U.S. House Committee
Approves Unborn Victims of Violence Bill
by Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
January 21, 2004
Washington, DC (LifeNews.com) -- Members of a House committee took the first
steps in offering further protection to pregnant women and their unborn
children, by approving legislation that would allow prosecutors to hold
criminals accountable when they kill or injure an unborn child in the course
of an attack against a pregnant woman.
The House Judiciary Committee approved the bill on a 20-13 party line vote,
though the bill is expected to receive considerable bipartisan support on
the House floor.
Lawmakers say that pregnant women are increasingly targeted with violence --
including some cases where the attacker intends to cause harm to the baby to
avoid becoming a father and bearing the legal and financial responsibilities
for the child.
Members of the committee supporting the Unborn Victims of Violence Act said
it was a travesty of justice that criminals could escape prosecution for the
death or injury to a woman's unborn baby.
"Injuring or killing an unborn child during an attack against a pregnant
woman has no legal consequence," explained pro-life Rep. Steve Chabot
(R-Ohio). "This situation is unacceptable.''
Abortion advocates claim the only purpose of the bill is to afford unborn
children further recognition under law -- something that would eventually
lead to the downfall of Roe v. Wade and legalized abortion.
"This is part of a larger cultural war that is going on,'' said pro-abortion
Rep. John Conyers of Michigan.
Abortion advocates also disagree with the bill's premise, saying that there
is only one victim when a pregnant woman is attacked and her unborn baby is
killed or injured.
Pro-abortion Rep. Zoe Lofgren, a California Democrat, offered a substitute
version of the bill that says there is only one victim when an attack on a
pregnant woman kills or injures her unborn child. Members of the committee
rejected that version, which pro-life groups opposed.
The Unborn Victims bill passed the House in 1999 and 2001, but never
received a vote in the Senate. Now that the Senate agenda is formulated by
pro-life senators, pro-life groups are hoping that the bill will finally
come up for a vote on the Senate floor this year -- though a pro-abortion
filibuster remains a possibility.
The bill, HR 1997, also known as Laci and Conner's Law, after Laci and
Conner Peterson, is sponsored by pro-life Rep. Melissa Hart, of
Pennsylvania. Pro-life Sen. Mike DeWine (R-OH) is the main sponsor of the
Senate version.
Sharon Rocha -- whose daughter Laci and unborn grandson Conner were brutally
murdered in California just over a year ago -- has urged lawmakers to reject
the "single-victim" Lofgren proposal and to enact the Unborn Victims of
Violence Act.
In a letter to congressional sponsors of the bill, Rocha said that enactment
of the Lofgren "single-victim" proposal would be "a painful blow to those,
like me, who are left alive after a two-victim crime, because Congress would
be saying that Conner and other innocent unborn victims like him are not
really victims -- indeed, that they never really existed at all. But our
grandson did live. He had a name, he was loved, and his life was violently
taken from him before he ever saw the sun."
The bill would recognize as a legal victim any "child in utero" who is
injured or killed during the commission of a federal crime of violence. The
bill covers unborn children throughout pregnancy.
President Bush supports the legislation. |