Could North Carolina investigate Planned Parenthood policies?

Byand the Associated Press WTVD logo
Friday, July 17, 2015
NC to probe Planned Parenthood?
There's no word yet if NC leaders plan to investigate of Planned Parenthood facilities to determine if organs from aborted fetuses are being sold.

RALEIGH (WTVD) -- There's no word yet if North Carolina leaders plan to follow the lead of other states and order investigations of Planned Parenthood facilities to determine if organs from aborted fetuses are being sold.

The governors of Georgia and Indiana and Ohio's attorney general on Thursday state investigations. Other probes announced Wednesday by three Republican-led congressional committees - come in response to the release of an undercover video made by anti-abortion activists. The video shows Dr. Deborah Nucatola, Planned Parenthood's senior director of medical services, discussing procedures for providing fetal body parts to researchers.

Click to watch selected clips of the video

North Carolina pro-life activists reacted angrily to the video.

"It's just outrageous. It's horrific, and it makes you wonder what kind of moral climate we live in in this country when someone can talk so casually over lunch and a glass of wine about trafficking and selling for money the body parts of unborn babies that have been aborted," said Tami Fitzgerald with the NC Values Coalition.

Planned Parenthood officials say that Nucatola has been "reprimanded." They did not elaborate. The organization's president, Cecile Richards, apologized for the tone of some of Nucatola's recorded statements.

Click to watch Richards' apology

Nucatola is heard in the video referring to fetal hearts, lungs and livers and to efforts to retrieve these organs intact rather than crush them during an abortion procedure. She also is heard giving a range of monetary estimates for their procurement.

The commercial sale of fetal tissue is outlawed. Planned Parenthood, which provides abortions and other reproductive health services, says it legally helps women who want to make not-for-profit donations of their fetus' organs for scientific research.

According to Planned Parenthood, the monetary sums mentioned by Nucatola were for reimbursement of the clinics' costs in handling the tissue donations. "Nobody should be 'selling' tissue. That's just not the goal here," Nucatola says at one point.

The video, made covertly last year, was produced by the Irvine, California-based Center for Medical Progress, which released it with the support of several national anti-abortion organizations. It shows a lunchtime conversation between Nucatola and anti-abortion activists posing as potential buyers for a human biologics company.

Click to watch the full video

On Thursday, GOP Govs. Nathan Deal in Georgia and Mike Pence in Indiana and GOP Attorney General Mike DeWine in Ohio ordered probes of Planned Parenthood clinics. DeWine said he'll investigate whether Planned Parenthood may have violated its nonprofit status and made money from the sale of fetal organs.

But in a video, Richards describes as "outrageous" the claims that Planned Parenthood clinics were breaking the law by selling fetal tissue for profit. "Our donation programs - like any other high-quality health care providers - follow all laws and ethical guidelines," she said.

However, she said some of Nucatola's remarks heard on the undercover video did not reflect Planned Parenthood's commitment to "compassionate care."

"This is unacceptable, and I personally apologize for the staff member's tone and statements," Richards said. "If there is any aspect of our work that can be strengthened, we want to know about it, and we take swift action to address it."

In Congress, House Speaker John Boehner said Planned Parenthood has embraced "gruesome practices" and he voiced skepticism at the suggestion that its procedures were legitimate.

"If you saw the video, it certainly didn't strike me that way," he said. "I could talk about the video, but I think I'd vomit ... It's disgusting."

Two Democratic congressmen, Reps. John Conyers of Michigan and Steve Cohen of Tennessee, criticized the launching of congressional investigations.

"House Leadership is using a sensationalist and heavily edited video as an opportunity to attack one of the nation's leading providers of high-quality health care for women," they said in a joint statement.

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