In his 1995 book, "....and the truth shall
set you free," Icke describes Planned Parenthood in the following terms on page
145:
Secrets of the Dead-Baby Industry
Aborted Fetuses Are Being Dissected
Alive, Harvested And Sold In Pieces To Fuel A Vast Research
Enterprise
The doctor walked into the lab and set a
steel pan on the table. "Got you some good specimens," he said. "Twins." The
technician looked down at a pair of perfectly formed 24-week-old fetuses moving
and gasping for air. Except for a few nicks from the surgical tongs that had
pulled them out, they seemed uninjured. "There's something wrong here," the
technician stammered. "They are moving. I don't do this. That's not in my
contract." She watched the doctor take a bottle of sterile water and fill the
pan until the water ran up over the babies' mouths and noses. Then she left the
room. "I would not watch those fetuses moving," she recalls. "That's when I
decided it was wrong."
The technician uses the pseudonym
"Kelly." She has her back to the camera, she wears a wig, and her voice is
electronically modified because she says she fears for her life. Until a few
months ago Kelly worked for a Maryland company called the Anatomic Gift
Foundation. Her job was to procure fetal tissue for research. She worked at a
Planned Parenthood clinic that was also a member of the National Abortion
Federation. Her interview appears on the May issue of "Life Talk" video
magazine-the first of a monthly series of videos released by Life Dynamics
Inc., a renegade pro-life group based in Denton, Texas, that admits to having
spies work in abortion clinics to uncover their most closely guarded
secrets.
On their video, Life Dynamics asks Kelly
if the abortionist at the clinic ever deliberately altered procedure to procure
tissue. "Yes," she replies. "All the limbs, the arms, the head, the chest
cavity were never invaded. They were all completely intact. Sometimes, the
fetus appeared to be dead, but when you'd open up the chest cavity you'd see
the heart beating."
Were women ever coerced into the
procedure? Kelly says that sometimes, before the final surgery, on the third
day "you could blatantly hear them in the halls saying they wanted to change
their minds." But they were sedated, in what Kelly calls a "Nyquil nap," which
made it difficult to protest. Sometimes the IV was turned up; in any case, the
woman always had the abortion.
Routinely, the women would go into labour
before the final surgery. "They were coming out alive," says Kelly. Aside from
the incident with the twins, she says, there were three to four live births in
a typical two-week period. "The doctor would either break the neck or take a
pair of tongs and basically beat the fetus until it was dead."
As incredible as Kelly's testimony seems,
other sources corroborate it. Eric Harrah worked in the abortion industry for
11 years, leaving it 18 months ago. He managed and owned or partially owned 26
American abortion clinics. Live births, he tells Life Dynamics, were the
industry's "dirty little secret." "It was always very disturbing, so the doctor
would try to conceal it from the rest of the staff," he says, but one incident
is hard for him to forget. The woman in question was 26 weeks pregnant. She had
laminaria inserted, signed paperwork agreeing not to call anyone but the clinic
if she went into labour, and was sent to a motel up the road to await her
procedure the next day. She was brought to the clinic in the middle of the
night, carrying her fetus in a white cotton hotel towel.
"I was in the scrub room when I saw the
towel move," says Mr. Harrah. "A nurse said, 'Eric, you're just tired. It's
three in the morning.' Then we both looked and a little baby's arm raised up
out of the towel and was moving like a newborn baby. I screamed and ran out.
The doctor came in and closed the door and when we went back in to process the
baby out of the clinic into the lab, [the baby] had a puncture wound in his
chest."