abortions are 
     performed each year and they are usually necessary either to 
     protect the life of the mother or because of severe fetal 
     abnormalities. It is inappropriate for Congress to mandate a 
     course of action for a woman who is already faced with an 
     intensely personal and difficult decision. This procedure can 
     mean the difference between life and death for a woman.
       The American Nurses Association is the only full-service 
     professional organization representing the nation's 2.2 
     million Registered Nurses through its 53 constituent 
     associations. ANA advances the nursing profession by 
     fostering high standards of nursing practice, promoting the 
     economic and general welfare of nurses in the workplace, 
     projecting a positive and realistic view of nursing, and by 
     lobbying the Congress and regulatory agencies on health care 
     issues affecting nurses and the public.
       The American Nurses Association respectfully urges you to 
     vote against H.R. 1833 when it is brought before the Senate.
                                            Geri Marullo, MSN, RN,
                                               Executive Director.

  Mrs. BOXER. When we look at people who nurture, who bring their love 
into medicine, who bring their compassion into medicine, who have been 
known to place themselves at risk in the work that they do to save 
lives, I think it is very important to note that the American Nurses 
Association strongly opposes this bill.
  We know that Viki Wilson, whose testimony was read so eloquently by 
Senator Simon, is a pediatric nurse, and she found herself in this 
circumstance. So if we want to talk about compelling testimony, I guess 
there was a lot of compelling testimony.
  The reason I am keeping this family portrait up here is because I 
want to keep this family's face right up here. Because with all the 
talk about medicine and all the charts of drawings of medical 
procedures, as if we were a medical school here, this has been 
forgotten. I will not allow these families to be forgotten in this 
debate. This mother, this wife, this husband and father, and these 
children, who could have lost this extraordinary woman, who happens to 
be a pro-life Republican, and who, by the way, wrote in her Op-Ed to 
the New York Times--that is why I was grateful that we had the hearing, 
because more attention was paid to this. She said, ``Those who want 
Congress to ban the controversial late-term abortion technique might 
think I would be an ally. I was raised in a conservative, religious 
family. My parents are Rush Limbaugh fans. I am a Republican that 
always believed that abortion was wrong. Then I had one.'' Then she 
goes into the pain of this late-term abortion, which was her only 
option. So, yes, I am leaving her face up here through this debate.
  For those people who do not support a woman's right to choose, who 
say that this bill is consistent with Roe versus Wade, I remind you 
that Roe is very clear. Always the life and health of the woman is 
paramount--always, even when a State can in fact regulate abortion, 
which Roe says they can do under certain circumstances. There is a 
State interest. The woman's life and her health must always be 
protected, always be protected. Yes, we had physicians who said this 
procedure is not necessary to do, but we had others who said, clearly, 
that it is quite necessary.
  As a matter of fact, Coreen Costello, age 31, pregnant now with her 
third child, her doctor said a cesarean section or induction of labor 
could well have cost her life.
  Well, Mr. President, we are going to have a long time more to debate 
this. I am not going to go on too long this evening. My friend has been 
patient and has a lot more to say.
  There is no such thing as a partial-birth abortion. There is no such 
terminology. There is no such thing. There is such a thing as a late-
term abortion, and it is always tragic and always undertaken because it 
is an emergency procedure. The life of mothers like Coreen may well be 
at stake, or serious adverse health consequences may arise from severe 
fetal abnormalities, such as organs growing outside the body. These 
late-term abortions are not births or partial births. They are the most 
tragic emergency medical procedures.
  So I ask again, why is the Senate taking this up--a ban on a 
particular procedure used in these tragic operations? Is it because 
nobody is regulating these abortions? No. I explained that in Roe 
versus Wade clearly the State has the right to, and States do, regulate 
late-term abortions. Is it because there is a surge in late-term 
abortions? No. That is not the case.
  My colleagues will say that they are doing this because this is a 
terrible procedure. They throw away the arguments by physicians who say 
it is a necessary life-saving procedure and only quote those doctors 
who say it is not. I thought you people were conservative. You should 
take the conservative position. If even a handful of doctors think a 
woman is more likely to die--14 times more likely if she undergoes 
cesarean section--then take the conservative approach and give the 
physician every tool he or she can have, so that it can be a safe 
emergency procedure, so women like Coreen Costello and Viki Wilson, and 
the others we will talk about in debate later, will live.
  Well, I think I know what the real agenda is. I do not think it is a 
surprise. It is not going to shatter anybody's mind when I say this. I 
think there is a group of Senators who want to make abortion illegal in 
this country. They ran on that platform. They are committed to doing 
it. They feel a woman should not have a right to choose.
  If it was up to them, they would criminalize this procedure. They 
would put the woman in jail. They would put the doctor in jail. They do 
not have the votes, folks. They do not have the votes to outlaw 
abortion. They wish they did.
  Now, with this Republican Congress they have more votes than they 
have ever had before, and I hope people in this country understand 
that. But they still do not have the votes to outlaw abortion straight 
out.
  Just like those who came here to destroy environmental protection, 
they do not have the votes to outlaw the Clean Air Act or the Clean 
Water Act. So what do you do? Cut the Environmental Protection Agency 
by a third; cut enforcement by two-thirds. This way you do not have to 
go just right at it and repeal the laws.
  The same thing here, but another issue. They do not have the votes to 
outlaw abortion. The Supreme Court, much to their dismay, upheld Roe. 
They have said abortion is a constitutional right. So these Senators 
are trying to outlaw abortion not directly but indirectly and they will 
take every chance to do it. That is what this is about.
  Already, we have seen an erosion of a woman's right to choose. No 
abortion in military hospitals. Imagine, it is your daughter, she is 
stationed in Saudi Arabia, she cannot go to a military hospital. God 
knows where she will go.
  As Senator Simpson said, and I read every word he said, when abortion 
was illegal in this country, women obtained abortion. A woman risked 
her freedom to try and get an abortion. Doctors did the same.
  I lived through those days. Women died. They died in back alleys. 
They lost their fertility. We are not going back to those days. But 
there are those in the Senate who want to take us back. That is what 
this is about.
  They may say it is nothing, you could be pro-choice and support this. 
That is fine. They can say it. But if you read behind the lines, you 
know that is the plan. That is the plan of the far right in this 
country. Take the victories where you get them. Force the President to 
sign the defense bill. Ipso facto outlaw abortion in military 
hospitals.
  Now, if you are a Federal employee and happen to be a woman, you 
cannot use your own insurance for which you pay a good portion of the 
premium, you cannot use it to get an abortion. OK, that is gone.
  How about this: one of the reasons the Health and Human Services bill 
has not been brought up here is there are those in this Senate who want 
to stop training ob-gyn's to perform abortion. Folks, listen: It does 
not say stop training them in this procedure. It says stop training 
medical students so that no one will know how to do a safe and legal 
abortion in this country.
  I stood here on this floor and I objected to bringing that bill 
forward because I knew that would be offered. 

[[Page S 17898]]
 How does that help a woman in this country, when she has to go back to 
the back alleys, and the men in this Chamber stand up and talk about 
the joy of giving birth?
  I had the joy. Do not lecture me about that. And do not tell my 
children and my grandchildren that you know better for them than their 
God and their daughter and their husbands and their wives. Do not do 
that.
  That is not what this Republican revolution was supposed to be about; 
if anything, it was supposed to be about getting Government out of our 
lives. Now they are putting it in the hospital room, in the medical 
school.
  We said when this came up, we should have a hearing. We want to put a 
woman's face on it. We see these drawings. Time after time, day after 
day--where is the face of the mother? Where is the face of her husband? 
Where is the face of her children?
  No, we did not see that face, but we got that face. We had the time 
to get that face into those hearings. I am so glad colleagues stuck 
with us on that one. It was going to be a close vote.
  Yes, I hope our colleagues will read the testimony--all sides--and 
they will find that the medical community is split. The lawyers are 
split. We already know the Nurses Association is strongly against this 
bill. Yes, we had one nurse who is for it who worked 3 days as a 
temporary employee. That is if we believe the veracity of her 
testimony. Yes, we have some doctors who say the procedure is not 
necessary. But the ob-gyn organization says this bill is bad.
  But no one can dispute Coreen Costello or Viki Wilson or John and Kim 
Leonetti, who I will talk about later in this debate, or the many 
others who had the courage to come forward and tell their story. They 
are religious women. They are God-loving mothers. No one on the other 
side of this would dare stand up and say what they said was not 
accurate. They lived it.
  That is what this is about. This is what is going to happen if this 
bill passes and it is signed into law without exception. People like 
this do not have a chance.
  We have a lot of work to do, as I said, in this Senate. We have a lot 
of appropriations bills we have to pass. We have to have a pass on 
Bosnia. We cannot even agree on a budget, can barely agree on the size 
of the table that we are going to sit around. We have work to do.
  I say people sent us here to fight about those priorities. I want 
that debate. I want to know how Medicare survives after you cut $270 
billion out of it. I want to know how Medicaid survives when you cut 
$182 billion out of it. I want to know how senior citizens are better 
off when you repeal nursing home standards and go back.
  You want to talk about compelling? Why do you not read what it was 
like in the 1980's before we had nursing home standards from the 
Federal Government. It was pretty compelling. Grandmothers and 
grandfathers were sexually abused, mistreated, scalded in the bathtub.
  We have a lot of work to do. We should not get into what medical 
procedure is appropriate and what medical procedure is not.
  I will say this to my colleagues. If this bill becomes law as it is 
now written--I believe the chances of that are nil; there is not even 
an exception for life or health of the mother, but say it did--and 
someone's wife dies, someone in this Nation loses a wife and a loving 
partner because of the action of this body, I tell that person, even 
though their case could get kicked out of court, I would tell them to 
sue the pants off every U.S. Senator in this place who voted to outlaw 
a life-saving procedure. I would make that case that we have no 
business getting in the middle of a tragic family decision, playing 
God, playing doctor without the foggiest notion about what it means to 
make that tragic choice.
  We talk about the joy of birth. God has blessed those people who have 
never known such a tragedy as these families have known. You are 
blessed that you never knew such a tragedy. But do not stand up here 
and say in every single case it is all beautiful. How you can even say 
that, in light of this testimony, is beyond belief.
  One of the reasons we were so strong on having this testimony is 
because of what we heard here on this floor about how every birth is 
joyful, and there are no problems, and you do not need this procedure. 
I would have hoped we put that to rest, but it is back here again on 
the floor, calling doctors names, vicious names, because they helped a 
family like this. I say to you, if that doctor did not help this woman, 
that doctor would be violating the Hippocratic Oath.
  So, I just hope we amend this bill. Abortion is a legal right in this 
country. If you want to take it on, if you want to have a bill 
introduced to make it illegal, to put women in jail, go ahead. Let us 
have that debate. But I really feel to set ourselves up as a special 
committee, like one of a hospital that delivers babies, to stand around 
here and talk about what procedure should be done and what should not 
be done, I just think we are off the mark as to what our responsibility 
is here.
  This is going to be a very difficult debate. This is just a preview 
of it. I know my colleagues and I disagree. We try very hard not to be 
disagreeable with one another. I certainly do not feel disagreeable to 
my colleagues who take the other view.
  I do feel, however, that they are looking at this in a way that 
ignores women like this, men like this, kids like this, families like 
this. So I will be bringing us back to these families, these 
circumstances.
  When you legislate, you do not legislate for the majority of people. 
That is easy. Most times you do not even need to think about this 
subject.
  Of course, we cannot close our eyes and say it is a beautiful, 
beautiful process, this process of birth. Nothing ever goes wrong, so 
therefore we are going to say any and all procedures that may have to 
be used in emergency, let us outlaw them, because maybe if we did, we 
would not need them.
  That is not the way to legislate. You legislate in a conservative 
fashion. You give the most leeway to people who may need every option 
at their disposal to save a woman like this and spare her family.
  So, yes, we will come back to this. We will debate it. We are going 
to try to amend this bill. It is a tough one, and I look forward to the 
remainder of the debate.
  I again thank my friend from New Hampshire for his courtesy, for 
allowing me to continue and complete my remarks, and I yield the floor.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from New Hampshire.
  Mr. SMITH. Mr. President, I heard during the course of the debate 
from the Senator from California that we should look in the eyes of a 
mother. She used her example of a woman who went through this very 
difficult decision, which I understand.
  Here we can look into the eyes of a mother, Brenda Shafer. She has 
two children. She was horrified by what she saw, so horrified that she 
quit her job at that clinic.
  We also heard the Senator from California make great mention of the 
life-of-the-mother exception. Of course, there is a life-of-the-mother 
exception in the bill, but it is easier to say it is not in there, so 
we can continue this debate, I guess; so we have something to say. But 
I guess my question would be something along these lines. If this is a 
life-of-the-mother threat that Brenda Shafer witnessed, why was it done 
in an abortion clinic? Why was it not done in a hospital? If the 
mother's life is under threat, then I would certainly think it would be 
done in a hospital where we could get the maximum medical attention, 
not in a clinic, whose specific and only purpose is to perform 
abortions. So, you see that is another falsehood that is being 
perpetrated in the debate here.
  Also, another falsehood is we are somehow part of the radical right 
because we oppose this procedure. The radical right, we were called. In 
the House, Patrick Kennedy, son of the distinguished Senator from 
Massachusetts, voted for this. So he is in the radical right. I guess I 
must have missed something in the newspapers somewhere. I missed it, I 
guess. The minority leader, former majority leader of the House of 
Representatives, Dick Gephardt, is a member of the radical right. And 
so many others who were pro-choice who voted for this bill.
  You see, the reason they voted for it is because those on the other 
side are the radical ones. Nurse Shafer was so horrified by this, to 
her everlasting 

[[Page S 17899]]
credit, she stood up and exposed this for what it is. It is not done to 
save the life of the mother. We have a life-of-the-mother exception, 
but this is not done to save the life of the mother. As I said, if it 
is to save the life of the mother, then get the mother to the hospital, 
not to an abortion clinic.
  Nurse Shafer told the Judiciary Committee at its November 17 hearing 
on this bill that this partial-birth abortion that she witnessed was 
carried out--this is very important, I say to my colleagues--was 
carried out because the little boy involved, the one with the angelic 
face that she describes right here: ``I never went back to that clinic, 
but I am still haunted by the face of that little boy--it was the most 
perfect, angelic face I have ever seen.'' Do you know what that little 
boy was diagnosed with? Do you know why he was aborted? He was 
diagnosed with Down's syndrome.
  I have heard a lot today on the floor, from the Senator from 
California and from the Senator from Illinois and others, that somehow 
I am in the business of playing God here. When a woman electively, 
selectively makes a decision to abort a child because it has Down's 
syndrome, that is the only reason, that is the little angelic face--
because of that, only, that is what we are talking about here in this 
particular case--is that not playing God? Somehow there is a twisted 
sense of logic here.
  I guess I have to wonder where we draw the line. Is it a missing 
foot, a deformed foot? Does that qualify for that decision? A cleft 
palate, does that qualify? I am having trouble understanding just where 
it comes down. Where does it come down? God? Playing God? Who is 
playing God here?
  Think about it: Down's syndrome. Do you know, we see Down's syndrome 
people acting on television everyday. There is a television series 
involving a young man with Down's syndrome. This little baby boy was 
killed with a catheter to the back of his head because he had Down's 
syndrome, in the United States of America. He did nothing else. He did 
not do anything wrong. He did not commit any crimes.
  Even killers on death row who are executed are done so more humanely 
than this little boy died because he had Down's syndrome. Where are we, 
in China? What is the next election, female child? Is that all right? 
Male child, twins, cannot handle that?
  This little baby boy, described by Nurse Shafer, with scissors jammed 
into the back of his head and the catheter sucking his brains out, his 
crime was that he had Down's syndrome.
  This little boy, as nurse Shafer said, was executed by Dr. Haskell 
because he had Down's syndrome. You know, it is no small irony, Mr. 
President, if I do say so myself, that we now see the sad spectacle--
and it is a sad spectacle--of some of the Senate's most respected and 
vigorous liberal advocates of the rights of disabled persons in our 
society coming to the Senate floor to defend an abortion procedure that 
often targets disabled children, targets them for destruction for one 
reason--they have a disability.
  That is what the Senator from California is talking about. No, I am 
not playing God, Mr. President. I am not. I am trying to prevent other 
people from playing God. I am not playing God when I am trying to 
protect those under the Constitution of the United States any more than 
I am playing God when I say that a person in this country has the right 
to the protection of life under the Constitution.
  Later on in this debate we may see an amendment. Who knows, somebody 
may offer an amendment, offered by one or more of those so-called 
disabled rights advocates, seeking to exempt the disabled from this 
bill who are disabled through no fault of their own, through some 
genetic abnormality. How can they claim to be defenders of the rights 
of the disabled and turn around and single out to target, to execute, 
out of the womb--not in the womb; out of the womb--disabled babies? 
Disabled babies.
  I would like to see an opportunity where one of these disabled young 
Americans today, perhaps a young man or woman with Down's syndrome, or 
perhaps someone with a cleft palate or perhaps someone with a foot or 
an arm missing due to some horrible birth defect, I would like to see 
that person come face to face with some of these U.S. Senators and look 
them in the eye and say, ``You know what? No, I don't have the same 
privileges you had in terms of health, but I am trying to make 
something of myself, I'm trying to contribute to society. And I'm doing 
it. And thank you, I don't appreciate it when you say you want to take 
my life because of what I was dealt.''
  That is what this debate is about. That is what it is about, Mr. 
President--make no mistake about it--killing disabled children. One of 
the primary debating tactics that the defenders of the partial-birth 
abortions employ is to argue--they argue that this brutal, grizzly 
procedure is utilized only in the hard cases, only in medical 
emergencies, only in medical emergencies threatening the life of the 
mother or in the case of severe congenital abnormalities.
  But the words, Mr. President, of the only living doctor in America 
who has publicly--I will strike the word ``confess''--admitted, 
publicly admitted that he does partial-birth abortions, Dr. Martin 
Haskell of Dayton, OH, has given the lie to this deceptive debating 
tactic. Haskell told the AMA News that the overwhelming majority--this 
is Haskell himself. This is not Smith, this is not the distinguished 
Senator from Ohio sitting in the Chair, this is not somebody from the 
pro-life movement; this is Dr. Haskell himself. And in the AMA News he 
said the overwhelming majority of the partial-birth abortions that he 
does are for elective reasons--elective reasons.
  Haskell performed 1,000 of them. So 800 babies, 800 babies --who 
knows what those 800 babies may have been--doctors, lawyers, maybe 
somebody who came up with a cure for cancer, the first woman President, 
the first black President? Who knows. We will never know. They never 
had a chance.
  In the United States of America this is going on. And people come 
down here on the floor, time and time again, every time we debate this 
issue, and accuse me and others of playing God. Haskell said, ``Most of 
my abortions are elective in that 20- to 24-week range, and probably 20 
percent, 20 percent, 200 out of the 1,000 are for genetic reasons.''

  So let us call it like it is and stop distorting the record and 
saying things that are not accurate down here. Let us call it like it 
is--1,000 abortions, partial-birth abortions in the birth canal, 
everything but the head; 800 elective, 200 for genetic reasons.
  Haskell later tried to claim he had been misquoted. It turns out, 
however, that the AMA News tape recorded the interview. They tape 
recorded it. They prepared a transcript. There was not any misquoting 
in there. Dr. Haskell was quoted accurately.
  Like I said earlier, Mr. President, no wonder he did not have the 
guts to appear before the Judiciary Committee and try to defend his 
employment of this, because you cannot defend it. They have a bit of a 
problem with Dr. Haskell's confession that he performs partial-birth 
abortions on perfectly healthy women with perfectly healthy babies.
  We did not hear about that from the Senator from California. We did 
not hear anything about the perfectly healthy babies. We did not hear 
the Senator from California stand up on the floor and say, ``I support 
that healthy baby having the right to live and not die at the hands of 
an abortionist with a catheter and a pair of scissors to the back of 
the head.'' No, we did not hear about that.
  They tried to claim that somehow the word ``elective'' includes 
``hard cases,'' quote unquote. Well, Mr. President, that is another 
blatant and deliberate deception. And as we debate this bill, there is 
litigation going on in the U.S. District Court for the Southern 
District of Ohio, which I am sure the Senator in the chair is aware of, 
in which Dr. Haskell is challenging the constitutionality of Ohio's new 
State law banning partial-birth abortions. He is an advocate. I give 
him credit. He does not see anything wrong with it.
  During the course of the proceedings in that case, Dr. Harlan Giles 
has testified about what ``elective'' means. Dr. Giles is an 
obstetrician-gynecologist at the Medical College of Pennsylvania and 
Allegheny General Hospital who has a subspecialty in the field of 
perinatology, which includes maternal fetal medicine, high-risk 
pregnancy, ultrasound and genetics.
  During his testimony before the U.S. district court in Ohio, Dr. 
Giles was 

[[Page S 17900]]
asked to tell the court what an elective abortion is. What is it? Here 
is what Dr. Giles said:

       An elective abortion is a procedure carried out for a 
     patient for whom there is no identifiable maternal or fetal 
     indication. That is to say, the patient feels it would be in 
     her best interest to terminate the pregnancy either on social 
     grounds, emotional grounds, financial grounds, etc. If there 
     are no medical indications from either a fetal or maternal 
     standpoint, we refer to the termination as elective.

  There we have it, Mr. President, 8\1/2\ months, bring the child 80 
percent into the world, making sure you bring it out feet first so that 
it cannot breathe first, and kill it. That is exactly what we are 
doing. That is what an elective abortion is, not for medical reasons. 
Once in a while that is done. But that is not what we are talking about 
here in 80 percent of the cases.
  To sum up what he said is an elective abortion, it is one that is 
done on a perfectly healthy mother with a perfectly healthy baby--not 
always. Therefore, what Dr. Haskell told the AMA News is that 80 
percent of partial-birth abortions he does are done on perfectly 
healthy mothers with perfectly healthy babies. But we did not hear 
about that today--nothing. We did not hear about that at all. That is 
the truth.
  I said during the outset of my remarks, Mr. President, that I would 
offer my colleagues a detailed assessment of the November 17 hearing 
that the Judiciary Committee held on this bill. I would like to focus a 
few remarks on that at the outset of this November 17 hearing. My 
colleague, Senator Kennedy, described H.R. 1833 as ``extremist 
legislation at its worst.'' I found that somewhat puzzling that Senator 
Kennedy would say this because his own son, Congressman Patrick Kennedy 
of Rhode Island, voted for the bill in the House, in the exact form 
that it is here before us in the Senate.
  So I assume from that that he means his son is an extremist, and he 
may very well feel that way. I do not know. We already mentioned Mr. 
Gephardt and Mr. Bonior. I guess they are extremists.
  Mr. President, Senator Kennedy got it wrong, with all due respect to 
my colleague. The real extremists are those who believe that partial-
birth abortions should be legal through all 9 months of pregnancy. We 
are talking about in the latter months of pregnancy, the latter days in 
some cases. Those are the extremists; they think it is legal for 
Haskell to use this method to kill a little Down's syndrome baby. They 
are the extremists. That is who the extremists are.
  Frankly, I initially opposed sending the bill to the committee for a 
hearing because I did not think it was necessary. But I am glad we had 
a hearing. As you know, I agreed to have it and allowed the vote to go 
that way, did not object, because I think that hearing transcript, 
which the distinguished Senator from Ohio had the opportunity to be a 
part of, is now available, and I invite my colleagues to review it in 
detail. Before you vote, read it. It demonstrates just how bankrupt the 
arguments are on this issue.
  When this bill first came to the Senate floor on November 7 and 8, we 
heard the opposition floor manager, Senator Boxer, repeatedly assert 
that partial-birth abortions are emergency operations. Senator Boxer 
said it again today, undertaken to save women's lives. During the 
November 7 floor debate on this bill, for example, Senator Boxer 
referred to partial-birth abortion as ``an emergency medical procedure 
that must be performed on certain pregnant women lest families lose 
that mother forever.''
  You heard it again today. During her appearance on ``Nightline'' with 
me on November 7, she claimed that partial-birth abortions are 
emergency medical procedures and asserted that H.R. 1833 would ``outlaw 
an emergency medical procedure.''
  The next day, on November 8, Senator Boxer helped lead the charge on 
the Senate floor for a hearing on H.R. 1833. And when the Senate agreed 
to refer the bill to the Judiciary Committee for the hearing, it was 
incumbent upon Senator Boxer and allies on the committee to produce 
testimony to support her repeated assertions that a partial-birth 
abortion is an emergency medical procedure.
  Well, they had plenty of time to prove it, but they failed to do so. 
You were there, Mr. President. The lead witness that the opponents of 
this bill presented was Dr. Nancy Campbell, who is the Medical Director 
for Planned Parenthood here in Washington. Far from claiming that any 
partial-birth abortions are undertaken as emergency procedures to save 
the lives of women, Dr. Campbell asserted that the vast majority of 
these procedures are done because of severe fetal malformations. So Dr. 
Campbell's testimony failed to support Senator Boxer's claims. A 
partial-birth abortion that is undertaken to destroy a baby because the 
baby has a disability is not necessarily an emergency abortion done to 
save the life of a mother. So it is not true what is being said here.
  At some point in the debate, perhaps tomorrow when we go back to this 
debate--as the Chair knows, we are going to break at 7:30 and recess 
the Senate until tomorrow, but at the appropriate time I am going to 
read into the Record comments in a large number of letters from ob-
gyn's who take a very interesting view of this bill. They support the 
bill, and they say the process of partial-birth abortions is simply not 
necessary to save the life of a mother.

  In fact, regarding Dr. Campbell's assertion that the vast majority of 
partial-birth abortions are done because of severe fetal malformations, 
that is also unsupportable. Campbell cited no academic studies, no 
medical journal articles, no government or private statistics, 
nothing--nothing. Just stated it, no support. In fact, her statement to 
that effect appears only in the transcript of her oral argument, not in 
her written statement.
  So as I pointed out earlier, the only reliable testimony that we have 
on this point comes from the only living doctor who is willing to admit 
publicly that he does these, Dr. Martin Haskell. Haskell told the 
American Medical Association News that 80 percent of the partial-birth 
abortions he does are purely for elective reasons. It is entirely 
reliable because he does them. The man knows what he is talking about. 
Give him credit for admitting it. He is telling the truth. He is not 
trying to hide it.
  Campbell's assertion, on the other hand, is completely unreliable 
because she does not do partial-birth abortions and cited no other 
evidence to support her completely unsupported claim. It is interesting 
that they had Dr. Campbell testify and she does not do partial-birth 
abortions and the guy who does do it, Haskell, he does not testify. He 
cannot be here.
  The only other medical witness on the other side was Dr. Courtland 
Robinson, who is a medical professor at Johns Hopkins, and during his 
testimony Robinson managed to contradict both Senator Boxer's claim 
that partial-birth abortions are done for emergency reasons to save 
women's lives and Dr. Campbell's assertion that the vast majority of 
them are done because of severe fetal abnormalities. On the other hand, 
though, Robinson's testimony supports Dr. Haskell's statement to the 
AMA News that the overwhelming majority, 80 percent of these abortions 
are done for purely elective reasons.
  We have all heard the debate on abortion, about whether or not a 
woman has the right to choose in the first month, second month, third 
month. That is a debate that we have had on the Senate floor, and 
everyone knows where I come from on it. That is not the debate we are 
having on the Senate floor right now. We are having a debate on the 
Senate floor now as to whether or not we approve of this procedure that 
I have earlier described of allowing a child to be brought out through 
the birth canal with the exception of the head and killed with scissors 
and a catheter with no anesthetic. And as I said then, would you kill a 
pet, would you euthanize your pet in that way? Yet we do it to 
children.

  During his oral testimony before the committee, Robinson said that 
``women present to us for later abortions for a number of reasons. I am 
a doctor,'' Robinson continued, ``and it is not my place to judge my 
patient's reasons for ending a pregnancy or to punish her because 
circumstances prevented her from obtaining an abortion earlier. It is 
my place to treat my patient, a woman with a pregnancy she feels she 
cannot continue. 

[[Page S 17901]]

  But bear in mind the timeframe we are talking about--5th through 9th 
month. I again give the doctor credit for his candor. In seeking to 
justify the use of the brutal and shockingly inhumane partial-birth 
procedure, Robinson did claim, as Senator Boxer does, that these are 
emergency medical procedures.
  Neither did Robinson assert, as did Campbell, that the vast majority 
of such abortions are undertaken because of severe fetal malformations. 
No. Dr. Robinson told the truth. He corroborated what Dr. Haskell 
said--80 percent of the partial-birth abortions are purely elective.
  So, in conclusion on that point, there are only two witnesses, 
medical witnesses, that the supporters of partial-birth abortions 
offered at the 17th of November Judiciary hearing--Campbell and 
Robinson. Neither one had ever performed a partial-birth abortion, and 
they flatly contradicted each other about why partial-birth abortions 
are performed, Campbell claiming the vast majority are because of 
severe fetal abnormalities, and Robinson said they are done for 
elective reasons--in other words, on demand. No consistency whatsoever.
  Now, the next two witnesses that the supporters of partial-birth 
abortion presented--and this is the interesting part--were two women 
who had late-term abortions. Interestingly enough, however--and this 
was not brought out by the Senator from California--neither one of them 
had a partial-birth abortion. The Senator from Ohio pointed it out when 
he was speaking, that neither one of the women had a partial-birth 
abortion.
  The stories they told before the committee were very compelling and 
very emotional, and I respect that. I understand it. But they were not 
partial-birth abortions. The first woman was Miss Coreen Costello of 
Agoura, CA. She explained to the committee that she sought a late-term 
abortion because her baby had severe deformities and was not expected 
to survive. She then described her abortion, and what she described was 
not a partial-birth abortion. It was not a partial-birth abortion.
  She said her baby died in the womb before any part of her was 
removed. She said the baby was not stabbed in the head with scissors. 
Third, Miss Costello said no part of her brain was missing. Of course 
not. It was not a partial-birth abortion. The baby died in the womb. 
That is different.
  Clearly, what Ms. Costello described is something else. I do not 
intend, Mr. President, to make light of the agony that Ms. Costello's 
anguish caused her over her baby's condition and her abortion. The only 
thing I want to point out is that this debate is about partial-birth 
abortions. They could not find anybody to testify who had a partial-
birth abortion because the life of the mother was threatened. They 
could not find anybody to do it. That is my point. That is why we are 
here, to stop a brutal practice.
  To be honest, Ms. Costello's testimony, although very emotional and 
very personal, is not relevant to the debate we are having today.
  The second and last witness who had received a late-term abortion to 
support partial-birth abortions presented at the November 17 hearing 
was Viki Wilson. The Senator from Ohio mentioned her.
  Ms. Wilson, like Ms. Costello, told the committee about her child's 
condition and why she had decided to have a late-term abortion. Like 
Ms. Costello, Ms. Wilson proceeded to describe an abortion that very 
clearly was not a partial-birth abortion.
  She said her little girl died inside the womb. ``My daughter died 
with dignity inside my womb,'' Ms. Wilson testified. ``She was not 
stabbed in the back of the head with scissors, no one dragged her out 
half alive and killed her. We never would have allowed that.''
  That is interesting, she never would have allowed that, but we are 
allowing it here. It is going on. Maybe she would not, and I give Ms. 
Wilson credit for saying she would not allow it, but others do and it 
is happening. One thousand Dr. Haskell performed. The estimates are one 
or two a day.
  So not only did Ms. Wilson, like Ms. Costello, not have a partial-
birth abortion, she also told the committee she never would have 
consented to it. Very interesting. Their witness.
  In summary, Mr. President, the supporters of partial-birth abortions 
were not able to produce at the November 17 hearing a single doctor who 
had ever performed a partial-birth abortion. The only doctor who has 
publicly confessed to performing them refused to appear, and all they 
did produce was two doctors who had never done partial-birth abortions, 
but nonetheless speculated, and in the process contradicted one another 
about why partial-birth abortions are done.
  In short, the supporters of partial-birth abortion produced not a 
single doctor who cast any doubt whatsoever on the one who has done 
them, Dr. Haskell. In his own unrefuted statement to the AMA News, 80 
percent of partial-birth abortions he does are purely elective. Nobody 
refuted it.
  The supporters of partial-birth abortion were not able to produce as 
a witness a single woman who had ever undergone a partial-birth 
abortion. Of course, they are out there, but they did not produce any.
  Senator Boxer says that partial-birth abortions are an emergency, and 
yet she could not find anybody to say that. Other supporters of 
partial-birth abortions talk about how the procedure is done to 
eliminate children with severe abnormalities, yet they could not 
produce a witness who had a partial-birth abortion for that reason.
  There you have it, the supporters of partial-birth abortion demanded 
a hearing to tell their side of the story, and what did they produce? 
Two doctors who had not done any and two women who had not had any. 
There is their hearing. They fought hard for it. They wanted it. They 
got it.

  The last witness produced by the supporters of partial-birth abortion 
at the hearing was a constitutional law professor by the name of Louis 
Michael Seidman of Georgetown University Law Center. Frankly, as a 
Catholic myself, I am a little surprised that a Catholic university has 
on its payroll such a highly partisan, indeed enthusiastic, supporter 
of abortion on demand through all 9 months of pregnancy for any reason. 
But to each his own.
  Predictably, given Professor Seidman's undisguised enthusiasm for a 
right to an abortion, that is, Roe versus Wade, it is not surprising he 
confidently predicted that the Court would strike H.R. 1833 if it were 
to be enacted.
  The other constitutional law expert on the panel was Dr. Kmiec, who 
served as Assistant Attorney General of the United States at the 
Justice Department under President Reagan and who now is a professor of 
law at Notre Dame. He strongly disagreed with Professor Seidman, and I 
believe Professor Kmiec made, by far, the better case.
  Much to my disappointment, though, the Supreme Court in 1992, by a 
vote of 5 to 4 in the case of Planned Parenthood versus Casey, 
reaffirmed the basic holding of Roe versus Wade. But the Court did not 
address in that case, which involved a Pennsylvania State law, a 
congressional statute like H.R. 1833 that aims to protect babies who 
have emerged into the birth canal from being brutally killed. Kmiec has 
no doubt this will be held constitutional if this law passes.
  A born child is a constitutional person. Why is a little baby whose 
whole body beneath her head has already entered the birth canal and 
entered outside the birth canal be less of a person than one whose head 
remains inside the birth canal? Can someone please answer that question 
for me? Why is it any less a person? Three inches, three seconds; three 
inches, three seconds. If you do not stop the baby from being born, in 
3 seconds it is out; it is a living child, 3 inches or 4. What is the 
difference? If somebody can tell me what the difference is, I sure 
would like to hear it.
  Where in the Constitution does it say that the Congress is powerless 
to protect such a child from Dr. Haskell's scissors and catheter? Where 
in the Constitution, where in the Constitution does it say that?
  The God-given right to life, of which Thomas Jefferson wrote in the 
magnificent Declaration of Independence, protects the right to life, 
liberty and the pursuit of happiness of each and every child who falls 
victim to Haskell's scissors and his suction catheter, and our great 
Constitution which guarantees the right of each and every person to 

[[Page S 17902]]
equal protection under the law protects these defenseless, partially 
born babies from being attacked by Dr. Haskell and other abortionists 
like him. The American people know it, and the people sitting in this 
Chamber now, members of the staff, they know it, my colleagues know 
it--we all know it. You ought to witness one of these things if you 
have any doubts. See if you can come away like Nurse Shafer and not be 
affected.
  I am going to have a lot more to say on this tomorrow, but I know we 
have a gentleman's agreement to get this place closed down, because we 
do not have anybody else to relieve the Chair.
  At this point, I suggest the absence of a quorum.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER. The clerk will call the roll.
  The assistant legislative clerk proceeded to call the roll.
  Mr. DeWINE. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the order for 
the quorum call be rescinded.
  The PRESIDING OFFICER (Mr. Smith). Without objection, it is so 
ordered.
  Mr. DeWINE. Mr. President, I would like to take this opportunity to, 
very briefly, respond to the comments my colleague from California made 
a few moments ago. I will try to be brief because I realize that we 
will be debating this bill on other days.
  My colleague from California placed in the Record a letter, which I 
might point out had already been placed in the Record in the previous 
days of debate. That was a letter from Nurse Shafer's supervisor. That 
letter calls into question some of the things that Nurse Shafer said, 
or in the words of my colleague from California, the supervisor doubts 
the veracity of the nurse.
  Mr. President, let me again talk about the testimony that we heard in 
the Judiciary Committee that refutes the attacks on Nurse Shafer and 
that refutes this specific letter by the purported supervisor of Nurse 
Shafer. First, the issue of how far along, how many weeks along Dr. 
Haskell would continue to do abortions. Let me quote from the letter. 
``Dr. Haskell does not perform abortions past 24 weeks of pregnancy.''
  Wrong. Dr. Haskell does. Dr. Haskell says so himself. We have already 
put that into the Record in Dr. Haskell's own words.
  Second, ``Dr. Haskell does not use ultrasound.'' Wrong. The record 
clearly shows he does. How do we know that? Because he says he does.
  Third. ``At no point is there any fetal movement or response that 
would indicate awareness, pain, or struggle.'' Wrong. The testimony 
that we heard would indicate contrary to that.
  So I do not think we should spend this entire debate talking about 
the veracity of Nurse Shafer. But, again, I would go back to what I 
said an hour ago and, that is, if anyone doubts her veracity, take the 
facts, compare them with what Dr. Haskell says, the man who performs 
the abortions. What you will find is that Nurse Shafer's description 
fits identically with what Dr. Haskell says he does himself.
  So this is a red herring. This is a side issue. This is the old 
tactic that is always used in court or in a debate: When you do not 
have the facts, talk about something else. Attack somebody whose 
testimony you do not like. Let us continue, if we can, to try to focus 
on what this debate is all about. I will come back to that in a moment. 
Senator Boxer has quoted Ms. Costello and Ms. Wilson, who gave very 
compelling testimony. Yes, it was. I thought that in my previous 
statement I stated that.
  Quite frankly, Mr. President, I do not see how anyone could have 
listened to their testimony and not have teared up. I did. Nobody who 
is a parent and nobody who has lost a child could listen to that and 
not become emotional. The hearts of everybody in that room went out to 
those two women. But let me again say, Mr. President, that their 
testimony was not relevant. Let us confine ourselves to the terms of 
this debate and to the terms of this bill. No matter how compelling or 
how emotional their testimony was, or how much our hearts go out to 
them, it does not alter the simple fact that this bill does not apply 
to their situations. And so, again, the opponents of this bill want to 
talk about everything in the world but the bill.

  With all due respect, I believe that the attack on this bill that we 
have heard this afternoon, 90 percent--and that is a conservative 
estimate--of what was said in opposition to this bill is totally 
irrelevant. You may believe it, disbelieve it, agree with it, disagree 
with it, but it is irrelevant. This bill, I submit, Mr. President, has 
nothing to do with nursing home standards. It has nothing to do with 
the EPA. It has nothing to do with the environment. We can and will 
argue these issues on this floor. But let us, please, try to keep this 
debate to what the issues are in front of us.
  Maybe on a note of personal privilege, if I could, Mr. President, my 
friend from California talks about the ``joy of giving birth.'' She 
used that phrase four or five times. I guess she was inferring that 
those of us who favor this bill use this term to in some way denigrate 
women and say that it is just an easy thing. Well, let me tell you, Mr. 
President, and let me assure my colleague from California, as the 
father of eight--but much more importantly, as the husband of the 
mother of eight, you are never going to catch this U.S. Senator in any 
way denigrating or in any way making light of birth. You are not going 
to find me minimizing the pain or the great accomplishment of the 
mother or the seriousness of the delivery.
  Again, Mr. President, let us try to stay on the debate and try to 
stay on what is relevant. The opponents of this bill talk about 
protecting the life of the mother. I would, again, call to my 
colleagues' attention the affirmative defense that was in this bill 
when it was passed in the House. When many pro-choice Members of the 
House voted for this bill, that affirmative defense was in there. I 
also, though, refer my colleagues in the Senate to the evidence that 
came at the hearing. Again, this is the hearing that the opponents of 
this bill wanted. It was a good hearing, and we learned things. The 
evidence at the hearing clearly showed that this is a procedure that 
you would not use--that a doctor would not use to save the life of a 
mother. I point out that the testimony clearly showed that this 
procedure takes 3 days, from the time the woman comes in and you begin 
to treat the woman until the actual final act takes place. The 
testimony at the hearing was very clear. If the life of the mother was 
at stake, a doctor would not do this method, would not do this 3-day 
procedure. This procedure is not the ``standard of care'' in these 
cases.
  So, again, we can talk about saving the life of the mother. But I 
maintain that it is outside the scope of this debate. We have the 
affirmative defense built into the law, built into this proposed law, 
and you also have testimony--medical testimony--that this is not the 
procedure you would use anyway.
  Dr. Pamela Smith of Chicago's Mt. Sinai Medical Center testified that 
medical texts prescribe at least three other techniques, but not this 
one. I will not take the time of the Senate to go into all the medical 
details, but the testimony is clearly there.

  I also point out that no one at the hearing--no one at the hearing--
disputed Dr. Smith's testimony. That is the state of the record. We 
simply do not do this procedure. Again, confine ourselves to this 
debate.
  Mr. President, the debate will go on. We will hear again from both 
sides, but we should try to narrow it and talk about what is at stake. 
It is not a question of, do we do away with Roe versus Wade? It is not 
a question about Republicans or Democrats or conservatives or liberals, 
or trends, or Republican Congresses or Democrat Congresses. It is about 
a very, very, very limited number of abortions that are performed each 
year. But they are performed. They are, I maintain, wrong.
  I think the evidence is abundantly clear. My colleague who is in the 
chair and who has shown the pictures and who has talked about it in 
graphic detail has described exactly what this procedure consists of. 
So it is a public policy debate, of very limited scope, but of an 
important area. We define in this debate, as we do in many debates, 
what kind of a people we are.
  To my friends who are pro-choice--and, again, I say being pro-choice, 
being for Roe versus Wade, is not inconsistent for being with this 
bill; in fact, you can be consistent and do that--I say to them and I 
say to my 

[[Page S 17903]]
friend from California and others who oppose this bill, is there not 
some limit, some limit, to what a civilized society will tolerate, to 
what a good and decent people will allow?
  I think, Mr. President, in this bill we are saying, yes, there is a 
limit, however narrow that may be drawn, but there is a limit. So in 
this bill, in this public debate, as in many debates, we define and 
redefine and redefine what kind of a people we are and what we hold 
dear.

                          ____________________