Yesterday (Monday), Thomas More Society attorneys filed a lawsuit to
compel disclosure of public records that indicate why a doctor in
Michigan was not punished for tossing aborted fetuses and patient
records in the trash. Robert Fleming, local counsel for the
Chicago-based Thomas More Society, filed the lawsuit on behalf of
Monica Migliorino Miller, Ph.D. and Citizens for a Pro-Life Society
(CPLS) in Ingram County Circuit Court.
Dr. Miller, president and director of CPLS, filed a Freedom of
Information Act (FOIA) request to learn the results of an investigation
of Dr. Alberto Hodari and his abortion clinic, the Women Care Clinic in
Lathrup Village, Mich. The investigation was brought on after CPLS
found patient medical and financial records as well as the remains of
aborted fetuses in trash containers outside the Women Care Clinic in
2008. Dr. Miller and CPLS then filed the complaint as well as evidence
of their discovery with the Bureau of Health Professionals and the
local police department. Dr. Miller's and CPLS' FOIA request was denied
earlier this year when they were told only that there was insufficient
evidence to "substantiate" their charges, without any explanation as to
why or how their evidence was deemed deficient.
"The Freedom of Information Act is meant to foster transparency and
openness in government, and this pro-life group and its leader, who
uncovered Dr. Hodari's despicable actions, have been left completely in
the dark," said Tom Brejcha, president and chief counsel of the Thomas
More Society. "The public has a right to know the details as to Dr.
Hodari's grievous and gruesome aberration from professional medical
norms and simple human decencies."
The Thomas More Society contends that the cited reason for Dr. Miller's
FOIA denial, "an unwarranted invasion of the individual's privacy," is
moot, as the medical and financial records found behind the Women Care
Clinic were already publicly disclosed and a gross violation of the
patients' rights and expectations of privacy. The Society also asks the
court to review the withheld records in chambers to redact or edit out
any personal identification or embarrassing details.
A copy of the complaint can be found here.