I was interested to read last month in the Daily
Telegraph that more than 750 GPs, surgeons and other doctors had kept their
jobs despite being found guilty of criminal offences.
Of the convictions, 184 were for dangerous driving, 330 for
drink-driving and four for driving under the influence of drugs.
But other convictions included perjury, forgery, fraud,
making threats to kill and violent disorder, including rioting. Also included were
one doctor who took indecent photographs of a child, two with convictions for
possessing child pornography, two for trafficking drugs and three for grievous
bodily harm.
There were 31 offences of assault, three of possessing
dangerous weapons, seven for soliciting prostitutes, a dozen for domestic
violence, and two of child cruelty or neglect.
The report predictably led to protest by patient advocacy
groups. Why was it, they asked, that doctors were able to keep their jobs after
criminal convictions when other professionals weren’t?
But what about doctors who habitually break the law without being investigated or prosecuted, let alone convicted?
In this connection I was interested to see another Telegraph
article in which the journalist related a conversation she had had with a
friend who was a GP.
The doctor had deliberately falsified an HSA1
abortion authorisation form saying that the patient qualified under ‘ground C’ - mental health - when she most clearly did not.
When the patient, a student, challenged her she explained
that there were no other options to tick to grant her an abortion and that the
reasons given on the form were the only legal grounds for abortion (as
established by the 1967 Abortion Act).
This not surprisingly left the
girl mystified and the GP feeling profoundly uneasy. She had clearly been
breaking the law for some time but had never been challenged about it before.
Ground C reads as
follows:
‘The pregnancy
has NOT exceeded its 24th week and that the continuance of the pregnancy would
involve risk, greater than if the pregnancy were terminated, of injury to the
physical or mental health of the pregnant woman.’
In practice 98% of all abortions in Britain (about 196,000 per year)
are authorised under Ground C and 99.96% of these are under mental health rather than physical health.
But in fact, according to a major review carried out by the Academy of Medical Royal Colleges in 2011, there is no evidence that the risk to mental health of continuing a pregnancy is ever greater than the risk of having an abortion.
So in other words these abortions
are technically
illegal. Furthermore doctors who knowingly or wilfully putting their
signatures to an HSA1 form in the way described are actually committing a form
of perjury (I explain this is much more detail here).
Under the Offences
Against the Person Act 1861 abortion is still a criminal offence carrying a
custodial life sentence, like murder. All the Abortion Act did was to make
abortion legal under certain restricted circumstances.
Under the Perjury Act
1911 falsifying an HSA1 form is a criminal offence which carries a
custodial sentence of up to two years, or a fine, or both.
What happens in practice is that both illegal abortion and
related perjury occur on an industrial scale in Britain.
But the police, prosecutors, the courts, parliament and the
medical profession do nothing about it.
Parliament, police and the courts have always deferred to doctors in this matter. There has been only one conviction for illegal abortion since 1967 in almost eight million cases and none, as far as I know, for perjury.
As a result, close to eight million preborn babies have had
their lives taken by doctors illegally.
As well as being illegal in probably 98% of cases in
Britain, abortion is also contrary to the Hippocratic Oath and was described
by the British Medical Association in 1947 as ‘the greatest crime’.
But now doctors are its authorisers and facilitators.
On 23 February 2012 the Chief Medical Officer wrote
to all abortion providers advising them about the importance of upholding
the law on abortion.
Last week, in answer to a parliamentary
question from David Burrowes MP, Health Minister Daniel Poulter said that
between 23 February 2012 and 31 December 2012 there were
153,335 abortions performed where the grounds involved a risk to the woman's
mental health (notice that the health minister has used wording which is
nowhere found in the Act itself).
So it appears that the CMO’s letter has made not a blind bit
of difference.
I wonder what will happen now?
I suspect, if the last 45 years is any indication, the
answer will be ‘not much’.
There is no one more innocent, more vulnerable and killed in
greater numbers in Britain than the preborn baby. That this is done largely
illegally and that no one with power does anything to stop it is one of the
greatest scandals and travesties of justice of our time.
It also makes doctors the largest group of unapprehended
criminals in the state.
The 750 doctors who are allowed to go on practising despite
having criminal convictions are a drop in the bucket in comparison.







