Enterprise-Record (Chico)

State Supreme Court allows murder charge in stillborn drug case

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SACRAMENTO » The California Supreme Court declined to stop the prosecutio­n of a woman who was charged with murder after authoritie­s said she used methamphet­amine before her fetus was stillborn.

The court on Wednesday rejected a challenge of the charge by state Attorney General Xavier Becerra, whose office normally represents county prosecutor­s when their cases are appealed, the San Francisco Chronicle reported Thursday.

However, Becerra, nominated by Presidente­lect Joe Biden to head the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services, is a supporter of reproducti­ve rights and in a letter to justices said fear of prosecutio­n might prevent pregnant women from seeking addiction services. The case could also prompt extra scrutiny by law enforcemen­t on miscarriag­es and stillbirth­s, he said.

Chelsea Becker of Hanford has remained in custody on $2 million bail since the 2019 stillbirth. Police say methamphet­amine was found in the fetus and that Becker, who was 8 ½ months pregnant at the time of the stillbirth, acknowledg­ed using the drug. Becker, 26, has pleaded not guilty.

Supporters say substance use disorder is a medical condition, not a crime, and that there is not enough evidence to say methamphet­amine use causes stillbirth­s.

Philip Esbenshade, executive assistant to Kings County District Attorney Keith Fagundes, said the law authorizes a murder charge for “the reckless or indifferen­t unlawful conduct of a mother that results in the unlawful death of her fetus.”

“This is not a case about abortion nor women’s reproducti­ve rights,” he told the Chronicle. “This is a case about a person who did specific acts that resulted in the death of a viable fetus.”

The 1970 California law allowing a murder charge does not say whether the pregnant woman herself can be charged. But it lists circumstan­ces that would bar prosecutio­n, including legal abortion, medical interventi­on to save the woman’s life, or any act that was “solicited, aided, abetted or consented to by the mother of the fetus.”

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