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Newsom grants posthumous pardon to woman who provided safe abortions in the 1930s and '40s

Governor Gavin Newsom granted posthumous pardon to Laura Miner, a courageous reproductive healthcare provider in California

This Friday, the governor Gavin Newsom granted posthumous pardon to Laura Miner, a courageous provider of reproductive health care in California from 1934 to 1948, who dedicated her career to providing safe and accessible elective abortions at a time when punitive restrictions forced women to seek abortions not regulated and often medically risky. 

Miner was respected in the medical community as a highly skilled practitioner and cared for patients in need. 

In 1949, Miner was convicted and sentenced to four years in prison for the felony abortion and abortion conspiracy.

 "In California, we will never go back to a time when women were forced to seek basic medical care in back rooms and underground clinics," Newsom said. 

Laura Miner's story is a powerful reminder of the generations of people who fought for reproductive freedom in this country and the risks so many Americans now face in a post-Roe world. Miner paid a price for taking a stand, and today we are taking a step to right this injustice and reaffirm California's commitment to upholding the hard-won progress of countless advocates and healthcare providers over decades."

For her part, the governor's wife, Jennifer Siebel Newsom, pointed out that this pardon is a reaffirmation of California's commitment to defend reproductive rights and protect those who seek or provide abortion services.

“As a woman and a mother, I am so grateful for Laura Miner's courage and dedication to providing women with safe reproductive care in the face of tremendous personal risk. Now, more than 70 years after Ms. Miner's wrongful conviction, we must harness her strength and determination as we fight to protect and ensure in America the basic right of a woman to make decisions about her own body and her future," he said.

For Senate President Pro Tempore, Toni G. Atkins, "Laura Miner was a hero ahead of her time who willingly gave up her own freedom to save countless women, women who risked everything to make their own health care decisions and, in a very basic sense, choose your own future.

In that sense, he stressed that "Laura's courage deserved to be praised, not processed, and I am grateful that we have evolved enough to be able to forgive her today. Laura's story of subversive care eerily portends what we may see when courts and parliaments across the country reverse our reproductive rights. We remember her and the generations of women who had no choice but to seek care in the shadows, as we continue the work to ensure that California is a beacon of reproductive justice and access for all."

It should be noted that after the annulment of Roe v. Wade, Governor Newsom, and the Legislature took action to advance reproductive freedom with new measures to further protect patients and providers from legal retaliation, assist women in other states seeking abortion services, and expand reproductive health, access to care and affordability.

In turn, legislative measures have been signed to ensure that pregnancy loss is not criminalized, safeguard the privacy of medical records, and prohibit law enforcement and corporations from cooperating with entities in other states regarding legal abortions. in California, among many other actions.

You may be interested in: Immigrant women in the US have the least access to prenatal care: study

Peninsula 360 Press
Peninsula 360 Presshttps://peninsula360press.com
Study of cross-cultural digital communication

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