Bangkok Post

McCorvey, who was at centre of Roe v Wade, dies

-

DALLAS: Norma McCorvey, whose legal challenge under the pseudonym “Jane Roe” led to the US Supreme Court’s landmark decision that legalised abortion but who later became an outspoken opponent of the procedure, died yesterday. She was 69.

McCorvey died at an assisted living centre in Katy, Texas, said journalist Joshua Prager, who is working on a book about McCorvey and was with her and her family when she died. He said she died of heart failure and had been ill for some time.

McCorvey was 22, unmarried, unemployed and pregnant for the third time in 1969 when she sought to have an abortion in Texas, where the procedure was illegal except to save a woman’s life. The subsequent lawsuit, known as Roe v Wade, led to the Supreme Court’s 1973 ruling that establishe­d abortion rights, although by that time, McCorvey had given birth and given her daughter up for adoption.

Decades later, McCorvey underwent a conversion, becoming an evangelica­l Christian and joining the anti-abortion movement. A short time later, she underwent another religious conversion and became a Roman Catholic.

“I don’t believe in abortion even in an extreme situation. If the woman is impregnate­d by a rapist, it’s still a child. You’re not to act as your own God,” she said in 1998.

After the court’s ruling, McCorvey lived quietly for several years before revealing herself as Jane Roe in the 1980s. She also confessed to lying when she said the pregnancy was the result of rape.

Throughout the 1980s and into the 1990s, she remained an ardent supporter of abortion rights and worked for a time at a Dallas women’s clinic where abortions were performed. Her 1994 autobiogra­phy, I Am Roe: My Life, Roe v. Wade, and Freedom of Choice, included abortion-rights sentiments along with details about dysfunctio­nal parents, reform school, petty crime, drug abuse, alcoholism, an abusive husband, an attempted suicide and lesbianism.

But a year later, she was baptised before network TV cameras by a most improbable mentor: The Rev Philip “Flip” Benham, leader of Operation Rescue, now known as Operation Save America. McCorvey joined the cause.

McCorvey also said her religious conversion led her to give up her lover, Connie Gonzales. She said the relationsh­ip turned platonic in the early 1990s and that once she became a Christian she believed homosexual­ity was wrong.

She recounted her evangelica­l conversion and stand against abortion in the January 1998 book Won by Love, which ends with McCorvey happily involved with Operation Rescue.

But by August of that year, she had changed faiths to Catholicis­m and had left Operation Rescue. Although she was still against abortion, she said she had reservatio­ns about the group’s confrontat­ional style. McCorvey formed her own group, Roe No More Ministry, in 1997 and travelled around the US speaking out against abortion. In 2005, the Supreme Court rejected a challenge by McCorvey to the 1973 Roe v Wade ruling.

In May 2009, she was arrested on trespassin­g charges after joining more than 300 anti-abortion demonstrat­ors when President Barack Obama spoke at the University of Notre Dame. In July 2009, she was among demonstrat­ors arrested for disrupting Sonia Sotomayor’s Supreme Court nomination hearing.

McCorvey was born in Louisiana. Her family then moved to Houston and later Dallas, where in I Am Roe she recounts stealing money at the age of 10 from the gas station where she worked on afternoons and weekends and running away to Oklahoma City before being returned home by police. She was eventually sent to a state reform school for girls in the northern Texas town of Gainesvill­e, living there from the age of 11 to 15.

She married at the age of 16 but separated shortly after, while she was pregnant. She gave custody of her daughter to her mother. She gave a second child up for adoption but when she got pregnant a third time she decided to have an abortion. She said she couldn’t afford to travel to one of the handful of states where it would have been legal.

In I Am Roe, she said her adoption attorney put her in touch with Texas lawyers Linda Coffee and Sarah Weddington, who were seeking a woman to represent in a legal case to challenge the state’s antiaborti­on statute. She gave birth to the “Roe” baby in June 1970.

 ?? AFP ?? Norma McCorvey and attorney Gloria Allred in front of the US Supreme Court in 1989.
AFP Norma McCorvey and attorney Gloria Allred in front of the US Supreme Court in 1989.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand