Foeticide Explained

Foeticide (British English), or feticide (North American English), is the act of killing a fetus, or causing a miscarriage.[1] Definitions differ between legal and medical applications, whereas in law, feticide frequently refers to a criminal offense,[2] in medicine the term generally refers to a part of an abortion procedure in which a provider intentionally induces fetal demise to avoid the chance of an unintended live birth, or as a standalone procedure in the case of selective reduction.[3]

Etymology

Foeticide derives from two constituent Latin roots. Foetus, meaning child, is an alternate form of fetus coming from the writings of Isidorus, who preferred oe due to its association with foveo "I cherish" as opposed to feo "I beget".[4] Foetus is compounded with the suffix -cide, from caedere, "to cut down, to kill." Also see homicide, genocide, infanticide, matricide, and regicide.

As a crime

Laws in the North America

Laws in the United States

In the U.S., most crimes of violence are covered by state law, not federal law. 38 states currently recognize the unborn child (the term usually used) or fetus as a homicide victim, and 29 of those states apply this principle throughout the period of pre-natal development.[5] These laws do not apply to legally induced abortions. Federal and state courts have consistently held that these laws do not contradict the U.S. Supreme Court's rulings on abortion.

In 2004, Congress enacted, and President Bush signed, the Unborn Victims of Violence Act, which recognizes the "child in utero" as a legal victim if he or she is injured or killed during the commission of any of the 68 existing federal crimes of violence. These crimes include some acts that are federal crimes no matter where they occur (e.g., certain acts of terrorism), crimes in federal jurisdictions, crimes within the military system, crimes involving certain federal officials, and other special cases. The law defines "child in utero" as "a member of the species Homo sapiens, at any stage of development, who is carried in the womb." This federal law (as well as many similar state laws, such as the one in California), does not require any proof that the person charged with the crime actually knew the woman was pregnant when the crime was committed.[6]

Of the 38[5] states that recognize fetal homicide, approximately two-thirds apply the principle throughout the period of pre-natal development, while one-third establish protection at some later stage, which varies from state to state. For example, California treats the killing of a fetus as homicide, but does not treat the killing of an embryo (prior to approximately eight weeks) as homicide, by construction of the California Supreme Court.[7] Some other states do not consider the killing of a fetus to be homicide until the fetus has reached quickening or viability.[8]

In states where the overturning of Roe v. Wade has resulted in the complete illegalization of abortion except to preserve the life of the carrier, such laws may be used to prosecute any such procedure resulting in fetal demise.[9]

Fetal homicide laws have also been used to prosecute women for recklessly causing stillbirths, such as in the cases of Rennie Gibbs, Bei Bei Shuai, and Purvi Patel. Gibbs was charged with murder in Mississippi in 2006 for having a stillborn daughter while addicted to cocaine. Gibbs is the first woman in Mississippi to be charged with murder relating to the loss of her unborn baby.[10] The judge in that case ruled that the charges be dismissed.[11] In 2011 Shuai was charged by Indiana authorities with murder and foeticide after her suicide attempt resulted in the death of the child she was pregnant with. Shuai's case was the first in the history of Indiana in which a woman was prosecuted for murder for a suicide attempt while pregnant.[12] In 2013 Shuai pleaded guilty to a misdemeanor charge of criminal recklessness and was released, having been sentenced to time served. In 2015 Purvi Patel became the first woman in the United States to be charged, convicted, and sentenced on a foeticide charge.[13] However, her conviction was later overturned, and she was resentenced to time served for a lesser charge.[14]

Laws in Canada

Feticide is not considered a crime in Canada, as the Revised Statutes of Canada does not define a fetus as a person until it has either (1) taken a breath, (2) had independent circulation, or (3) had its umbilical cord severed.[15] However, if the feticide occurs in the process of birth, it is a criminal offense.[16]

Laws in the Central America

Laws in Belize

In Belizean Law, Feticide is a crime, although the prosecution and exact legality of such a such an action is difficult to conclusively ascertain, as legal experts disagree on how the law, and its requirement for Mens rea should be applied.[17]

Laws in Costa Rica

In Costa Rican law, feticide exists as a crime, but it does not stand equivalent to homicide, nor does it result in similar penalties.[18]

Laws in El Salvador

In Salvadoran law, any act which results in the death of a fetus is heavily criminalized.[18] This has resulted in numerous women being charged and convicted for miscarriages, as was the case with Evelyn Beatriz Hernandez Cruz,[19] María Teres, and others.[20]

Laws in Guatemala

In Guatemalan law, anyone who, during "acts of violence" causes on abortion "when the pregnant state of the victim is evident" has committed what the law calls an unintended abortion, and faces penalties up of up to three years imprisonment.[21]

Laws in Honduras

In Honduran law, causing the death of a fetus where the mother is visibly pregnant is known legally as feticide.[18] [22]

Laws in Nicaragua

In Nicaraguan law, feticide is known legally as Reckless Abortion, and the law specifies that whoever causes "abortion through recklessness" is guilty of the offense and shall face six months to one year in prison.[23]

Laws in the Caribbean

Laws in Bahamas

In Bahaman Law, feticide is only a crime if fetal demise was the intent of the act (for example, if a perpetrator performed an abortion, or assaulted a pregnant person with the explicit intent of inducing a miscarriage).[24] In cases tried both recently and historically the murder of pregnant women, even when the women was obviously pregnant, resulted in no greater penalty for the destruction of the fetus.[25]

Laws in Jamaica

In Jamaican law, feticide is not a crime.[26] In recent history there have however been repeated calls for this to change.[27]

Laws in Haiti

In Haitian law, feticide is a crime.[18] Under Section 2, Article 262 of the Penal Code of Haiti, "Anyone who, by means of food, drink, medicine, violence or any other means, procures the abortion of a pregnant woman, whether she has consented to it or not, will be punished by imprisonment."[28]

Laws in The Dominican Republic

In Dominican law, feticide is a crime. Under Article 317 of the Criminal Code of the Dominican Republic, "Whoever, by means of food, medicines, medicines, probes, treatments or in any other way, causes or directly cooperates to cause the abortion of a pregnant woman, even if she consents to it, shall be punished with the penalty of minor imprisonment."[29]

Laws in St. Kitts and Nevis, Antigua and Barbuda, and Dominica

In the countries listed above, English Common Law remains the law of the land, and as such, feticide is prohibited by a combination of two acts, the first, the Offences Against the Person Act, makes feticide a crime, but only when the act that induced it was itself intended to "to procure... (a) miscarriage", defining the act as an abortion. The second act on the subject, the Infant Life (Preservation) Act further outlines a separate crime, child destruction, which occurs when a person with "intent to destroy the life of a child capable of being born alive" takes an action which, "causes a child to die before it has an existence independent of its mother". The act goes on to specify that any fetus which has gestated for 28 weeks or more is to be considered capable of being born alive.[30] [31] [32]

Laws in St. Lucia

In St. Lucia, feticide is only a crime if fetal demise was the intent of the act (for example, if a perpetrator performed an abortion, or assaulted a pregnant person with the explicit intent of inducing a miscarriage). The crime, known as "causing a termination of a pregnancy" occurs when someone causes the pregnant person to "be prematurely delivered of a child" but only if they also have "intent unlawfully to cause or hasten the death of the child"[33]

Laws in St. Vincent and the Grenadines

In St. Vincent and the Grenadines, feticide is only a crime if fetal demise was the intent of the act (for example, if a perpetrator performed an abortion, or assaulted a pregnant person with the explicit intent of inducing a miscarriage). The crime, which is known simply as abortion occurs when someone "unlawfully administers to her (a pregnant person), or causes her to take, any poison or other noxious thing, or uses any force of any kind, or uses any other means whatsoever" but only if they also have "intent to procure the miscarriage of a woman".[34]

Laws in Barbados

In Barbados, feticide is only a crime if fetal demise was the intent of the act (for example, if a perpetrator performed an abortion, or assaulted a pregnant person with the explicit intent of inducing a miscarriage) or, when the pregnant person "is about to be delivered of a child". The crime for intentionally inducing a miscarriage, which is known as "Administering drugs or using instruments to procure abortion" occurs when someone "with intent to procure the miscarriage of any woman,... unlawfully administers to her or causes to be taken by her any poison or other noxious thing or unlawfully uses any instrument or other means whatsoever". The crime for feticide where the pregnant person "is about to be delivered of a child", is defined as "Killing an unborn child" and occurs when a person "prevents the child from being born alive by any act or omission of such a nature that, if the child had been born alive and had then died, he would be deemed to have unlawfully killed the child"[35]

Laws in Grenada

In Grenada, feticide is only a crime if fetal demise was the intent of the act (for example, if a perpetrator performed an abortion, or assaulted a pregnant person with the explicit intent of inducing a miscarriage). The crime is known simply as causing abortion, and is committed when someone takes an action "causing a woman to be prematurely delivered of a child, with intent unlawfully to cause or hasten the death of the child."[36]

Laws in Trinidad and Tobago

In Trinidad and Tobago, feticide is only a crime if fetal demise was the intent of the act (for example, if a perpetrator performed an abortion, or assaulted a pregnant person with the explicit intent of inducing a miscarriage). The crime, which is known simply as abortion occurs when someone "unlawfully administers to her or causes to be taken by her any poison or other noxious thing, or unlawfully uses any instrument or other means whatsoever with the like intent" but only if they also have "intent to procure a miscarriage".[37]

Laws in Europe

Laws in the United Kingdom

See main article: Child destruction. In English law, "child destruction" is the crime of killing a fetus "capable of being born alive", before it has "a separate existence".[38] The Crimes Act 1958 defined "capable of being born alive" as 28 weeks' gestation, later reduced to 24 weeks.[38] The 1990 Amendment to the Abortion Act 1967 means a medical practitioner cannot be guilty of the crime.[38]

The charge of child destruction is rare.[39] A woman who had an unsafe abortion while 7½ months pregnant was given a suspended sentence of 12 months in 2007;[40] the Crown Prosecution Service was unaware of any similar conviction.[39]

Laws in Asia

Laws in India

See main article: Female foeticide in India. In Indian Law, feticide is considered a form of "culpable homicide". Section 316 of the Indian Penal Code defines the crime as "an act (that) cause(s) the death of a quick unborn child", but only applies when it occurs as an effect of another crime which would cause death, such as the murder of the mother.[41]

In the case of sex-selective abortion, the Pre-Conception and Pre-Natal Diagnostic Techniques Act prohibits the act, although there is question as to the degree of enforcement, as the ratio of male to female live births continue to be misaligned with the international average.[42]

As a medical practice

In medical use, the word "foeticide" is used simply to mean the induction of fetal demise, either as a precursor to a further abortion procedure, or as a primary abortive method during selective reduction due to fetal abnormality or multiples. The Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists recommends foeticide be performed "before medical abortion after 21 weeks and 6 days of gestation to ensure that there is no risk of a live birth".[43] In abortions after 20 weeks, an injection of digoxin or potassium chloride into the fetal heart to stop the fetal heart can be used to achieve foeticide.[44] [45] [46] [47] [48] In the United States, the Supreme Court has ruled that a legal ban on intact dilation and extraction procedures does not apply if foeticide is completed before surgery starts.

Historically, a multitude of methods both mechanical and pharmaceutical were used to induce fetal demise. These included intrafetal injection with meperidine and xylocaine,[49] injection of lidocaine into the umbilical vain,[50] intracardiac calcium gluconate[51] or fibrin adhesive[52] injection, umbilical occlusion by way of alcohol or embucrilate gel injection,[53] umbilical cord ligation, intraarterial coil placement, and cardiac puncture.[54] These methods are rarely if ever used in modern practice, as both digoxin and potassium chloride have better, and more reliable outcomes.

Injecting potassium chloride into the heart of a fetus causes immediate asystole, but depending on the method used, digoxin may fail to induce fetal demise in some cases (up to 5% if injected into the fetus and up to a third if injected into the amniotic sac)[55] even though it is the preferred drug in many clinics. Digoxin is preferred because it is technically difficult to inject KCl into the heart or umbilical cord.[56]

The most common method of selective reduction—a procedure to reduce the number of fetuses in a multifetus pregnancy—is foeticide via a chemical injection into the selected fetus or fetuses. The reduction procedure is usually performed during the first trimester of pregnancy.[57] It often follows detection of a congenital defect in the selected fetus or fetuses, but can also reduce the risks of carrying more than three fetuses to term.[58]

See also

Notes and References

  1. http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/feticide Definitions of feticide from dictionary.com
  2. Web site: Hardy . Benjamin . 1999 . Crimes Against The Unborn Child . Connecticut General Assembly Office of Legal Research.
  3. Guilbaud . L. . Maurice . P. . Dhombres . F. . Maisonneuve . É. . Rigouzzo . A. . Darras . A. -M. . Jouannic . J. -M. . 2020-09-01 . Geste d'arrêtde vie fœtale : techniques pour les interruptions médicales de grossesse des deuxième et troisième trimestres . Gynécologie Obstétrique Fertilité & Sénologie . fr . 48 . 9 . 687–692 . 10.1016/j.gofs.2020.02.009 . 32092488 . 213657224 . 2468-7189. free .
  4. Boyd . J. D. . Hamilton . W. J. . Foetus—or Fetus? . British Medical Journal . 1967-02-18 . 1 . 5537 . 425 . 10.1136/bmj.1.5537.425 . 1841520 .
  5. https://www.ncsl.org/research/health/fetal-homicide-state-laws.aspx Fetal Homicide Laws
  6. Web site: What the California Fetal Homicide Law Does and Doesn't Cover. 5 June 2015.
  7. People v. Davis, 7 Cal.4th 797, 30 Cal.Rptr.2d 50, 872 P.2d 591 (Calif. 1994).
  8. Hedden, Andrew. When is the Death of a Fetus a Homicide? (Center for Homicide Research 2007).
  9. See, e.g., Women’s Medical Professional Corporation v. Taft (6th Cir. 2003).
  10. News: The Guardian . Outcry in America as pregnant women who lose babies face murder charges . June 24, 2011 . Ed . Pilkington.
  11. News: Fowler. Sarah. Judge dismisses Rennie Gibbs' depraved heart murder case. 31 August 2015. The Dispatch. April 3, 2014. The Commercial Dispatch Publishing Company. April 3, 2014.
  12. News: Pilkington. Ed. Indiana prosecutor accused of silencing Chinese woman on murder charge. 15 July 2012. The Guardian. 15 July 2012.
  13. Web site: NBC News . First woman in US sentenced for killing a fetus . Raleigh, Durham, Fayetteville . WNCN . 2015-03-31 . 2015-04-15 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20150415230601/http://www.wncn.com/story/28664509/first-woman-in-us-sentenced-for-killing-a-fetus . 2015-04-15 .
  14. Web site: Judge says Purvi Patel should be freed immediately after feticide conviction overturned. Associated Press. 2016-09-01. The Guardian. en. 2018-05-21.
  15. Web site: Branch . Legislative Services . 2022-12-15 . Consolidated federal laws of Canada, Criminal Code . 2023-01-27 . laws-lois.justice.gc.ca.
  16. Web site: Branch . Legislative Services . 2022-12-15 . Consolidated federal laws of Canada, Criminal Code . 2023-01-27 . laws-lois.justice.gc.ca.
  17. Web site: 2010-08-13 . Justice for pregnant woman stabbing? . 2023-01-27 . Amandala Newspaper . en-US.
  18. De Jesus . Ligia M . 2013 . Abortion In Latin America And The Caribbean: A Comparative Study Of Domestic Laws And Relevant Jurisprudence Following The Adoption Of The American Convention On Human Rights . ILSA Journal of International & Comparative Law . 20 . 1.
  19. A Teen Rape Victim in El Salvador Has Been Jailed 30 Years . 2023-01-27 . Time . en.
  20. Web site: 2014-12-16 . El Salvador Imprisons 17 Women Who Lost Their Newborns as Murderers . 2023-01-27 . Global Voices . en.
  21. Web site: Guatemala's Abortion Provisions . 2023-01-28 . Center for Reproductive Rights . en-US.
  22. Web site: Writer . Bridget Mire Staff . Larose resident sentenced to life in prison for woman's death . 2023-01-28 . The Courier . en-US.
  23. Web site: Nicaragua's Abortion Provisions . 2023-01-28 . Center for Reproductive Rights . en-US.
  24. Web site: BAHAMAS . 2023-01-28 . cyber.harvard.edu.
  25. Web site: Murder convict gets two life sentences Bahamas Local News . 2023-01-28 . www.bahamaslocal.com.
  26. Web site: 2013-10-14 . Pregnant female vs foetus rights . 2023-01-28 . jamaica-gleaner.com . en.
  27. Web site: 2014-10-31 . OCA head bats for foetal homicide law . 2023-01-28 . Jamaica Observer . en-US.
  28. Book: Code Penal Haiti En.
  29. Book: Penal Code of the Dominican Republic (EN).
  30. Web site: SAINT KITTS AND NEVIS . 2023-01-28 . cyber.harvard.edu.
  31. Web site: ANTIGUA . 2023-01-28 . cyber.harvard.edu.
  32. Web site: 28 January 2023 . Laws of Dominica: Offenses Against the Person Act .
  33. Web site: Saint Lucia - Access Government . 2023-01-28 . Saint Lucia - Access Government.
  34. Web site: 28 January 2023 . Chapter 171 - Criminal Code of Saint Vincent and the Grenadines . The Organization of American States.
  35. Web site: September 1994 . Barbados Offences Against The Person, 1994 - 18 .
  36. Web site: WIPO Lex . 2023-01-28 . www.wipo.int.
  37. Web site: December 2007 . Laws of Trinidad and Tobago: Offences Against The Person Act . Organization of American States.
  38. Book: Knight, Bernard . Lawyers guide to forensic medicine . . 1998 . 2nd . 70 . 1-85941-159-2.
  39. News: Child destruction: charge is rarely used . 27 May 2007 . . 2009-03-31.
  40. News: Jury convicts mother who destroyed foetus . Britten . Nick . 27 May 2007 . . 2009-03-31.
  41. Web site: 316 IPC Causing death of quick unborn child by act amounting to culpable homicide 316 Indian Penal Code 1860 . 2023-01-26 . www.lawdadi.in.
  42. Web site: Un-Natural Selection: Female Feticide in India The Public Health Advocate . 2023-01-26 . pha.berkeley.edu . 10 April 2021 . en-US.
  43. Web site: 3270 RCOG Abortion guideline.qxd . https://web.archive.org/web/20120529004416/http://www.rcog.org.uk/files/rcog-corp/Abortion%20guideline_web_1.pdf . dead . 2012-05-29 . 2014-02-23 .
  44. Vause . S . Sands . J . Johnston . TA . Russell . S . Rimmer . S . May 2002 . Could some fetocides be avoided by more prompt referral after diagnosis of fetal abnormality? . J Obstet Gynaecol . 22 . 3. 243–5 . 10.1080/01443610220130490 . 12521492 . 41055699 .
  45. Dommergues . M . Cahen . F . Garel . M . Mahieu-Caputo . D . Dumez . Y . 2003 . Feticide during second- and third-trimester termination of pregnancy: opinions of health care professionals . Fetal Diagn Ther . 18 . 2. 91–7 . 12576743 . 10.1159/000068068. 43211417 .
  46. Bhide . A . Sairam . S . Hollis . B . Thilaganathan . B . Sep 2002 . Comparison of feticide carried out by cordocentesis versus cardiac puncture . Ultrasound Obstet Gynecol . 20 . 3. 230–2 . 10.1046/j.1469-0705.2002.00797.x . 12230443 . 21824579 .
  47. Senat . MV . Fischer . C . Bernard . JP . Ville . Y . Mar 2003 . The use of lidocaine for fetocide in late termination of pregnancy . BJOG . 110 . 3. 296–300 . 12628271 . 10.1016/s1470-0328(02)02217-6. free .
  48. Gonzales v. Carhart, 550 U.S. ____ (2007). Findlaw.com. Retrieved 24 April 2007.
  49. Brandes . Joseph M. . Itskovitz . Joseph . Timor-Tritsch . Ilan E. . Drugan . Arie . Frydman . Rene . 1987-08-01 . Reduction of the number of embryos in a multiple pregnancy: quintuplet to triplet . Fertility and Sterility . en . 48 . 2 . 326–327 . 10.1016/S0015-0282(16)59366-2 . 3609345 . 0015-0282.
  50. Senat . M.V. . Fischer . C. . Bernard . J.P. . Ville . Y. . March 2003 . The use of lidocaine for fetocide in late termination of pregnancy . BJOG: An International Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology . en . 110 . 3 . 296–300 . 10.1046/j.1471-0528.2003.02217.x . 12628271 . 45900160 . 1470-0328.
  51. Antsaklis . Aris . Politis . John . Karagiannopoulos . Costas . Kaskarelis . Dionysios . Karababa . Photini . Panourgias . John . Boussiou . Marina . Loukopoulos . Dimitris . 1984 . Selective survival of only the healthy fetus following prenatal diagnosis of thalassaemia major in binovular twin gestation . Prenatal Diagnosis . en . 4 . 4 . 289–296 . 10.1002/pd.1970040408. 6483789 . 42413318 .
  52. Dumler . E. A. . Kolben . M. . Schneider . K. T. M. . 1996-03-01 . Intracardiac fibrin adhesive for selective fetocide in twin pregnancy: report of three cases: Selective fetocide . Ultrasound in Obstetrics and Gynecology . en . 7 . 3 . 213–215 . 10.1046/j.1469-0705.1996.07030213.x. 8705418 . 20665573 . free .
  53. Denbow . M.L. . Overton . T.G. . Duncan . K.R. . Cox . P.M. . Fisk . N.M. . 1999 . High failure rate of umbilical vessel occlusion by ultrasound-guided injection of absolute alcohol or enbucrilate gel . Prenatal Diagnosis. 19 . 6 . 527–532 . 10.1002/(sici)1097-0223(199906)19:6<527::aid-pd576>3.0.co;2-n . 10416967 . 9829503 . free .
  54. Åberg . Anders . Mitelman . Felix . Cantz . Michael . Gehler . Jürgen . Cardiac Puncture of Fetus with Hurler's Disease Avoiding Abortion of Unaffected Co-Twin . 1978-11-04 . The Lancet . English . 312 . 8097 . 990–991 . 10.1016/S0140-6736(78)92550-3 . 82009 . 46345247 . 0140-6736.
  55. Hammond. Cassing. Recent advances in second-trimester abortion: an evidence-based review. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology. April 2009. 200. 4. 347–356. 10.1016/j.ajog.2008.11.016. 31 October 2015. Furthermore, although intracardiac KCl elicits immediate fetal asystole, intrafetal digoxin may fail to effect demise in up to 5% of cases whereas intraamniotic digoxin may fail to cause demise in up to one third of cases.. 19318143.
  56. Book: Paul . Lichtenberg. Borgatta. Grimes. Stubblefield. Creinin. Management of Unintended and Abnormal Pregnancy: Comprehensive Abortion Care. 2011. John Wiley & Sons. 978-1444358476. 10 . First-trimester aspiration abortion. https://books.google.com/books?id=iK7xrRr2p9sC&q=intra-amniotic+or+intrafetal+digoxin&pg=RA1-PT334. Intra-amniotic or intrafetal digoxin is likely to be the procedure of choice in most settings, as funic or intracardiac KCl administration is technically much more difficult..
  57. Book: Komaroff, Anthony. Harvard Medical School Family Health Guide. registration. 913. Simon and Schuster. 1999. Selective reduction is usually performed during the first trimester.... 0-684-84703-5.
  58. See, e.g. Berkowitz. Richard. etal. 1993. First-Trimester Transabdominal Multifetal Pregnancy Reduction: A Report of Two Hundred Completed Cases. American Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology. 169. 1. 17–21. 10.1016/0002-9378(93)90124-2. 8333448. "All of the procedures were performed in the first trimester by the transabdominal injection of potassium chloride into the thoraces of those fetuses that underwent feticide."