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U.S. Senate Passes Fetus Protection Bill
By JIM ABRAMS
WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate voted Thursday to make it a separate crime to
harm a fetus during commission of a violent federal crime, a victory for
those seeking to expand the legal rights of the unborn.
The 61-38 vote on the Unborn Victims of Violence Act sends the legislation,
after a five-year battle in Congress, to President Bush for his signature.
The White House said in a statement that it "strongly supports protection
for unborn children." The House passed the bill last month.
Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist, R-Tenn., said the bill was "powerful
because this act is about simple humanity, about simple reality."
But abortion rights lawmakers contended that giving a fetus, from the point
of conception, the same legal rights as its mother sets a precedent that
could be used in future legal challenges to abortion rights.
It was the second big win for social conservatives pushing protections for
the unborn following enactment of the so-called partial birth abortion ban
last year. That ban is now tied up in the courts.
The Senate cleared the way for passage with a 50-49 vote to defeat an
amendment, backed by opponents of the bill, that would have increased
penalties but maintained that an attack on a pregnant woman was a
single-victim crime.
Sen. John Kerry, D-Mass., President Bush's opponent this fall, interrupted
his campaign schedule to vote yes on the one-victim amendment. He voted no
on final passage.
The bill states that an assailant who attacks a pregnant woman while
committing a violent federal crime can be prosecuted for separate offenses
against both the woman and her unborn child. The legislation defines an
"unborn child" as a child in utero, which it says "means a member of the
species homo sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the
womb."
"This bill recognizes that there are two victims," said Sen. Mike DeWine,
R-Ohio, a chief sponsor. Americans, he said, "intuitively know that there is
a victim besides the mother."
The key obstacle was an amendment by Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., that
would have imposed the same tougher penalties outlined in the DeWine bill
but classified any attack on a pregnant woman as a single-victim crime,
avoiding the issue of fetal rights and the question of when a person attains
personhood.
Feinstein said that by defining when life begins, the bill was "the first
step in removing a woman's right to choice, particularly in the early months
of a pregnancy before viability." She said it could also chill embryonic
stem cell research.
The Senate also defeated an amendment by Sen. Patty Murray, D-Wash., that
would require employers to give unpaid leave, and states to pay unemployment
benefits, to women when they or family members are victims of domestic or
sexual violence.
Supporters of the bill have named it after Laci Peterson and her unborn
child, Conner, victims in the highly publicized murder case in California.
California, one of 29 states with an unborn victims law, is trying
Peterson's husband, Scott, on double murder charges.
Laci Peterson's stepfather, Ron Grantski, said at a Capitol Hill news
conference that he and Laci's mother had received several hundred thousand
sympathy cards and "they all mourned our loss of Laci and Conner - not Laci
and the fetus."
The Senate bill covers 68 federal crimes of violence, such as drug-related
shootings, violence at an international airport, terrorist attacks, crimes
on a military base and threats against a witness in a federal proceeding.
It would specifically exclude prosecution of legally performed abortions - a
fact supporters cite in arguing that the bill would not undermine the 1973
Roe v. Wade decision affirming a woman's right to end a pregnancy.
"The criminals who commit these crimes are not committing abortions," said
Douglas Johnson, legislative director of the National Right to Life
Committee. "They are depriving these unborn children of the right to life.
It's a separate issue related to the right to life."
Groups on both sides of the abortion issue lobbied hard on the legislation.
The Christian Coalition of America said votes for either the Murray or
Feinstein amendments would be regarded as negative votes on its annual
congressional scorecard of lawmakers.
On the other side, NARAL Pro-Choice America delivered more than 130,000
petitions to senators urging defeat of the bill.
"This would be the first time in federal law that an embryo or fetus is
recognized as a separate and distinct person under the law, separate from
the woman," said NARAL president Kate Michelman. "Much of this is preparing
for the day the Supreme Court has a majority that will overrule Roe v.
Wade."
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