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http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20050530&s=mcgarvey

Dr. Hager's Family Values
by AYELISH MCGARVEY

[from the May 30, 2005 issue of The Nation]

Late last October Dr. W. David Hager, a prominent
obstetrician-gynecologist and Bush Administration appointee to the
Advisory Committee for Reproductive Health Drugs in the Food and Drug
Administration (FDA), took to the pulpit as the featured speaker at a
morning service. He stood in the campus chapel at Asbury College, a small
evangelical Christian school nestled among picturesque horse farms in the
small town of Wilmore in Kentucky's bluegrass region. Hager is an Asburian
nabob; his elderly father is a past president of the college, and Hager
himself currently sits on his alma mater's board of trustees. Even the
school's administrative building, Hager Hall, bears the family name.

That day, a mostly friendly audience of 1,500 students and faculty packed
into the seats in front of him. With the autumn sunlight streaming through
the stained-glass windows, Hager opened his Bible to the Old Testament
Book of Ezekiel and looked out into the audience. "I want to share with
you some information about how...God has called me to stand in the gap,"
he declared. "Not only for others, but regarding ethical and moral issues
in our country."

For Hager, those moral and ethical issues all appear to revolve around
sex: In both his medical practice and his advisory role at the FDA, his
ardent evangelical piety anchors his staunch opposition to emergency
contraception, abortion and premarital sex. Through his six books--which
include such titles as Stress and the Woman's Body and As Jesus Cared for
Women, self-help tomes that interweave syrupy Christian spirituality with
paternalistic advice on women's health and relationships--he has
established himself as a leading conservative Christian voice on women's
health and sexuality.

And because of his warm relationship with the Bush Administration, Hager
has had the opportunity to see his ideas influence federal policy. In
December 2003 the FDA advisory committee of which he is a member was asked
to consider whether emergency contraception, known as Plan B, should be
made available over the counter. Over Hager's dissent, the committee voted
overwhelmingly to approve the change. But the FDA rejected its
recommendation, a highly unusual and controversial decision in which
Hager, The Nation has learned, played a key role. Hager's reappointment to
the committee, which does not require Congressional approval, is expected
this June, but Bush's nomination of Dr. Lester Crawford as FDA director
has been bogged down in controversy over the issue of emergency
contraception. Crawford was acting director throughout the Plan B debacle,
and Senate Democrats, led by Hillary Clinton and Patty Murray, are holding
up his nomination until the agency revisits its decision about going over
the counter with the pill.

When Hager's nomination to the FDA was announced in the fall of 2002, his
conservative Christian beliefs drew sharp criticism from Democrats and
prochoice groups. David Limbaugh, the lesser light in the Limbaugh family
and author of Persecution: How Liberals Are Waging Political War Against
Christianity, said the left had subjected Hager to an "anti-Christian
litmus test." Hager's valor in the face of this "religious profiling"
earned him the praise and lasting support of evangelical Christians,
including such luminaries as Charles Colson, Dr. James Dobson and Franklin
Graham, son of the Rev. Billy Graham.

Back at Asbury, Hager cast himself as a victim of religious persecution in
his sermon. "You see...there is a war going on in this country," he said
gravely. "And I'm not speaking about the war in Iraq. It's a war being
waged against Christians, particularly evangelical Christians. It wasn't
my scientific record that came under scrutiny [at the FDA]. It was my
faith.... By making myself available, God has used me to stand in the
breach.... Just as he has used me, he can use you."

Up on the dais, several men seated behind Hager nodded solemnly in
agreement. But out in the audience, Linda Carruth Davis--co-author with
Hager of Stress and the Woman's Body, and, more saliently, his former wife
of thirty-two years--was enraged. "It was the most disgusting thing I've
ever heard," she recalled months later, through clenched teeth.

According to Davis, Hager's public moralizing on sexual matters clashed
with his deplorable treatment of her during their marriage. Davis alleges
that between 1995 and their divorce in 2002, Hager repeatedly sodomized
her without her consent. Several sources on and off the record confirmed
that she had told them it was the sexual and emotional abuse within their
marriage that eventually forced her out. "I probably wouldn't have
objected so much, or felt it was so abusive if he had just wanted normal
[vaginal] sex all the time," she explained to me. "But it was the painful,
invasive, totally nonconsensual nature of the [anal] sex that was so
horrible."

Not once during the uproar over Hager's FDA appointment did any reporter
solicit the opinion of the woman now known as Linda Davis--she remarried
in November 2002 to James Davis, a Methodist minister, and relocated to
southern Georgia--on her husband's record, even though she contributed to
much of his self-help work in the Christian arena (she remains a religious
and political conservative). She intermittently thought of telling her
story but refrained, she says, out of respect for her adult children. It
was Hager's sermon at Asbury last October that finally changed her mind.
Davis was there to hear her middle son give a vocal performance; she was
prepared to hear her ex-husband inveigh against secular liberals, but she
was shocked to hear him speak about their divorce when he took to the
pulpit.

"In early 2002," Hager told the churchgoers that day, "my world fell
apart.... After thirty-two years of marriage, I was suddenly alone in a
new home that we had built as our dream home. Time spent 'doing God's
will' had kept me from spending the time I needed to nourish my marriage."
Hager noted with pride that in his darkest hour, Focus on the Family
estimated that 50 million people worldwide were praying for him.

Linda Davis quietly fumed in her chair. "He had the gall to stand under
the banner of holiness of the Lord and lie, by the sin of omission," she
told me. "It's what he didn't say--it's the impression he left."

David Hager is not the fringe character and fundamentalist faith healer
that some of his critics have made him out to be. In fact, he is a
well-credentialed doctor. In Kentucky Hager has long been recognized as a
leading Ob-Gyn at Lexington's Central Baptist Hospital and a faculty
member at the University of Kentucky's medical school. And in the 1990s
several magazines, including Modern Healthcare and Good Housekeeping,
counted him among the best doctors for women in the nation.

Yet while Hager doesn't advocate the substitution of conservative
Christianity for medicine, his religious ideology underlies an
all-encompassing paternalism in his approach to his women patients. "Even
though I was trained as a medical specialist," Hager explained in the
preface to As Jesus Cared for Women, "it wasn't until I began to see how
Jesus treated women that I understood how I, as a doctor, should treat
them." To underscore this revelation, Hager recounted case after case in
which he acted as confidant, spiritual adviser and even father figure to
his grateful patients. As laid out in his writings, Hager's worldview is
not informed by a sense of inherent equality between men and women.
Instead, men are expected to act as benevolent authority figures for the
women in their lives. (In one of his books, he refers to a man who raped
his wife as "selfish" and "sinful.") But to model gender relations on the
one Jesus had with his followers is to leave women dangerously exposed in
the event that the men in their lives don't meet the high standard set by
God Himself--trapped in a permanent state of dependence hoping to be
treated well.

In tandem with his medical career, Hager has been an aggressive advocate
for the political agenda of the Christian right. A member of Focus on the
Family's Physician Resource Council and the Christian Medical and Dental
Society, Hager assisted the Concerned Women for America in submitting a
"Citizen's Petition" to the FDA in August 2002 to halt distribution and
marketing of the abortion pill, RU-486. It was this record of conservative
activism that ignited a firestorm when the Bush Administration first
floated his name for chairman of the FDA's advisory committee in the fall
of 2002. In the end, the FDA found a way to dodge the controversy: It
issued a stealth announcement of Hager's appointment to the panel (to be
one of eleven members, not chairman) on Christmas Eve. Liberals were
furious that they weren't able to block his appointment. For many months
afterward, an outraged chain letter alerting women to the appointment of a
man with religious views "far outside the mainstream" snaked its way
around the Internet, lending the whole episode the air of urban legend.

Back in Lexington, where the couple continued to live, Linda Hager, as she
was still known at the time, was sinking into a deep depression, she says.
Though her marriage had been dead for nearly a decade, she could not see
her way clear to divorce; she had no money of her own and few marketable
skills. But life with David Hager had grown unbearable. As his public
profile increased, so did the tension in their home, which she says
periodically triggered episodes of abuse. "I would be asleep," she
recalls, "and since [the sodomy] was painful and threatening, I woke up.
Sometimes I acquiesced once he had started, just to make it go faster, and
sometimes I tried to push him off.... I would [confront] David later, and
he would say, 'You asked me to do that,' and I would say, 'No, I never
asked for it.'"

I first heard of Davis's experience in 2004 through a friend of hers.
After a few telephone conversations, she agreed to have me fly down to see
her in her modest parsonage in Georgia, to tell me her story on the
record. With her mod reading glasses, stylish bob and clever outfits,
Davis, 55, is a handsome woman with a sharp wit. She spoke with me over
two days in January.

Linda Davis (née Carruth) first met David Hager on the campus of Asbury
College in 1967. "On the very first date he sat me down and told me he was
going to marry me," Davis remembers. "I was so overwhelmed by this
aggressive approach of 'I see you and I want you' that I was completely
seduced by it."

Davis, a former beauty queen, was a disengaged student eager to get
married and start a family. A Hager-Carruth marriage promised prestige and
wealth for the couple; her father was a famous Methodist evangelist, and
his father was then president of Asbury. "On the surface, it just looked
so good," she remembers. The couple married in 1970, while Hager completed
medical school at the University of Kentucky.

"I don't think I was married even a full year before I realized that I had
made a horrible mistake," Davis says. By her account, Hager was demanding
and controlling, and the couple shared little emotional intimacy. "But,"
she says, "the people around me said, 'Well, you've made your bed, and now
you have to lie in it.'" So Davis commenced with family making and bore
three sons: Philip, in 1973; Neal, in 1977; and Jonathan, in 1979.

Sometime between the births of Neal and Jonathan, Hager embarked on an
affair with a Bible-study classmate who was a friend of Davis's. A close
friend of Davis's remembers her calling long distance when she found out:
"She was angry and distraught, like any woman with two children would be.
But she was committed to working it out."

Sex was always a source of conflict in the marriage. Though it wasn't
emotionally satisfying for her, Davis says she soon learned that sex could
"buy" peace with Hager after a long day of arguing, or insure his
forgiveness after she spent too much money. "Sex was coinage; it was a
commodity," she said. Sometimes Hager would blithely shift from vaginal to
anal sex. Davis protested. "He would say, 'Oh, I didn't mean to have anal
sex with you; I can't feel the difference,'" Davis recalls incredulously.
"And I would say, 'Well then, you're in the wrong business.'"

By the 1980s, according to Davis, Hager was pressuring her to let him
videotape and photograph them having sex. She consented, and eventually
she even let Hager pay her for sex that she wouldn't have otherwise
engaged in--for example, $2,000 for oral sex, "though that didn't happen
very often because I hated doing it so much. So though it was more
painful, I would let him sodomize me, and he would leave a check on the
dresser," Davis admitted to me with some embarrassment. This exchange took
place almost weekly for several years.

Money was an explosive issue in their household. Hager kept an iron grip
on the family purse strings. Initially the couple's single checking
account was in Hager's name only, which meant that Davis had to appeal to
her husband for cash, she says. Eventually he relented and opened a dual
account. Davis recalls that Hager would return home every evening and make
a beeline for his office to balance the checkbook, often angrily summoning
her to account for the money she'd spent that day. Brenda Bartella
Peterson, Davis's friend of twenty-five years and her neighbor at the
time, witnessed Hager berate his wife in their kitchen after one such
episode. For her part, Davis set out to subvert Hager's financial
dominance with profligate spending on credit cards opened in her own name.
"I was not willing to face reality about money," she admits. "I thought,
'Well, money can't buy happiness, but it buys the kind of misery you can
learn to live with.'"

These financial atmospherics undoubtedly figured into Linda's willingness
to accept payment for sex. But eventually her conscience caught up with
her. "Finally...I said, 'You know, David, this is like being a prostitute.
I just can't do this anymore; I don't think it's healthy for our
relationship,'" she recalls.

By 1995, according to Davis's account, Hager's treatment of his wife had
moved beyond morally reprehensible to potentially felonious. It was a
uniquely stressful year for Davis. Her mother, dying of cancer, had moved
in with the family and was in need of constant care. At the same time,
Davis was suffering from a seemingly inexplicable exhaustion during the
day. She began exhibiting a series of strange behaviors, like falling
asleep in such curious places as the mall and her closet. Occasionally she
would--as she describes it--"zone out" in midsentence in a conversation,
and her legs would buckle. Eventually, Davis was diagnosed as having
narcolepsy, a neurological disorder that affects the brain's ability to
regulate normal sleep-wake cycles.

For Davis, the diagnosis spelled relief, and a physician placed her on
several medications to attain "sleep hygiene," or a consistent sleep
pattern. But Davis says it was after the diagnosis that the period of the
most severe abuse began. For the next seven years Hager sodomized Davis
without her consent while she slept roughly once a month until their
divorce in 2002, she claims. "My sense is that he saw [my narcolepsy] as
an opportunity," Davis surmises. Sometimes she fought Hager off and he
would quit for a while, only to circle back later that same night; at
other times, "the most expedient thing was to try and somehow get it [over
with]. In order to keep any peace, I had to maintain the illusion of being
available to him." At still other moments, she says, she attempted to
avoid Hager's predatory advances in various ways--for example, by sleeping
in other rooms in the house, or by struggling to stay awake until Hager
was in a deep sleep himself. But, she says, nothing worked. One of Davis's
lifelong confidantes remembers when Davis first told her about the abuse.
"[Linda] was very angry and shaken," she recalled.

As Hager began fielding calls from the White House personnel office in
2001, the stress in the household--and, with it, the abuse--hit an
all-time high, according to Davis. She says she confronted her husband on
numerous occasions: "[I said to him,] 'Every time you do this, I hate your
guts. And it blows a bridge out between us that takes weeks, if not
months, to heal.'" She says that Hager would, in rare instances, admit
what he had done and apologize, but typically would deny it altogether.

For a while, fears of poverty, isolation and damnation were enough to keep
Davis from seeking a divorce. She says that she had never cheated on
Hager, but after reuniting with a high school sweetheart (not her current
husband) in the chaotic aftermath of September 11, she had a brief affair.
En route to their first, and only, rendezvous, she prayed aloud. "I said
to the Lord, 'All right. I do not want to die without having sex with
someone I love,'" she remembers. "'I want to know what that's like, Lord.
I know that it's a sin, and I know this is adultery. But I have to know
what it's like.'"

Davis was sure that God would strike her dead on her way home that
weekend. But when nothing happened, she took it as a good sign. Back in
Lexington, she walked through her front door and made a decision right
there on the spot. "I said, 'David, I want a divorce.'"

Marital rape is a foreign concept to many women with stories like this
one. Indeed, Linda Davis had never heard the term until midway through her
divorce. In Kentucky a person is guilty of rape in the first degree when
he engages in sexual intercourse with another person by "forcible
compulsion"; or when the victim is incapable of consent because she is
physically helpless. The same standards apply to the crime of sodomy in
the first degree (equivalent to rape, and distinct from consensual
sodomy). Both are felonies.

In sexual assault cases, the outcome hinges on the issue of consent. A
high-level domestic violence prosecutor in Kentucky confirmed that a
scenario such as this one, in which Davis was in a deep sleep from the
narcolepsy, could meet the "physically helpless" standard required for a
first-degree offense. A prosecutor could also argue that Hager engaged in
sodomy with Davis by means of forcible compulsion, even though the alleged
encounters did not involve violence. According to the Kentucky Supreme
Court's decision in 1992 in Yarnell v. Commonwealth, a climate of abuse
involving "constant emotional, verbal, and physical duress" is tantamount
to forcible compulsion. In that case, the victims submitted to the sex
acts to avoid a loss of financial security, as well as to maintain peace
in the household.

Historically, the legal system has long been indifferent to the crime of
marital sexual assault; as recently as twelve years ago in some states, it
was legal for a man to force his wife physically into sex, or commence
having sex without her consent--actions that could land a stranger in
jail. Until 2000 the Kentucky Penal Code still contained archaic
procedural obstacles for prosecuting marital rape, including a requirement
that it be reported within one year of the offense. (No other
felony--including "stranger rape"--contains a statute of limitations.)
Even today, marital sexual assault is a notoriously difficult crime to
prosecute. Women like Davis often have strong financial incentives to stay
with their spouses; those who speak out frequently face an uphill battle
to convince people that their husbands, who may be well liked and
respected, are capable of something this ugly at home. Also, because
marriages play out over many years, some sex is consensual, while other
sex is not--a fact that may complicate matters for a jury in a criminal
proceeding.

Linda Davis chose not to bring allegations of marital rape into her
divorce proceedings; her foremost desires at the time were a fair
settlement and minimal disruption for her sons. Nonetheless, she informed
her lawyer of the abuse. Natalie Wilson, a divorce attorney in Lexington,
asked Linda to draw up a working chronology of her marriage to Hager.
"[It] included references to what I would call the sexual abuse," Wilson
explained. "I had no reason not to believe her.... It was an explanation
for some of the things that went on in the marriage, and it explained her
reluctance to share that information with her sons--which had resulted in
her sons' being very angry about the fact that she was insisting on the
divorce."

As it turned out, when the dust settled after their divorce, nearly
everyone in the Hagers' Christian and medical circles in Lexington had
sided with Hager, who told people that his wife was mentally unstable and
had moved in with another man (she moved in with friends).

Davis had only told a handful of people about the abuse throughout her
marriage, but several of her longtime confidantes confirmed for this
article that she had told them of the abuse at the time it was occurring.
Wilson, the attorney, spoke to me on the record, as did Brenda Bartella
Peterson, Davis's close friend of twenty-five years. Several others close
to Davis spoke to me off the record. Two refused to speak to me and
denounced Davis for going public, but they did not contest her claims.
Many attempts to interview nearly a dozen of Hager's friends and
supporters in Lexington and around the country were unsuccessful.

As for David Hager, after repeated attempts to interview him for this
story, we finally spoke for nearly half an hour in early April. That
conversation was off the record. "My official comment is that I decline to
comment," he said.

As disturbing as they are on their own, Linda Davis's allegations take on
even more gravity in light of Hager's public role as a custodian of
women's health. Some may argue that this is just a personal matter between
a man and his former wife--a simple case of "he said, she said" with no
public implications. That might be so--if there were no allegations of
criminal conduct, if the alleged conduct did not bear any relevance to the
public responsibilities of the person in question, and if the allegations
themselves were not credible and independently corroborated. But given
that this case fails all of those tests, the public has a right to call on
Dr. David Hager to answer Linda Davis's charges before he is entrusted
with another term. After all, few women would knowingly choose a sexual
abuser as their gynecologist, and fewer still would likely be comfortable
with the idea of letting one serve as a federal adviser on women's health
issues.

(Lest inappropriate analogies be drawn between the Hager accusations and
the politics of personal destruction that nearly brought down the
presidency of Bill Clinton, it ought to be remembered that President
Clinton's sexual relationship with Monica Lewinsky was never alleged to be
criminal and did not affect his ability to fulfill his obligations to the
nation. This, of course, did not stop the religious right from calling for
his head. "The topic of private vs. public behavior has emerged as perhaps
the central moral issue raised by Bill Clinton's 'improper relationship,'"
wrote evangelist and Hager ally Franklin Graham at the time. "But the God
of the Bible says that what one does in private does matter. There needs
to be no clash between personal conduct and public appearance.")

Hager's FDA assignment is an object lesson in the potential influence of a
single appointment to a federal advisory committee that in turn affects
thousands, even millions, of lives. Witness the behind-the-scenes
machinations that set the stage for the FDA's ruling against Plan B, a
decision that the American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists
called a "dark stain on the reputation of an evidence-based agency like
the FDA."

On December 16, 2003, twenty-seven of the FDA's advisers on women's health
and nonprescription drugs gathered in Gaithersburg, Maryland, to evaluate
the safety and efficacy of emergency contraception for over-the-counter
use. (The Plan B pill, which drastically reduces the risk of pregnancy
when used within seventy-two hours after intercourse, has long been
available by prescription only; its advocates say its greater availability
could significantly reduce the nation's abortion rate.) After a long day
of highly technical deliberation, the advisers voted 23 to 4 to drop the
prescription-only status of emergency contraception. "I've been on this
committee...for almost four years, and I would take this to be the safest
product that we have seen brought before us," announced Dr. Julie Johnson,
a professor at the University of Florida's Colleges of Pharmacy and
Medicine.

But on May 6, 2004, the FDA rejected the advice of its own experts and
refused to approve the sale of Plan B over the counter. In his letter to
Barr Laboratories, Steven Galson, acting director of the FDA's Center for
Drug Evaluation and Research, claimed that Barr had not provided adequate
data showing just how young adolescent women would actually use the drug.

That issue was never voted on by the committee. It was, however, broached
by Hager at the meeting; he mentioned his concern for these "younger
adolescents" several times.

In his private practice back in Kentucky, Hager doesn't prescribe
emergency contraception, because he believes it is an abortifacient, and,
not surprisingly, his was one of the four votes against widening its
availability. But rather than voice his ethical opposition to the product,
Hager emphasized his concern about adolescents, which other committee
members have since called a "political fig leaf." According to Dr. James
Trussell, who voted in favor of Plan B, the FDA had at hand six studies
examining whether teens as young as 15 would increase their "risky"
behavior if they knew they had a backup emergency contraceptive--and none
of the studies showed any evidence for that contention.

In his sermon at Asbury College last fall, Hager proudly recounted his
role in the Plan B decision. "After two days of hearings," he said, "the
committees voted to approve this over-the-counter sale by 23 to 4. I was
asked to write a minority opinion that was sent to the commissioner of the
FDA.... Now the opinion I wrote was not from an evangelical Christian
perspective.... But I argued it from a scientific perspective, and God
took that information, and He used it through this minority report to
influence the decision." [Emphasis added.]

None of the four panel members I spoke with for this article were aware of
Hager's "minority opinion." An FDA spokeswoman told me that "the FDA did
not ask for a minority opinion from this advisory committee," though she
was unable to say whether any individual within the agency had requested
such a document from Hager. This past January the FDA missed a deadline to
respond to a new application from Barr Laboratories, and any forward
motion on making Plan B more widely available has completely stalled.

Meanwhile, David Hager's stock has been rising among conservatives. Though
his term on the FDA panel is set to expire on June 30, observers on both
sides of the political divide anticipate his reappointment. In March I
spoke with Janice Shaw Crouse, executive director and senior fellow at the
Beverly LaHaye Institute, the research arm of Concerned Women for America.
She is one of Hager's staunchest advocates in Washington (some credit her
with engineering his FDA appointment); Crouse sits alongside Hager on
Asbury College's board of trustees. In May, when informed of the
allegations against him, she declined to revise her earlier statement. "I
would not be at all surprised to see Dr. Hager elevated to a higher
position or to another very influential position when it comes to women's
care," she told me. "Because he has shown that he does care about women
regardless of...the [religious] issues that people want to try to
raise.... When people try to discredit him, he continues on. He hasn't
caved in, and he hasn't waffled. He has been a gentleman. He is a person
of character and integrity, and I think people admire that."

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