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The Ohio Black Woman Criminalized For Miscarriage Tells Her Story

Brittany Watts says she's "grieving the loss of" her baby, as she fights for her freedom in court.

Brittany Watts was in her second trimester when tragedy struck. Alone in her bathroom, the 33-year-old miscarried her fetus over the toilet. Desperate and disoriented from a potentially life-threatening miscarriage, according to the Post, she scooped bits of the fetal tissue, blood, and other bodily fluids out of the toilet and deposited it outside her garage. She flushed what was left.

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She would eventually be admitted to the hospital, where, still connected to an IV, she would be questioned by police for over an hour. Weeks later, Watts was arrested and charged with felony abuse of a corpse for how she dealt with the remains of her non-viable fetus.

Watts told the Washington Post, which investigated her case that her โ€œlife was turned upside downโ€ when police decided to intervene.

โ€œI am grieving the loss of my baby,โ€ she told The Washington Post. โ€œI feel anger, frustration and, at times, shameful.โ€

According to the Washington Post, a nurse at the hospital called the authorities on Watts. That same nurse reportedly reassured her that everything would be alright as the police grilled her.

If sheโ€™s indicted by the Trumbull County grand jury investigating her case, Watts could face up to a year in prison as well as a hefty fine.

While Wattโ€™s case is extreme, itโ€™s not an isolated incident.

Over the last 16 years, Pregnancy Justice tracked nearly 1,400 cases of pregnancy criminalization. Most of the allegations centered around substance use during pregnancy, including Marijuana usage. Black Americans, particularly, are overrepresented in arrests for pregnancy criminalization, with the primary targets for arrest being poor white and poor Black Americans.

As the data suggests, this isnโ€™t a problem that arose after the Dobbs decision, but itโ€™s undeniably heightened the risks. โ€œThe policing and criminalizing of pregnant people is not new, but never before have we had such a comprehensive picture of the full scope of how theyโ€”especially those who are poor and living in the Southโ€”are losing their autonomy, their rights, and their freedoms because of police, prosecutorsโ€™ and politiciansโ€™ desire to control pregnancy,โ€ said Dorothy Roberts, professor at Penn Carey School of Law and author of โ€œKilling the Black Body,โ€ in a statement about the Pregnancy Justice data.

Watts is still in limbo as she awaits the results of the grand juryโ€™s investigation.

โ€œI pray that my story makes a difference and no other woman ever faces this reality,โ€ she told the Washington Post. โ€œHowever, if it comes to that, she has my support.โ€

Straight From The Root

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