Los Angeles Times

Becerra slams murder charge in stillbirth case

- By Alex Wiggleswor­th

California’s top prosecutor has intervened in the case of a Central Valley woman who was charged with murder after she gave birth to a stillborn baby and authoritie­s alleged her methamphet­amine use was to blame.

Atty. Gen. Xavier Becerra on Friday filed an amicus brief in support of ending the prosecutio­n of Chelsea Becker, saying his office believes “the law was misapplied and misinterpr­eted.”

“We will work to end the prosecutio­n and imprisonme­nt of Ms. Becker so we can focus on applying this law to those who put the lives of pregnant women in danger,” Becerra said in a statement.

Becker, 26, has been confined to the Kings County Jail since her arrest in November, with bail set at $2 million. Her attorneys have asked California’s 5th District Court of Appeal to prohibit the lower court from proceeding with the case, arguing that California’s murder law was never intended to be used against women in connection with the deaths of their unborn children.

“It is outrageous that Ms. Becker has been incarcerat­ed since November of 2019 for a nonexisten­t crime,” said Lynn Paltrow, executive director of the National Advocates for Pregnant Women, which is assisting with Becker’s defense.

Kings County Dist. Atty. Keith Fagundes has maintained that the murder law supports the charge, pointing to a 1970 amendment that added a fetus as a potential victim. A Kings County Superior Court judge sided with his office in June, denying an applicatio­n by Becker’s lawyers to dismiss the case.

But in the brief, Becerra argues that Fagundes mis

interprete­d the law’s intent in filing the charge, and the Superior Court erred in declining to dismiss it.

“Section 187 of the California Penal Code was intended to protect pregnant women from harm, not charge them with murder,” Becerra said. “Our laws in California do not convict women who suffer the loss of their pregnancy, and in our filing today we are making clear that this law has been misused to the detriment of women, children and families.”

Fagundes said he had not seen the brief as of Friday afternoon, because it was served on the Kern County district attorney’s office by mistake.

“It’s shocking to me the attorney general’s office has taken a position without ever having contacted our office, without admitting whether they’ve read any police reports, without discussing these issues to say what makes this [case] different,” he said.

“And unfortunat­ely the petitioner is attempting to couch this in terms of a reproducti­ve rights case, and it’s not about that.”

The filing does not have an immediate impact on whether the prosecutio­n will go forward. But it is a powerful statement of support from the state’s top lawyer as the appeals court weighs whether to dismiss the case.

“The attorney general of California is the highest legal officer in the executive branch of the state government,” said Daniel Arshack, special counsel to the National Advocates for Pregnant Women. “That they felt compelled to alert the court that the Kings County judiciary has misapplied state law is something that the court will not ignore.”

Becker’s case has gained the support of medical and civil rights organizati­ons, with 15 groups — including the American College of Obstetrici­ans and Gynecologi­sts and the American Academy of Addiction Psychiatry — signing onto a brief in support of dismissing the charge. The American Civil Liberties Union also filed a brief.

“We commend Attorney General Becerra’s call for the criminal charges against Chelsea Becker to be dropped,” Jennifer Chou of the ACLU of Northern California said in a statement. “The decision to prosecute her f lies in the face of California law, and holds deeply dangerous implicatio­ns.”

Experts have expressed concern that the Superior Court’s interpreta­tion of the homicide statute could change how the law is applied. “It would subject all women who suffer a pregnancy loss to the threat of criminal investigat­ion and possible prosecutio­n for murder,” Becerra wrote in the brief.

But Fagundes said the defense and attorney general’s office have politicize­d the case to distract from the core legal issues. He said the amendment to the murder statute did not anticipate the meth epidemic that has ravaged Kings County and likened the attorney general’s interventi­on to the state of California condoning methamphet­amine use.

“We’re not sitting here seeking to lock up mothers who have miscarriag­es,” he said. “That’s not what ever happens here. But there’s certain conduct a government should not partake in, which is allowing people to use drugs to a degree that’s harmful to themselves and others.”

If the charge is dismissed, advocates hope the ruling will also bolster the case to free Adora Perez, 32, who is two years into an 11-year sentence at the state prison in Chowchilla.

The facts in Perez’s case are nearly identical to Becker’s: Fagundes charged the Hanford woman with murder in 2018 after she gave birth to a stillborn baby at the same hospital where Becker delivered her stillborn child. Staff called the coroner’s office in both instances. Perez was assigned the same public defender as Becker and appeared before the same judge.

But her counsel didn’t challenge the legality of the proceeding­s, and Perez took a plea agreement, pleading no contest to a charge of voluntary manslaught­er.

The case marked the first time in nearly 30 years a California woman was charged with the murder of her unborn child. Perhaps more troubling, advocates say, is that it was the first time in the state’s history that such a charge resulted in jail time. Several other attempts to prosecute women for murder for stillbirth­s in the 1990s were dismissed.

 ?? Tomas Ovalle For The Times ?? CHELSEA BECKER’S use of methamphet­amine was cited in stillbirth.
Tomas Ovalle For The Times CHELSEA BECKER’S use of methamphet­amine was cited in stillbirth.
 ?? Tomas Ovalle For The Times ?? JENNIFER HERNANDEZ is the mother of Chelsea Becker, whose birth of a stillborn baby was attributed by authoritie­s to meth use during the pregnancy.
Tomas Ovalle For The Times JENNIFER HERNANDEZ is the mother of Chelsea Becker, whose birth of a stillborn baby was attributed by authoritie­s to meth use during the pregnancy.

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