Associate of Abortionist Steven
Brigham Loses Maryland Medical License
Part Three of FourBy Liz
Townsend
The Maryland Board of Physicians
announced December 2 that it permanently revoked the medical license of
George J. Shepard Jr., an abortionist who worked at the Maryland clinic of
Steven Chase Brigham. The board found Shepard "guilty of unprofessional
conduct and that he had practiced medicine with an unauthorized person,"
according to the Courier-Post.
Brigham, who did not have a Maryland
medical license, has been accused of operating a secret abortion clinic that
performed late abortions in a two-step process that took place in New Jersey
and Maryland, the Newark Star-Ledger reported. Shepard assisted Brigham in
the Maryland clinic two days a week, according to the Courier-Post.
Brigham had a medical license in New
Jersey, which was suspended in October and is currently being considered for
revocation by the state board of medical examiners, the Associated Press
(AP) reported. A complaint filed by New Jersey officials in September
detailed Brigham's abortion procedure. In a typical incident, a pregnant
woman went to Brigham's Voorhees, New Jersey, clinic, where he dilated her
cervix and "administered a drug that killed the fetus," according to the AP.
The woman was told to drive to Elkton, Maryland, the next day, where the
now-dead baby was dismembered and removed.
After the scheme was discovered,
investigators searched the Elkton clinic, "where a chest freezer held about
35 late-term fetuses," the Courier-Post reported. Maryland officials
suspended the licenses of Shepard and Utah abortionist Nicola Riley, who
also assisted at the clinic. The board decided October 28 to extend the
summary suspension of Riley's license, according to a document on the
board's web site. Riley now has the opportunity to request a full
evidentiary hearing before an administrative law judge.
The Maryland board's order to revoke
Shepard's license, dated November 18, details his involvement with Brigham
and the two-state abortion process. The board ruled that Shepard "practiced
with an unlicensed individual, Dr. Brigham, or aided an unlicensed
individual, Dr. Brigham, in the practice of medicine in Maryland."
It added, "This arrangement
potentially places patients at grave risk for harm or catastrophic
outcomes." Brigham's clinic, the board asserted, "poses a threat to the
public, to the patients who undergo procedures there, and to the profession
of medicine."
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Part
Four
Part One
Part Two |