Case Study Of Kenneth Edelin's Case

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Kenneth Edelin was a 35 year old third year medical resident at the Boston City Hospital. This hospital was known for many poor coming into it. This was also a place for research. By this time research was still being conducted on fetuses and embryos. When a patient came to the hospital for an abortion she also signed a waiver for them to test on her. They called her “Alice Roe” and she was only 17 years old but had the consent of her mother to proceed with the abortion.This patient was estimated by the supervisor over the residents, Hugh Holtrop, to be about twenty-two weeks pregnant but the other residents Enrique Giminez and Steve Teich disagreed. They estimated that she was about twenty-four weeks pregnant. Edlein was put in charge of doing the …show more content…

They also stated that there was no wanton or reckless act when he was preforming his procedure on Evonne. The case was closed on October 3, 1973 and after not being found guilty Edelin stated he found himself smiling again after two and half years. I do not think the Kenneth Edelin should have been charged with manslaughter. In the state of Massachusetts the law defines a fetus that has been born a baby. Birth is the key to making someone a person and an unborn fetus is not a person which would mean an unborn fetus would not considered manslaughter. After nine months until birth we call this a fetus but once a fetus is born we call this a baby. In our book it explains that a baby can be subject homicide charges unlike a fetus. When Edelin opened the body of Evonne to remove the fetus yes it was alive but it was still a fetus. Because this fetus had not been born yet it was still a fetus and this was still an abortion that was medically being done by a doctor. By law and by definition this fetus did not have any legal or ethical rights because it had not been born and was still inside of

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