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USA Female Inmates In California Prisons Sterilized Without Approval

Tejwant Singh

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Jun 30, 2004
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Female inmates sterilized in California prisons without approval
By Corey G. Johnson


Doctors under contract with the California Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation sterilized nearly 150 female inmates from 2006 to 2010 without required state approvals, the Center for Investigative Reporting has found.

At least 148 women received tubal ligations in violation of prison rules during those five years – and there are perhaps 100 more dating back to the late 1990s, according to state documents and interviews.

From 1997 to 2010, the state paid doctors $147,460 to perform the procedure, according to a database of contracted medical services for state prisoners.

The women were signed up for the surgery while they were pregnant and housed at either the California Institution for Women in Corona or Valley State Prison for Women in Chowchilla, which is now a men's prison.

Former inmates and prisoner advocates maintain that prison medical staff coerced the women, targeting those deemed likely to return to prison in the future.

Crystal Nguyen, a former Valley State Prison inmate who worked in the prison's infirmary during 2007, said she often overheard medical staff asking inmates who had served multiple prison terms to agree to be sterilized.

"I was like, 'Oh my God, that's not right,' " said Nguyen, 28. "Do they think they're animals, and they don't want them to breed anymore?"

One former Valley State inmate who gave birth to a son in October 2006 said the institution's OB-GYN, Dr. James Heinrich, repeatedly pressured her to agree to a tubal ligation.

"As soon as he found out that I had five kids, he suggested that I look into getting it done. The closer I got to my due date, the more he talked about it," said Christina Cordero, 34, who spent two years in prison for auto theft. "He made me feel like a bad mother if I didn't do it."

Cordero, released in 2008 and now living in Upland, agreed to the procedure. "Today," she said, "I wish I would have never had it done."

The allegations echo those made nearly a half-century ago, when forced sterilizations of prisoners, the mentally ill and the poor were commonplace in California. State lawmakers officially banned such practices in 1979.

In an interview with CIR, Heinrich said he provided an important service to poor women who faced health risks in future pregnancies because of past Caesarean sections. The 69-year-old Bay Area physician denied pressuring anyone and expressed surprise that local contract doctors had charged for the surgeries. He described the $147,460 total as minimal.

"Over a 10-year period, that isn't a huge amount of money," Heinrich said, "compared to what you save in welfare paying for these unwanted children – as they procreated more."

The top medical manager at Valley State Prison from 2005 to 2008 characterized the surgeries as an empowerment issue for female inmates, providing them the same options as women on the outside. Daun Martin, a licensed psychologist, also claimed that some pregnant women, particularly those on drugs or who were homeless, would commit crimes so they could return to prison for better health care.

"Do I criticize those women for manipulating the system because they're pregnant? Absolutely not," said Martin, 73. "But I don't think it should happen. And I'd like to find ways to decrease that."

Martin denied approving the surgeries, but at least 60 tubal ligations were done at Valley State while Martin was in charge, according to the state contracts database.

Federal and state laws ban inmate sterilizations if federal funds are used, reflecting concerns that prisoners might feel pressured to comply. California used state funds instead, but since 1994 the procedure has required approval from top medical officials in Sacramento on a case-by-case basis.

Yet no tubal ligation requests have come before the health care committee responsible for approving such restricted surgeries, said Dr. Ricki Barnett, who tracks medical services and costs for the California Prison Health Care Receivership Corp.

The receiver has overseen medical care in all 33 of the state's prisons since 2006, when U.S. District Judge Thelton Henderson ruled that the system's health care violated the constitutional ban on cruel and unusual punishment.

The receiver's office was aware that sterilizations were happening, records show.

In September 2008, the prisoner rights group Justice Now received a written response to questions about the treatment of pregnant inmates from Tim Rougeux, then the receiver's chief operating officer. The letter acknowledged that the two prisons offered sterilization surgery to women.

But nothing changed until 2010, after the Oakland-based organization filed a public records request and complained to the office of state Sen. Carol Liu, D-La Cañada Flintridge. Liu was the chairwoman of the Select Committee on Women and Children in the Criminal Justice System.

Prompted by a phone call from Liu's staff, Barnett said the receiver's top medical officer asked her to research the matter. After analyzing medical and cost records, Barnett met in 2010 with officials at both women's prisons and contract health professionals affiliated with nearby hospitals.

The 16-year-old restriction on tubal ligations seemed to be news to them, Barnett recalled. And, she said, none of the doctors thought they needed permission to perform the surgery on inmates.

"Everybody was operating on the fact that this was a perfectly reasonable thing to do," she said.

Martin, the Valley State Prison medical manager, said she and her staff had discovered the procedure was restricted five years earlier. Someone had complained about the sterilization of an inmate, Martin recalled. That prompted Martin to research the prison's medical rules.

Martin told CIR that she and Heinrich began to look for ways around the restrictions. Both believed the rules were unfair to women, she said.

"I'm sure that on a couple of occasions, (Heinrich) brought an issue to me saying, 'Mary Smith is having a medical emergency' kind of thing, "and we ought to have a tubal ligation. She's got six kids. Can we do it?'" Martin said. "And I said, 'Well, if you document it as a medical emergency, perhaps.' "

Heinrich said he offered tubal ligations only to pregnant inmates with a history of at least three C-sections. Additional pregnancies would be dangerous for these women, Heinrich said, because scar tissue inside the uterus could tear.

Former inmates tell a different story.

Michelle Anderson, who gave birth in December 2006 while at Valley State, said she'd had one prior C-section. Anderson, 44, repeatedly was asked to agree to be sterilized, she said, and was not told what risk factors led to the requests. She refused.

Nikki Montano also had had one C-section before she landed at Valley State in 2008, pregnant and battling drug addiction.

Montano, 42, was serving time after pleading guilty to burglary, forgery and receiving stolen property. The mother of seven children, she said neither Heinrich nor the medical staff told her why she needed a tubal ligation.

"I figured that's just what happens in prison – that that's the best kind of doctor you're going get," Montano said. "He never told me nothing about nothing."

Montano eagerly agreed to the surgery and said she still considers it a positive in her life.

Dr. Carolyn Sufrin, an OB-GYN at San Francisco General Hospital who teaches at UC San Francisco, said it is not common practice to offer tubal ligations to women who have had one C-section. She confirmed that having multiple C-sections increases the risk of complications, but even then, she said, it's more appropriate to offer women reversible means of birth control.

Lawsuits, a U.S. Supreme Court ruling and public outrage over eugenics and similar sterilization abuses in Alabama and New York spawned new requirements in the 1970s for doctors to fully inform patients.

Since then, it's been illegal to pressure anyone to be sterilized or ask for consent during labor or childbirth.

Yet Kimberly Jeffrey says she was pressured by a doctor while sedated and strapped to a surgical table for a C-section in 2010, during a stint at Valley State. She had failed a drug test while out on parole for a previous series of thefts.

Jeffrey, 43, was horrified, she said, and resisted.

"He said, 'So we're going to be doing this tubal ligation, right?' " Jeffrey said. "I'm like, 'Tubal ligation? What are you talking about? I don't want any procedure. I just want to have my baby.' I went into a straight panic."

Jeffrey provided copies of her official prison and hospital medical files to CIR. Those records show Jeffrey rejected a tubal ligation offer during a December 2009 prenatal checkup at Heinrich's office. A medical report from Jeffrey's C-section a month later noted that she again refused a tubal ligation request made after she arrived at Madera Community Hospital.

At no time did anyone explain to her any medical justifications for tubal ligation, Jeffrey said.

That experience still haunts Jeffrey, who lives in San Francisco with her 3-year-old son, Noel. She speaks to groups seeking to improve conditions for female prisoners and has lobbied legislators in Sacramento.

State prison officials "are the real repeat offenders," Jeffrey added. "They repeatedly offended me by denying me my right to dignity and humanity."

The independent, nonprofit Center for Investigative Reporting is the country's largest investigative reporting team. For more, visit www.cironline.org. The reporter can be reached at cjohnson@cironline.org.

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2013/07/07/5549696/female-inmates-sterilized-in-california.html#storylink=cpy
 

spnadmin

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Jun 17, 2004
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Tejwant ji

I read this very quickly, and possibly did not grasp all of the significant issues. The puzzling aspect of this is the lack of state approval.

In many controversial situations involving sterilization it is usually the "state" that imposes the sterilization on prisoners, the mentally disabled, those who are mentally ill, and generally incarcerated for long periods of time.

In this article the pressure appears to be coming from somewhere else... as opposed to "the state."

Doctors were paid by the state of California, in spite of the statement that the sterilizations were in violation of statutes. Women with multiple sentences were sterilized. Yet how does one get pregnant in prison without some collusion or mismanagement on the part of the prison guards?

There is also a mythology that sterilization of people who are confined in institutions is a way to control violence and acting out, because sex drives are believed to be reduced. That is not true, but people believe it anyway.

What, to you knowledge, was the purpose behind the sterilization agenda?
 

Tejwant Singh

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Jun 30, 2004
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Henderson, NV.
Spnadmin ji,

Guru fateh.

It is an interesting situation. The way I understand it is that our prison system is a kind of closed group mafia where they can make their own rules without any authorization. This may be more common in the female prisons where women are assaulted by the guards themselves and get pregnant.

In fact, following is an eye opener from a female prisoner:

"I am 7 months pregnant [and] I got pregnant here during a sexual assault. I have been sexually assaulted here numerous times! The jailers here are the ones doing it!"
– excerpt from a letter from an inmate in a jail in Alabama to Stop Prisoner Rape.
http://rhrealitycheck.org/article/2...ison-sexual-abuse-against-incarcerated-women/

As the original article indicates that
” Former inmates and prisoner advocates maintain that prison medical staff coerced the women, targeting those deemed likely to return to prison in the future.”
Secondly, these doctors were outside contractors which show some kind of money arrangement between the prison managers and the doctors.

This is just sterilization in the prison system. In India, during Indira Gandhi’s emergency rule, millions of women were sterilized and many vasectomies were done to men as a part of family planning with the help of her favourite prodigal son Sanjay Gandhi, her heir in waiting before he died in a plane crash. Mainly it was the women who were the victims.

The Government owned companies like the Railways who had their own infrastructures like the hospitals were instructed by the Central Government to have these procedures done to the employees. The doctors were given incentives if they met their quotas which included anesthesiologists, ob/gyns, and others related to the procedures. I know this because some members of my own family were those doctors.

Now, the question arises why women are more victims of this when men are responsible for the same as well. The article in NY Times on the Nov.7th 2003 gives us the glimpse of it.
When Kumari Pidse, a mite of a government health worker in Mangata, in Chattisgarh State, approaches a man about a vasectomy, the answer is always the same: ''Take my wife.''
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/07/world/for-sterilization-target-is-women.html

These are the fruits of the patriarchal society the world over.

The practice still continues, sad to say, and money is the driving force behind it.

Following in the article from last month in Bloomberg News:
“Sumati Devi knew before she arrived at the grimy government clinic in northern India that she would be paid to be sterilized.”
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-06-11/india-s-poorest-women-coerced-into-sterilization.html

Family planning is very important for the population control especially in the poor countries which include most of Africa, Asia, and Latin America. But for this to happen, we need collective efforts to educate the populi. For that to happen we need the help from the religious charities, in this case the Christian ones who are spread around the world to proselytize people. They have the manpower and the networks to do that but they refuse to educate people in this matter. It is against their beliefs to distribute birth control methods like condoms and pills, they claim, which include the mega churches like the Saddleback Church in Southern California whose pastor Rick Warren is very influential especially in Africa and also of course the Catholic Church.

In my opinion, if they cared an iota about the humanity that suffers especially the females who cannot plan their lives to forge ahead and be independent because of pregnancies, then only they would be able to claim themselves as men of God. These women would do anything to improve their lives rather than having these unwanted pregnancies. But sadly, these institutions only care to thump their Bibles. It has become the numbers game for them, not what is humane.

According to The Bill & Melinda Gates foundation,
“more than 220 million women in developing countries who don’t want to get pregnant lack access to effective methods of contraception and voluntary family planning information and services.”
http://www.gatesfoundation.org/What-We-Do/Global-Development/Family-Planning

They are investing millions to change this trend.

I apologise for getting off tracked but I felt compelled to share this information with the fellow members.

Thanks & regards

Tejwant Singh
 
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Luckysingh

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Dec 3, 2011
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Reading the above few posts have been an eye opener for me !
It's another topic that we don't give too much regards about until someone shouts about it.

When the term 'jail rape' is used, the first thing that comes to mind (thanks to media and movies) is a big heavy male raping another weaker male.
I never gave any thought of a female inmate getting raped by a male guard until reading this.

The doctors carrying out the sterilization procedures should be questioned on their protocols. The patient or inmate in this case has the perfect human right not to be forced into such procedure.
 
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