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ChunkMcHorkle , (edited )
@ChunkMcHorkle@lemmy.world avatar

Even the articles we can easily see today repeat that she was offered induced labor and follow up care, an abortion, and she walked away. Twice.

That is a flat-out untruth. I posted this elsewhere in this thread, but just to be sure you see it:

Every single account I have read says she was in and out of the hospital miscarrying before she finally did at home, and then went back to the hospital afterward, where she was inpatient for days. She left the hospital because she wasn’t getting any help; they were all stuck on the new law while her body was unable to expel the fetus quickly. At NO point did they help her to expel it, or offer to do so. That’s why she kept going home.

December 15
washingtonpost.com/…/ohio-woman-miscarriage-abuse…
Archive link: archive.is/2rSiE

December 16
apnews.com/…/ohio-miscarriage-prosecution-brittan…

December 19
www.cnn.com/2023/12/19/us/…/index.html

From WaPo, linked above:

Brittany Watts was still hooked to an IV, sick for almost a week from a potentially fatal miscarriage, when a detective from the Warren Police Department in Ohio stepped into her hospital room. He assured her that she wasn’t in any trouble.

For more than an hour, Detective Nick Carney interviewed Watts, 33, about the details of that morning and the whereabouts of the nearly 22-week-old fetus that was declared nonviable two days earlier. As Watts described miscarrying in her bathroom, a nurse at Mercy Health — St. Joseph Warren Hospital rubbed her shoulders and told her everything would be okay, Watts told The Washington Post in a series of text messages. Two weeks later, Carney arrested Watts on charges of felony abuse of a corpse for how she handled the remains from her pregnancy. If indicted and found guilty, she faces up to a year in prison along with a fine of up to $2,500, her lawyer said.

To describe Watts’s experience, The Washington Post reviewed police reports, call recordings and more than 600 pages of medical records, interviewed her lawyer, and spoke to Watts via text message. (emphasis mine)

Again, you don’t need to make anything up. If you find yourself having to lie, maybe your point is not as worthy as you think it is.

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