How The Missouri Cloning Initiative Will
Nullify Certain Abortion Laws
James S. Cole, Esq.*
The
so-called Missouri Stem Cell Research and Cures Initiative
would protect several types of wrongs, not just cloning. Some
of them may surprise people, because they are not advertised
by the Initiative’s proponents.
The Initiative
would create constitutional protection for abuses of the unborn that not even
the Supreme Court has forced down citizens’ throats. The Initiative
would protect at least the following activities that Missouri law now forbids,
if not more: (1) the use of tissue (stem cells) from aborted human embryos
for transplantation when an abortion is procured for that purpose, which is
now banned by sec. 188.036.2, RSMo.; (2) offering inducements to women for
procuring abortions of their unborn for the medical, scientific, experimental,
or therapeutic use of tissue (stem cells) of the unborn, now banned by
sec. 188.036.4, RSMo., and (3) using an unborn human who is aborted alive for
research and experimental purposes, which is now banned by sec. 188.037, RSMo. Here
we are speaking of humans created by fertilization, not by cloning. Treatment
of clones is a separate subject. “Spare” frozen embryos that
have been created by in-vitro fertilization (IVF) are the most probable victims,
if they are implanted into a woman to grow to a desired gestational age, then
aborted.
The Initiative does not say these things
in a straightforward way, of course. Cloners, like abortionists,
are becoming skilled in achieving what they want in the law
by indirect language. We begin by looking for a paramount
rule, one that would trump most or all other rules. In
the Initiative, one paramount rule is found in Section 7(i),
which would forbid any governmental action that would “prevent,
restrict, obstruct, or discourage any stem cell research or
stem cell therapies and cures,” unless the restriction
is found in federal law or in the Initiative itself. (The
rule is also found in similar words in Section 2(7) of the
Initiative.) As a result of this primary rule, if the
Initiative is adopted, then any time an activity could be called “stem
cell research” or “stem cell therapies and cures,” no
state law could be enforced that forbids, restricts, reduces,
or even merely discourages it.
Although the Initiative refers to federal laws governing stem
cell research and therapies, there are none unless federal
funds are sought. As the President’s Council on
Bioethics noted, “There is no federal regulation of research
on in vitro embryos when such research is privately funded
and supported.” Reproduction and Responsibility:
The Regulation of New Biotechnologies, Ch. 5, Conclusions (March
2004). Only state law applies in the absence of federal
funding.
Accordingly, the only restrictions on creating
embryos for “stem cell research” or “stem
cell therapies” will be those that are found in the Initiative
itself.
There are
two provisions in the Initiative that the cloners might assert
as restrictions on the abuse of embryos. First, they might quote Section 2(3), which
states in relevant part, “No stem cells may be taken from a human blastocyst
more than fourteen days after cell division begins . . . “ Here,
the trick is knowing what a “blastocyst” is. Under the definition
of the Initiative, a human is a “blastocyst” only until implantation. Initiative,
Section 6(1). Once a blastocyst implants, it is longer a blastocyst,
and at that point, Section 2(3) would no longer apply. Thus, Section
2(3) would offer no protection for unborn babies after implantation. Any
type of stem cell-related experiment could be done on an aborted or soon-to-be-aborted
baby.
Second,
the cloners may quote Section 2(2) of the Initiative, which
states in relevant part, “(2) No human blastocyst may be produced by fertilization solely
for the purpose of stem cell research.” Here, the trick lies in
the difference between “stem cell research” and “stem cell
therapies and cures,” as those phrases are used in the Initiative. The
phrases have particular meanings assigned by Sections 6(15) and 6(16), which
read in relevant part:
“(15) ‘Stem cell research’ means any scientific
or medical research involving stem cells.
“(16) ‘Stem
cell therapies and cures’ means any medical treatment
that involves or
otherwise derives from the use of stem cells . . . “
The key point here is that “stem cell research” is
a different thing from “stem cell therapies and cures.” Thus,
the language of Section 2(2), which prohibits the creation
of human beings by fertilization solely for the purpose of “stem
cell research,” does not create any restriction on the
creation of human beings for “stem cell therapies and
cures.” If the Initiative is approved by the voters,
then scientists can create humans by in vitro fertilization,
implant them in cooperative women for the desired period, and
then abort them for “stem cell therapies and cures.” Existing
Missouri laws that prohibit such a barbaric practice would
be rendered unconstitutional and void.
Think of it. A proposal is sold to
the public as a way to save lives, but the proposal guarantees
that human lives can be created by fertilization and then killed
for stem cells, and further guarantees immunity for doing the
killing and removal of such cells and tissues.
It
would be nothing but medical cannibalism to create and kill
one person to take stem cells to implant into another person. The
Initiative would nullify the Missouri abortion laws that now
protect against such a crime and would write medical cannibalism
into the constitution of Missouri.
*James S. Cole, J.D. Harvard Law School, is a practicing attorney
in St. Louis and serves as General Counsel for Missouri Right
to Life. The author gratefully acknowledges the suggestions
of David C. Drury, Esq., president of Missouri Lawyers for Life,
in regard to a draft of this article.