Porterville Recorder

Activist behind Planned Parenthood video offered a probation plea deal

- By JUAN A. LOZANO

HOUSTON An anti-abortion activist’s plan to reject a plea deal offering probation for charges related to making undercover Planned Parenthood videos likely means his goal is to use a trial as a public platform to criticize the nonprofit, according to legal experts.

David Daleiden surrendere­d to authoritie­s, posted $3,000 bond and made two court appearance­s Thursday on the felony and misdemeano­r charges he faces before prosecutor­s offered him pretrial diversion, a form of probation that would keep him out of prison and ultimately have the charges dismissed.

But Terry Yates, one of Daleiden’s attorneys, said Daleiden isn’t interested in accepting the plea offer and is prepared to head to trial if he can’t quash the indictment.

“The only thing we’re going to accept right now is an apology,” he said.

The pretrial diversion, also offered to Daleiden’s co-defendant and fellow activist Sandra Merritt, is the “right thing to do” and a common offer for first-time nonviolent offenders, Harris County District Attorney’s Office spokesman Jeff Mcshan said. But he also said prosecutor­s are ready to proceed to trial and that “our case is strong.”

Attorneys for Merritt, who turned herself in Wednesday and was freed on $2,000 bond, have not indicated whether the 62-yearold would take the probation offer. One of them, Dan Cogdell, didn’t reply to phone calls seeking comment Thursday.

After his court appearance­s, Daleiden briefly spoke to about 30 cheering supporters who had gathered at a rally outside the courthouse in Houston, thanking them for their support and saying there will come a day “when there is no longer a price tag put on human life.” The 27-year-old, who’s described himself as a “citizen journalist,” also criticized Texas authoritie­s for not prosecutin­g Planned Parenthood.

The decision by Daleiden and his legal team to not accept the plea offer likely means the activist wants to use a trial to promote his cause, said Joel Androphy, a Houston defense attorney not connected to the case.

“If they take a plea, then their whole purpose of doing this goes down the tubes,” he said. “This is about a mission. The mission is to show Planned Parenthood did something wrong. Even though they are on trial, they are going to be prosecutin­g Planned Parenthood during their defense.”

Most defendants who are offered pretrial diversion would likely accept such an offer, said Melissa Hamilton, a visiting criminal law scholar at the University of Houston Law Center, “but the case here is a little different.”

“At least what the individual­s have been saying is they want this to be their new platform to battle the system,” she said.

Androphy said while Daleiden wants a trial, prosecutor­s probably want to settle the case as quickly as possible.

“This is a purely political issue and they don’t want to get involved in it, I’m sure,” he said.

Planned Parenthood spokesman Eric Ferrero said Thursday that “the wheels of justice have only begun to roll,” and that the group doesn’t “expect this to be the last time these extremists are booked and fingerprin­ted.”

He also said Planned Parenthood hopes other law enforcemen­t agencies pursue charges as well.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY BOB LEVEY ?? David Daleiden, center, one of the two anti-abortion activists indicted last week, addresses the media with attorneys Jared Woodfill, left, and Terry Yates after turning himself in to authoritie­s on Thursday in Houston.
AP PHOTO BY BOB LEVEY David Daleiden, center, one of the two anti-abortion activists indicted last week, addresses the media with attorneys Jared Woodfill, left, and Terry Yates after turning himself in to authoritie­s on Thursday in Houston.

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