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Chicago Sun-Times, February 5, 2005
Destroyed embryo
deemed human
BY STEVE PATTERSON AND ABDON M. PALLASCH Staff
Reporters
A frozen embryo destroyed in a Chicago fertility
clinic was a human being whose parents are
entitled to file a wrongful-death lawsuit,
a Cook County judge ruled Friday.
Attorneys on both sides of the abortion issue
said it was the first such ruling they had
heard of as the country debates whether stem
cells derived from embryos can be used in research
and medicine.
Alison Miller and Todd Parrish hoped to conceive
a child with help from the Center for Human
Reproduction, but the one fertilized egg the
couple created was thrown out "in error"
by a clinic worker.
Friday, Judge Jeffrey Lawrence II said "a
pre-embryo is a 'human being' ... whether or
not it is implanted in its mother's womb"
and the couple is entitled to seek the same
compensation awarded to other parents whose
children are killed.
"Philosophers and theologians may debate,"
he wrote, "but there is no doubt in the
mind of the Illinois Legislature when life
begins. It begins at conception."
James Kopriva, attorney for the fertility clinic,
declined to comment, saying they were weighing
their options.
Colleen Connell, executive director of the American
Civil Liberties Union in Chicago, said she
expected the ruling would be overturned on
appeal.
"It may be groundbreaking, but it's the
wrong decision," Connell said, predicting
the ruling could chill doctors' interest in
reproductive medicine. "No appellate court
has ever declared a fertilized egg a human
being in a wrongful-death suit."
'Scary' implications
Northwestern University law professor Victor
Rosenblum, an abortion opponent, said he admired
the judge's ruling but expected that the appellate
and state Supreme Court would want to weigh
in. "This is the first case I've heard
of like this."
Pro-Life Action League director Joe Scheidler
praised the ruling. "That's scientifically
correct: Life begins at fertilization, not
implantation."
Northwestern University law professor Dorothy
Roberts said the ruling has "dangerous"
and "scary" implications for the
law.
Courts have upheld statutes that allow homicide
charges when fetuses are killed along with
their mothers but have not extended the same
legal status to unimplanted embryos, the experts
said.
James Costello, who represented the couple with
Paul McMahon, said the clinic worker's negligence
is now at issue, given the ruling.
"This couple was trying to have children,"
he said. "They had nine blastocysts, the
doctor said one looked great. So it was frozen
and they came back later to have it unfrozen,
when they were told, 'Whoops -- we made a clerical
mistake and threw it in the garbage.'"
The embryo "had a unique set of DNA"
not unlike a child "and was just thrown
out like a piece of garbage," he said.
The couple had sought fertility help in 2000.
Parts of their case were thrown out last year,
but the courts allowed them to request a new
hearing on the issue of a wrongful-death case.
While the state's definitions of when life begins
provided the basis for their case, they also
relied on a pair of memos from clinic chairman
Dr. Norbert Gleicher.
Gleicher says he was "extremely sorry"
for "this very obvious error" caused
by a "communication mix-up," finishing
with an "offer of a free [in vitro fertilization]
cycle as a gesture of goodwill on our part."
He said those responsible no longer work for
the clinic: One left to work for a different
Chicago fertility clinic, and another left
to spend more time with her children.
Connell and Roberts said the couple should be
able to sue for their loss, but under a tort
or breach-of-contract claim, not a wrongful-death
action.
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