General Court Cases
State v. Deborah Z.
228 Wis. 2d 468, 596 N.W. 2d 490 (1999)
Deborah Z. was charged with attempted murder and first-degree
reckless injury because she allegedly had attempted at the end of her
pregnancy to drink so much alcohol that the fetus would die. The baby was
born with a high blood alcohol level. The baby also appeared to have FAS.
The court held that a fetus was not a human being under state law
and dismissed the charges.
Sheriff, Washoe County, Nevada v.
Encoe
110 New. 1317, 885 P. 2d 596 (1994)
After a newborn child tested positive for amphetamines and
methamphetamines, the state filed a criminal complaint against the mother,
charging her with child endangerment. The Nevada Supreme Court held that
the state's law forbidding child endangerment did not apply to the
ingestion by a pregnant mother of illegal substances that are transmitted
to the fetus through the umbilical cord.
The court noted that in 1991 the Nevada legislature had rejected a
proposed bill that would have encouraged prosecution of women whose
children were born with FAS. The rejected bill read in part as follows:
"If the baby is suffering from congenital drug addiction or the
fetal alcohol syndrome, the local health officer of the county or city within
which the baby or the mother of the baby resides shall report the
condition to the district attorney for that county for evaluation of the
appropriateness of invoking protective services and custody pursuant to
chapter 432B of the N[evada] R[evised] S[statutes] and of prosecuting the
mother for child abuse or neglect.
The bill was opposed, inter alia, by the Chief of the state Bureau of
Alcohol and Drug Abuse and by the president of the Nevada Eagle
For[u?]m.
State v. Ross
1996 WL 208476 (Minn. Ct. App.)
Ross was convicted of murder in the death of her foster child,
DeJohn Speed. The child died from head trauma and numerous internal and
external injuries.
Ross argued that she was denied the effective assistance of
counsel because her attorney did not call a witness to testify that the
child had FAS. Although the argument is not entirely clear, it appears
Ross was claiming that FAS would have caused the child to injure himself.
The appellate court rejected this claim because there was not evidence
that any medical expert would actually testify the child had FAS. 1996 WL
208476 at *7.
See also State v. Ross, 1994 WL 750593 (Minn. Dist. Ct.),
holding that Ross would be allowed to adduce evidence that the child had
FAS.
State v. Sidwell
1997 WL 1340003 (Wash. App. Div. 1)
Sidwell was charged with a murder which occurred when he was 14.
The state juvenile court declined jurisdiction, which permitted the state
to prosecute Sidwell as an adult. Sidwell plead guilty, but challenged
the decision to decline jurisdiction.
One reason the juvenile court gave for declining jurisdiction was
that the state juvenile detention facility did not have any program for
treating FAS and FAE. 1997 WL 1340003 at *3. Sidwell objected that this
was an impermissible ground for waiving jurisdiction, asserting that it
violated the Americans With Disabilities Act. The appellate court
rejected this argument because Sidwell had provided no supporting legal
authority. 1997 WL 1340003 at *3 n. 9.
Sidwell had been evaluated two years before the murder by Dr.
Robin LaDue, a clinical psychologist. Both attorneys interviewed Dr.
LaDue, and the transcript of the interview was put in evidence. LaDue had
diagnosed Sidwell with FAS. LaDue concluded that Sidwell was "at a high
risk to reoffend, particularly without a high[ly] structured situation."
On the other hand, she believed that Sidwell "would not survive if he was
put in the adult [prison] situation given his poor social skills and
impulsive behavior and not understanding the consequences of his
behavior." 1997 WL 1340003 at *1.
This appears to represent the failure of the criminal justice
system to find an appropriate method of dealing with an individual with
FAS. Sidwell had been diagnosed with FAS at the age of 12. By the time
of the killing he had six prior misdemeanor convictions and two felony
convictions, including four assaults and one robbery. The killing appears
to have been an impulsive reaction to a fistfight before a dance.
In the Interest of Tawanya J.
193 Wis. 2d 639, 537 N.W. 2d 434, 1995 WL 146902 (Ct. App. 1995)
Tawanya had previously been placed under juvenile supervision, and
remanded to a juvenile facility. While at the facility, and still under
the age of 18, she assaulted a staff member. The local prosecutor sought
to have the juvenile court waive jurisdiction over Tawanya, so that she
could be prosecuted as an adult.
The lower court waived its jurisdiction, but the appellate court
reversed and directed that Tawanya continue to be treated as a juvenile
offender.
The court's summary of the case reveals considerable disagreement
about the sort of juvenile facility in which Tawanya should have been
placed. One of the evaluations concluded that she might have FAS, and
that that would account for her difficulty with impulsivity and
concentration. 1995 WL 146902 at *10.
Commonwealth v. Welch
864 S.W. 2d 280 (Ky. 1993)
Welch had used the illegal narcotic oxycodone during her
pregnancy. She was charged with criminal abuse because she had used the
drug during the pregnancy. The baby, although testing negative for
oxycodone, had allegedly suffered from "neonatal abstinence syndrome."
The question in the case was whether drug use during a pregnancy
could constitute a crime against the fetus. The Kentucky Supreme Court
held, over a dissent, that such drug use did not constitute a crime
against the fetus. This was an abortion-related dispute; underlying the
appeal was whether an unborn fetus should be treated as a human being.
The ACLU represented Welch.
The majority opinion argued that if what Welch did was a crime, it
would also be a crime to drink alcohol while pregnant.
"The mother was a drug addict. But, for that matter, she could
have been a pregnant alcoholic, causing fetal alcohol syndrome . . . The
Commonwealth replied that the General Assembly probably intended to draw
the line at conduct that qualifies as criminal . . . The Commonwealth's
approach would exclude alcohol abuse, however devastating to the baby in
the womb, unless the Commonwealth could prove an act of drunk driving; but
it is the mother's alcoholism, not the act of driving that causes the
fetal alcohol syndrome."
864 S.W. 2d at 283. Note that the majority incorrectly assumes that
only
alcoholics have children with FAS.
The dissent objected that this was a "false issue." "[T]his Court
has not business fretting, as has the majority, over whether a pregnant
woman could be prosecuted if she ingested alcohol." 864 S.W. 2d at 286.
It is unclear whether the dissenters thought that it was obvious that such
a woman could be prosecuted, or that it was obvious she could not.
The majority opinion quoted the preamble to a 1992 Kentucky
statute that contained the following passage:
"The General Assembly finds that a woman's ability to bear healthy
children is threatened by the consequences of alcoholism and drug abuse;
as many as ten percent (10%) of all births in the Commonwealth may be
affected by alcohol or drug abuse; drug and alcohol use during pregnancy
can result in low birthweight, physical deformities, mental retardation,
learning disabilities, and other health problems in newborn infants; fetal
alcohol syndrome is the leading identifiable cause of mental retardation
in the nation and the only one that is totally preventable; drug and
alcohol impaired individuals pose extraordinary societal costs in terms of
medical, educational, and support services needed throughout the
individual's lifetime. "
864 S.W. 2d at 285. (Emphasis omitted).
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