30 Years of Lies
From Focus on the Family
By Tom Neven
January 2003Hoist by your own petard-an old literary
expression that means blown up by your own bomb. In 1973 the ACLU and feminist lawyers
dropped a bomb on American culture by asking the Supreme Court to legalize abortion on
demand. But the two women they used as pawns are now doing something explosive-trying to
take their cases back to the Court to have them overturned. And according to Rule 60 of
the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, theres nothing the pro-abortionists can do
about it.
Rule 60 states that Upon such terms as are just, a
motion can be made by a party and the judgment will be set aside. Basically, the
plaintiffs say they know things now that they didnt know before, such as the fact
that Roe V. Wade and its companion case, Doe v. Bolton, were based upon lies, the fact of
post-abortion trauma suffered by millions of women and the well-documented link between
abortion and breast cancer.
TAKEN ADVANTAGE OF
Norma McCorvey, the Jane Roe of Roe v. Wade, and Sandra Cano, the Mary Doe of Doe v.
Bolton, are now pro-life Christians. While McCorvey's case was about abortion, even though
she lied to her lawyers, Canos was not remotely associated with the gruesome
procedure.
In 1970 Cano was a homeless mother of three children who
had been taken away. Cano approached the local legal-aid office seeking custody of her
children and a divorce from her husband. What she received was something she never
requested: the legal right to abort her child.
Cano admits she was young, uneducated and naive. I
never wanted an abortion. I just wanted my children back, she says.
Her legal-aid attorney, Margie Pitts Hames, however, filed
the case under false pretenses. Cano says that either Hames forged her signature on the
affidavit, or she slipped it in among other papers Cano was told to sign for her divorce.
Cano never saw the affidavit that was filed with the Supreme Court, but she says
unequivocally, "the facts stated in the affidavit in Doe v. Bolton are not
true.
Before my court date, I was instructed not to say
anything and just be there, Cano says. This is the only time I ever made an
appearance in court before the Doe decision-and I never spoke a word.
The deception went further. Cano says that a TV interview
was basically faked. They set up the cameras facing my back, and then Margie did all
the talking like she was me. It wasnt even my voice.
Years later, when Cano tried to have her court records
unsealed, she was fought by, of all people, her former attorney, Hames. At first I
couldnt understand why; she knew it was me. But now I understand.
The affidavit said that she had applied for an abortion,
had been turned down and had therefore sued the state of Georgia. According to the
records, I had applied for an abortion through a panel of nine doctors and nurses at
[state-funded] Grady Memorial Hospital, she says. This is a lie. I contacted
the hospital and tried to get my records. At first they said they were there, but when my
attorney sent for them, the records disappeared, if they ever really existed.
In fact, Cano was against abortion. When told she had
"won" her court case, Cano says, It was like a whole bunch of bricks were
put on my shoulders, and it has been that way ever since. I never wanted an abortion.
Regardless of the worst state of misery or depression, it would never cross my mind to
take the life of a child.
ANOTHER PAWN
In 1969 Norma McCorvey was a self-described hippie and often unhappy. Id been
on the streets since I was 9 or 10, she says. I often told my mother, I
wish I could find the person who invented life. Id slap em. "
She was pregnant for the third time-the second time out of
wedlock- and looked into getting an abortion. The illegal abortion clinic she was referred
to was, in the mildest of terms, disgusting.
There was dried blood all over the floor and on the
side of this makeshift table, McCorvey says. There was a grip hanging from the
ceiling. I guess thats what the girls would hold on to. This was before they could
give them anesthesia. I saw the conditions of the place and went outside to get ill.
Eventually, McCorvey was recommended to two young women
fresh out of law school, Sarah Weddington and Linda Coffee. She lied to them, saying she
had been gang-raped.
They said, Well, you know, women have the right to
vote, McCorvey says. Im sitting there and thinking, well, I may
live part time in the streets and part time at my dads, but Im not stupid,
okay? They were treating me like I was stupid, and I resented that.
Then they said, Well, Norma, dont you
think women should have rights to their own reproductive organs? And Im going,
like, yeah. I wasnt real sure what they were talking about, but then you have to
understand that I stayed stoned a lot.
They told McCorvey that the case was only about Texas
abortion laws. (Ironically, because the case dragged out in the courts, McCorvey never got
an abortion. She gave up the baby for adoption.) When she found out that the case had gone
all the way to the Supreme Court and resulted in legalizing abortion in all 50 states, she
was stunned.
I sat in the dining room that night and just kept
rereading the newspaper story and drinking-drinking and thinking, she says. It
made me sad to know that my name, even though it was a pseudonym, would always be
connected to the death of children.
McCorvey got a straight razor and started cutting her
wrists a little at a time. That didnt work, so I went out and I got as many
pills as I could. I took all of them and chased it with a quart of Johnny Walker, thinking
I would die, and I wouldnt ever have to talk to Sarah Weddington or Linda Coffee
again. But that was not Gods plan for me.
SILENT NO MORE
Both women now are in a position to take away some of that shame, particularly since
McCorvey became a Christian in the mid-1990s and Cano two years ago. With the help of the
Texas Justice Foundation, they are asking the Supreme Court to rehear their cases. (The
Foundation is also representing Donna Santa Marie, a 16-year-old girl whose parents forced
her to get an abortion-after her father allegedly punched her in the stomach to try to
induce a miscarriage.)
Allan Parker, president of the Foundation, says, "they
were willing to listen to Norma the first time; they ought to be willing to listen to her
again.
He is launching a three-phased strategy called Operation
Outcry: Silent No More. We have filed a Friend of the Court brief on behalf of Norma
and Sandra, and thousands of women who have signed our Friend of the Court form, saying
they dont agree with Roe v. Wade. "
In Parkers second phase of litigation, he has sued
the Texas Department of Health for not adequately protecting womens health as it
relates to abortion. While this suit cant overturn Roe v. Wade, we want women
to be told, This is a human life that youre taking. You still have the choice
under Roe, but you may suffer severe psychological consequences. "
The third phase of Operation Outcry will be filing the
motion to reopen Roe v. Wade and Doe v . Bolton, based on the fact that false testimonies
were used in both. I believe that the Supreme Court will take and hear the
case, Parker says. Its a unique, historic opportunity in America where
two people who won landmark Supreme Court decisions want to go back. |