"The fate of a Northern Indiana woman sentenced to serve 20 years in
prison in connection with her own miscarriage Attorneys for
Purvi Patel
sought Monday to overturn her 2015 convictions of feticide and neglect
of a dependent. While the state's interpretation of its feticide law has
drawn national interest in the case, Monday's hearing heavily focused
on the evidence used to secure Patel's convictions, including whether
the prosecution sufficiently proved that the Granger woman knew her
child had been born alive. According to court documents, Patel
sought medical help at St. Joseph Hospital in July 2013 after delivering
a child at home. When pressed by doctors about her condition,
Patel told them she had delivered a stillborn child and discarded the
body in a dumpster. Prosecutors, however, alleged at trial that Patel had ordered abortifacients online and that her child was born alive On Monday, Patel's attorney, Lawrence Marshall, outlined his case for appeal. "The
evidence in this case was not there whatsoever," said Patel's attorney,
Lawrence Marshall. "Not a single expert ever said — in any sort of
declarative way — that yes, this infant would have survived had Ms.
Patel done differently."
Critics of
Patel's convictions argue that the feticide charge was never intended to
be used against a pregnant woman, but was instead meant to punish
illegal abortion providers. Patel was the first Indiana woman to be
convicted of feticide in connection with her own miscarriage. Patel's
attorney, Marshall, lambasted the state's use of the feticide statute
in court. He said the law has no role in criminalizing unlawful
abortion and never should have been applied in Patel's case. Marshall
also took issue with the prosecution's case for neglect, which he said
they failed to make at trial. The state, he said, never asked its
experts if his client's child would have made any noise or shown any
visible signs of life that would signal to Patel that the baby was not
stillborn. Nor did prosecutors ever present any evidence that the
baby would have survived had the baby been taken to a hospital, he
added. But the three-judge panel questioned Marshall about the
importance of the child's survival as a factor in the case, and whether
it mattered that the baby, which was born several weeks prematurely. "What
we're looking at is like a murder," Judge Nancy Vaidik said. "Someone
is about ready to die of cancer, and someone shoots them. That person is
guilty of murder. I mean, we don't say, 'Oh, they only had another five
hours to live.' And that's what I'm struggling with." The state,
meanwhile, said the evidence presented at Patel's 2015 criminal trial
was enough to support her convictions. Patel's actions fell within the
scope of Indiana's feticide law, argued Deputy Attorney General Ellen
Meilaender. "It's the defendant's failure to seek medical
treatment, to provide that care for the baby, that led to all of the
things that resulted in the baby's death," Meilaender said, citing trial
testimony from doctors that the child's heart was beating and that it
had taken a breath. "The jury could reasonably infer that somebody who
was holding a live baby in her hands would be aware that it was alive." But
the judges pressed Meilaender repeatedly about what evidence proved
Patel's awareness of the child's condition — an issue they said was a
crucial component of the appeal. Said Vaidik: "This is what the
state has to prove beyond a reasonable doubt: that she knew that this
baby was breathing and alive.".........Though
Patel's attorneys previously argued in court documents that many of
the most contentious issues raised by the case did not need to factor
into her appeal, the judges on Monday seemed unafraid to wade into
discussion about Indiana's decades-old feticide law, and whether its use
in Patel's case could leave other pregnant women at risk for
prosecution. They questioned whether a pregnant woman's use of
seemingly harmful substances could leave her open to a similar scenario
should something go wrong. "One pack of cigarettes a day, or a
fifth of whiskey a day?" Judge L. Mark Bailey asked. "I mean, what is it
that we're going to start prosecuting here?" It's unclear when
the panel will deliver its ruling or what that decision may look
like. But national women's advocacy groups and legal experts say they're
keeping a close watch on Patel's case."
http://www.indystar.com/story/news/2016/05/23/hearing-monday-woman-appealing-feticide-conviction/84660094/