Last week, an Indiana woman filed a lawsuit alleging that an Illinois alumni, Gyn lost her late abortion and left her in harm forever.
Blaze News spoke with Jane Doe's attorney Richard Craig to learn more about the case and what Craig and his clients want to achieve through litigation.
DOE's D&E: “Bad Choice” has gotten worse
On April 1, 2023, Jane Deau entered an equity clinic in Champaign, Illinois, and sought an elective abortion. At that point, she was 22 weeks pregnant and was due to undergo procedures called expansion and evacuation.
On April 2nd, DOE returned to the clinic and had no problems the day before. Dr. Keith Rising Kindle and other members of the equity clinic staff continued the procedure and removed the fetus from the udinal uterus of the DOE using a “combination of 15 aspiration catheters and… sofa clamps under ultrasound guidance.” Litigation I said.
The Kindle then had to explain all the baby's body parts, called “conception products” on the patient's chart, to make sure there was nothing left in the woman's uterus. “The product of conception was visibly examined and proved to be complete,” said a note on the DOE produced by Kindle.
Medical staff performed abdominal musculoskeletal that revealed “half of a deceased preschool human being” still inside the uterus.
Only Kindle could have done that, Craig told Blaze News.
The first indication that something was grossly wrong was a serious convulsion. DOE called the clinic on April 3rd and sued “severe sympathetic” but was told to take ibuprofen or Tylenol. When she called back five hours later, she was still in pain, and now she has difficulty breathing and is experiencing “a lot of pressure” at the rear end, she was instructed to take laxatives, the lawsuit said.
The next day, when she took two laxatives that didn't lead to intestinal movement again, when she called again, the DOE was told to try the enemy and probably consider going to an emergency clinic or ER.
Thankfully, she took that advice and went to a community hospital south of Indianapolis. There, medical staff “execute abdominal musculoskeletal showing that half of the dead pre-made human was still inside her womb, the lawsuit said.
The baby's body was removed from the uterus of doe, and fragments of the “fetal skull” were similarly removed from her intestines, the lawsuit alleges. Her uterus also required treatment for perforation, which allegedly occurred during abortion.
Craig's explanation of abortion complications was even more frightening. Not yet “half” of the babies in Doe, the record is “nearly two-thirds,” he told Blaze News.
“The child still had a spine and upper torso.”
Due to a medical report from the hospital, Craig repeated that the Kindle was unable to “visibly examine” all the parts of the child's body following an abortion, and was found to be “complete” as stated on the DOE chart.
“There's no way he determined that everything was removed because he examined the uterus and couldn't miss it.”
Kindle did not respond to requests for comment from Blaze News.
Message left in Equity Clinic -Features LGBTQ+ flags on web pages and criticizes the term “late abortion” as “embarrassment” people“Women who had abortions in the late stages of pregnancy were not necessarily returned.
Aftermath of abortion
Doe recovered from a failed abortion, but she was clearly left permanently hurt. The lawsuit alleges that the case “inflictial and physical damages will affect her ability to carry and deliver the child throughout her life.”
Craig told Blaze News that Doe definitely suffered permanent physical damage from abortion and subsequent complications.
“It's unclear if she can provide except for the C section. It's unclear if she can deliver again,” he said.
“He just wanted to get her off the phone.”
Craig also condemned and explained the obviously dismissive treatment of DOE due to her ongoing emotional injury, he pointed out that Doe and Kindle had three days after surgery.
On April 5, 2023, Doe called Kindle and asked if the fetus was a boy or a girl. Kindle's suspected response was nothing more than “Carous.”
“It didn't happen to me to check. I don't know, and I'll never know,” Craig insisted, “I don't know, but I'll go back, I look, and I'll let you know if I find anything.”
“He basically gave her the answer just to get the phone down because he knew it wouldn't be able to know if it was a boy or a girl at that point. He should have levelled it with her,” he continued.
“He just wanted to get her off the phone.”
Kindle apparently didn't help when he spoke to the general surgeon in the Southern community hospital that he called out on April 5th. The surgeon wanted to inform Kindle about the patient's laparotomy and ask what happened during the abortion procedure.
Kindle “defends to answer questions, provide information, provide information about abortion procedures, or assert a lack of consent,” the lawsuit from the DOE stated.
Doe and Craig are not only unhappy with Kindle and his work performance both during and after Doe's abortion.
An unknown board certified OB/Gyn who performed surgical abortions of over 1,000 first and second predictions reviewed the case of DOE and determined that the uterine perforation caused “unable to properly examine the cooperative parts” and that “deviated from reasonable standard of care” by causing uterine perforation and “inability to properly examine the cooperative parts.”
According to a shining 2023 article, Chicago TribuneKindle supported and carried out abortion throughout the entire life of adults. He also boasted about the bedside etiquette of scary abortion patients.
“I hold their hands, I wipe out my tears and emotional support,” Kindle recalled to the Tribune.
“And for many of our patients, it's unprecedented to have men who meet that role. It sparked on me. I had to use their privileges and their place in the world, to show how this actually treats people and how we treat people.
“The only reason I went to medical school was to become an abortion provider.”
Until recently, Kindle was a clinical assistant professor of obstetrics and gynecology at the Wright State University Boonshoft School of Medicine in Dayton, Ohio, and an alumni/Gyn director of the school's women's clinic. In fact, he recently broke up with the university, so as of Thursday morning he is listed on the school's website among the Alumni/Gyn faculty “Leadership”.
Screenshots from Wright State University website
However, when I emailed Kindle at the Wright State address where Blaze News is listed, I received a reply saying, “As I heard, I submitted my resignation to Wright State.” The reply also provided his personal email address on Kindle and his email address associated with the Stock Clinic. Kindle did not respond to emails sent to those addresses.
Representatives from the Alumni/Gyn division of Boonesoft School of Medicine at Wright State University did not respond to requests for comment from Blaze News.
I'm looking for “justice”
When speaking to Blaze News, lawyer Richard Craig refused to ward off the moral elements of abortion or the moral elements of negligence in Jane Daw's procurement. In fact, that was one of the reasons why he decided to shut her real name out of the lawsuit and protect her from the online “vitriol.”
“She's a good guy… She made a bad choice,” Craig said of the abortion. “We all do that. We are all human.”
“I think she'll step up first and say, 'I made a bad choice.' ”
“Our society presents the abortion process in a very barren way.”
However, he approved that the DOE is still a victim in this case.
“She's a good person who made bad choices. She's done harm to the bad person who made intentional choices to do what he did,” he explained, referring to Kindle. “And when he was confronted with the knowledge that he had caused her real harm, he responded in a very calm and indifferent way.”
Many prolife supporters and groups agreed.
“This is far from healthcare. This is far from Plouman,” he wrote. CatholicVote.
“Is this something like “healthcare” that women can expect from Illinois? This mother and her baby deserve justice.” American Life Association Odgins Association.
The lawsuit accuses Kindle of failing to inspect the baby's body parts as requested by the protocol, and blames not dealing with uterine perforations in DOE, providing proper post-fuss care and providing overall carelessness and negligence. They are seeking an amount of $50,000 “over the jurisdiction minimum.”
“I want to achieve similarity in justice for my clients who were seriously injured due to this,” Craig told Blaze News.
Additionally, Craig hopes the lawsuit will warn other women, especially young women. Young women in particular are at serious risk for abortions like D&E Jane Doo and hope to consider appointing a fetus instead.
“Our society presents the abortion process in a very barren way, and in a way that doesn't entirely reflect it in itself… [much] The human body resists effort, Craig said. “That's not something that's easy to achieve.”
“I hope a lot of people will reflect on it. It's probably a better approach to sticking it out rather than taking this procedure.”
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