Coerced and silenced: A mother’s fight to challenge Minnesota’s abortion laws
Clara Munger, a plaintiff in the landmark case Women’s Life Care Center v. Ellison, is challenging the foundation of Minnesota’s abortion laws, claiming she was coerced into an abortion she did not want due to a lack of informed consent and proper counseling.
In this case, Munger and other mothers are bravely sharing their emotional and psychological scars from being coerced into abortions they never wanted.
“If anyone at Planned Parenthood, or the State of Minnesota, ever told [me] that the abortion was a murder punishable by life imprisonment, and that [my] signature operated to grant immunity from prosecution for such a murder, [I] never would have submitted to the abortion,” says Munger.
A young woman from Minnesota, Munger found herself in a difficult, emotionally charged situation when her boyfriend – the father of her child – pressured her into seeking an abortion. Despite her hesitance, she ultimately gave in to his demands.
According to the legal complaint filed by renowned pro-life attorney Harold Cassidy, Munger’s experience at the Planned Parenthood Minnesota, North Dakota, South Dakota (PPMNS/PPNCS) facility in Rochester only deepened her distress.
“There was no counseling, no discussion of alternatives,” the complaint states.
It continues: “Clara ruminates about the loss of her child, experiencing ‘an emptiness and hollowness’ with deep sadness, depression and anger. She finds it one of the greatest painful experiences in her life.”
Now, Munger is taking on the very system she believes failed her at the most critical moment of her life.
The case centers on the claim that neither the medical facility nor the state of Minnesota provided proper informed consent, which could have prevented Munger from going through with the abortion.