from SLATE:
California Prisons Illegally Sterilizing Female Inmates as Recently as 2010

By Amanda Marcotte

Posted Monday, July 8, 2013, at 11:06 AM

Although it never got the kind of coverage that abortion rights did,
forced sterilization was another reproductive rights violation that
plagued women in the 20th century. The practice gradually disappeared
as the concept of reproductive autonomy took hold in our national
consciousness. Or we thought it did. But a new report from the Center
for Investigative Reporting suggests that as recently as 2010,
California prisons were coercing women into permanent sterilization by
skipping over protocols put in place to prevent such coercion.

In California, a health care committee is supposed to authorize
prisoner tubal litigations in order to prevent abuses, but from 2006
to 2010, 148 women were sterilized by doctors who just skipped that
step. CIR says there may be as many as 100 more cases dating back to
the 1990s.

CIR interviewed doctors who were involved in sterilizations in
California prisons, and comments from these doctors only raise
suspicion that they supported a system of bullying and frightening
women into agreeing to sterilizations they did not want. Dr. James
Heinrich is accused by at least one inmate of badgering her about
sterilization until she caved, and his comments about the money spent
by the state on these procedures are not very reassuring.

“Over a 10-year period, that isn’t a huge amount of money,” Heinrich
said, “compared to what you save in welfare paying for these unwanted
children—as they procreated more.”

"Unwanted" by whom? The women themselves or Heinrich? Christina
Cordero, who was sterilized by Heinrich, says she wished she hadn't
had the tubal litigation. So perhaps any child she might have
conceived would have been wanted.

Another doctor who worked for the California prison system was
recorded spouting right-wing urban legends about people who "want" to
be in prison for the supposedly great health care.

The top medical manager at Valley State Prison from 2005 to 2008
characterized the surgeries as an empowerment issue for female
inmates, providing them the same options as women on the outside. Daun
Martin, a licensed psychologist, also claimed that some pregnant
women, particularly those on drugs or who were homeless, would commit
crimes so they could return to prison for better health care.

“Do I criticize those women for manipulating the system because
they’re pregnant? Absolutely not,” Martin, 73, said. “But I don’t
think it should happen. And I’d like to find ways to decrease that.”

Any comment that implies that certain kinds of people don't yearn for
freedom should be viewed with suspicion, but especially under the
circumstances. After all, as CIR reports, U.S. District Judge Thelton
Henderson of the Northern District of California ruled in 2006 that
the health care system in the area prisons was so bad it constituted a
human rights violation. The claim that women are routinely trading in
their freedom and their families just to get access to such a shoddy
level of care is pretty hard to swallow.

Incarcerated women deserve to have access to contraception, of course,
and plenty of women are interested in long-term solutions. No one
denies this, but CIR's report shows how "access" can turn into
"coercion" very quickly when the women in question are marginalized or
imprisoned. The frustrating part is that California already has
fail-safes to make sure that line is not crossed, but the rules only
work if you actually bother to follow them.
-- 
Jim Devine /  "Reality is that which, when you stop believing in it,
doesn't go away." -- Philip K. Dick
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