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Kermit Gosnell trial: Judge tosses 3 murder charges against abortion doctor

Dr. Kermit Gosnell's defense attorney Jack McMahon walks to the Criminal Justice Center, Monday, March 18, 2013, in Philadelphia. Matt Rourke/AP Photo

 

PHILADELPHIA – Three of eight murder charges were thrown out Tuesday against a Philadelphia abortion provider whose clinic was called a “house of horrors,” apparently because the judge had not heard sufficient evidence from prosecutors that the three babies were viable, born alive and then killed.

Dr. Kermit Gosnell, 72, still faces the death penalty if convicted of first-degree murder in four remaining infant deaths. The judge also upheld murder charges in a patient’s overdose death.

Judge Jeffrey Minehart did not explain his reasoning for the split decision on the defence motion to acquit Gosnell after five weeks of prosecution testimony. Such requests are routine but rarely granted.

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Prosecutors have argued that the babies were viable and Gosnell and his staff cut them in the back of the neck to kill them. A nearly 300-page grand jury report released in 2011 described Gosnell’s clinic as a filthy, foul-smelling “house of horrors” that was overlooked by regulators.

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The defence questioned testimony from staffers who said they had seen babies move, cry or breathe. McMahon argued that each testified to seeing only a single movement or breath.

“There is not one piece – not one – of objective, scientific evidence that anyone was born alive,” McMahon said. “These are not the movements of a live child.”

The trial was set to resume Tuesday afternoon with defence witnesses for Gosnell’s co-defendant, Eileen O’Neill. She is charged with three counts of theft for practicing medicine without a license. Minehart dismissed six additional counts of that charge.

Gosnell must defend a third-degree murder charge for the 2009 overdose death of 41-year-old Karnamaya Mongar, a recent refugee from Bhutan to the U.S. who died after an abortion.

Assistant District Attorney Ed Cameron said the murder charge against Mongar it stemmed from the totality of the circumstances. They included the repeated medication dosages given by medical assistants; Gosnell’s absence during most of her visit; and the hour it took to open a locked side door and take her by stretcher to an ambulance.

Former staffers have testified that patients received heavy sedatives and painkillers from untrained workers while Gosnell was offsite, and were then left in waiting rooms, sometimes unattended, for hours before Gosnell arrived for the late-night surgeries.

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