- by foxnews
- 05 Apr 2025
Craig told Fox News Digital in an interview Thursday he's "never been presented" with a case like this.
"This is someone who performed an abortion that at 22 weeks of gestation - which at that point renders a two-day process - and then on the second day, when most of the work is done, at the culmination of his work, he entered a note, saying, these are his words, 'products of conception were visibly inspected and confirmed to be complete,'" Craig said. "That's his note. Well, clearly that didn't happen."
"When she presented to the emergency room two days later, they found what they described to be as a half of a pre-deceased fetus," Craig said. "And the films that are in the records actually suggests more like two-thirds. So, how could he say that he visibly inspected her?"
Doe, a mother of four, also alleged that Reisinger-Kindle refused to provide pertinent information to the attending surgeons without her consent.
The report also states that Reisinger-Kindle "failed to adequately examine the fetal parts" after the procedure. According to the lawsuit, there was a hole in the woman's uterus roughly the size of a large coin. The report notes that if Reisinger-Kindle "performed an adequate exam of the remains, it should have been obvious that fetal parts were left behind."
Craig - who said taking the case won't make him "any friends in Illinois" - also alleged Reisinger-Kindle didn't administer any pain-relief medication to the fetus, which would have stopped its heartbeat, prior to its dismemberment.
"The current laws would prevent me, for instance, from pursuing a claim against this doctor on behalf of the child for what had to be excruciating pain that the child underwent while he was being dismembered piece by piece, without any pain relief," Craig said. "And so those laws do, in fact, prevent me, or anybody from taking that position and seeking redress for that on the behalf of the child."
Fox News Digital has reached out to Reisinger-Kindle for comment but did not hear back by time of publication.
Proof of ancient olive trees and grapevines, consistent with a Bible verse, has been found at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, an archaeologist confirms.
read more