An unlicensed doctor fled out the back the
night the FBI raided a Philadelphia medical clinic in 2010, a witness testified
Thursday as a murder trial centered on the unorthodox facility.
Kermit Gosnell |
Abortion provider Kermit Gosnell, 72, is charged with
killing a woman patient and seven babies allegedly born alive, and with
performing illegal, late-term abortions at his thriving inner-city clinic.
Co-defendant Eileen O’Neill, 56, of Phoenixville, is charged with billing as a
doctor and participating in a corrupt organization.
Eight former employees have pleaded guilty, some to
third-degree murder, and have testified this month about bizarre, often-chaotic
practices at the clinic.
Ashley Baldwin spoke Thursday of starting there at age 15
through a high school training program, and soon assisting with abortions and
administering intravenous drugs. Baldwin, now 22, said she worked nearly
50-hour weeks, often well past midnight, when abortions were routinely
performed.
At least twice, she saw aborted babies move after the
procedure, only to have Gosnell explain that it an involuntary response. In one
case, she said, “the chest was moving.”
Her mother, Tina Baldwin, had started at the clinic in 2002,
referred by a business school where she had studied to be a medical assistant.
She mostly worked at the front desk, where her duties included giving patients
medicine to start their contractions.
She described O’Neill as a caring doctor who saw mostly
older patients for high blood pressure or diabetes. O’Neill kept her office
neat, in contrast to the rest of the clinic, Tina Baldwin said. So that’s where
Gosnell steered wealthy or white patients, she said. Gosnell also met with them
and administered their medications himself, she said.
Karnamaya Mongar (left) died while having an abortion
performed at Gosnell's Women's Medical Society
|
“Nine out of 10 times, if the patient was white ... he
didn’t want me to (administer the drugs), because he wanted to meet with them
himself,” she said.
Gosnell, who is black, would apologize to his mostly black
staff, but say “that’s the way it is,” Tina Baldwin testified.
Gosnell performed as many as 1,000 abortions a year,
charging from several hundred dollars for an early abortion to several thousand
for a three-day, late-term procedure. Prosecutors contend that he made millions
over the years, especially since he relied on untrained, low-paid staff.
Baldwin faces prison time after pleading guilty to
corruption of a minor, taking part in a corrupt organization and other charges.
She admits administering some of the medication to the patient who died of an
overdose. Yet she cooperated early on and wasn't charged with murder, unlike
other clinic workers who gave Karnamaya Mongar the medications in 2009.
The FBI raided the clinic in February 2010 to investigate
Gosnell’s distribution of painkillers. Tina Baldwin was at home that evening,
although her daughter was there. O’Neill called to say she had slipped out the
back door, leaving behind her purse and coat, because she was worried about not
having a license, Tina Baldwin testified.
She said O’Neill had routinely written prescriptions on a
pad pre-signed by Gosnell, even when Gosnell was not working to authorize it.
On cross-examination, as the defense tried to suggest otherwise, she
acknowledged Gosnell often stopped at the clinic on days off to feed his fish
or turtles.
She also said that O’Neill was trying to win back her
medical license, but Gosnell was stalling on his promise to help her. A
prosecutor asked if O’Neill nonetheless kept working there.
“We all kept working there,” she replied sadly.
The trial resumes Monday April 15 2013..
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