Gov.
Sam Brownback (Kansas) signed into law the historic Unborn Child Protection from Dismemberment Abortion Act (SB 95). It will go into effect July 1. Gov. Brownback commented, “This is a horrific
procedure and we are pleased to ban it in Kansas and we hope it will be banned
nationally.”
To
commemorate this ground-breaking and first-in-the-nation measure, Gov.
Brownback will travel across Kansas for ceremonial signings of the bill on
April 28.
The
Unborn Child Protection from
Dismemberment Abortion Act generated immediate grassroots support after
introduction in January by lead sponsor, Sen. Garrett Love (R-Montezuma), who
remarked, “In visiting with my constituents, many have been stunned that this
practice (dismemberment) is going on in Kansas and have demanded that it be
stopped.”
Records
released on April 1 by the Kansas Health & Environment Department show that
in 2014 this dilation & evacuation (D&E) method was used in 637-abortions,
or 8.8% of the total 7,263 Kansas abortions reported.
SB
95 bans a particularly gruesome abortion method in which a living unborn child
in her mother’s womb is ripped apart into pieces by an abortionist using sharp
metal tools.
Abortionist
LeRoy Carhart testified under oath that the unborn child is alive because he is
watching him/her on ultrasound during the procedure.
In
the words of U.S. Supreme Court (SCOTUS) Justice Anthony Kennedy, the unborn
child in a D&E/Dismemberment abortion, “dies just as a human adult or child
would: It bleeds to death as it is torn limb from limb.”
Testimony
provided by Kansans for Life
emphasized that the SCOTUS upheld a ban on the partial-birth method of abortion
in 2007 after two cases, Stenberg v
Carhart and Gonzales v Carhart. In both cases, the SCOTUS closely examined
both the partial-birth and D&E/ Dismemberment abortion methods and found
them to be “brutal.” The Court noted: “[It’s]
necessary at the outset to set forth what may happen during an abortion.”
...and, “States also have an interest in forbidding medical procedures which,
in the State’s reasonable determination, might cause the medical profession or
society as a whole to become insensitive, even disdainful, to life, including
life in the human fetus.” (Stenberg,
958 & 961)
On
March 25, the House overwhelmingly passed SB 95 by 98-26 after the Senate had
easily passed the measure, 31-9, on Feb 20.
Rev.
Dr. Kenneth L. Beale, Jr.
Chaplain
(Colonel-Ret), U.S. Army
Pastor, Ft. Snelling Memorial Chapel
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