Make wishtv.com your home page

Patient records found at shuttered Indiana abortion clinics

Officers from the Fort Wayne Police Department search the building that once housed an abortion clinic owned by Dr. Ulrich Klopfer on Thursday, Sept. 19, 2019, in Fort Wayne, Ind. After the doctor's death on Sept. 3, more than 2,000 medically preserved fetal remains were found in the garage of his home in rural Crete, Ill. (Eric Ginnard/The Herald-News via AP)

INDIANAPOLIS
(AP) — Investigators found thousands of abandoned medical records at
three shuttered Indiana abortion clinics that were operated by a late
doctor who took home more than 2,200 sets of fetal remains, Indiana’s
attorney general said Friday.

No fetal remains were found during
Thursday’s searches of Dr. Ulrich Klopfer’s former clinics and other
properties in Gary, South Bend and Fort Wayne, Attorney General Curtis
Hill said at a news conference. But he said thousands of patient medical
records were discovered, though he didn’t give an exact number.

Women
getting abortions have “a high degree of expectation of privacy and
confidentiality,” but the medical records found at Klopfer’s clinics,
which closed years ago, had simply been “abandoned” there, Hill said.

He
said his office hopes to determine why 2,246 sets of fetal remains from
abortions performed in 2000, 2001 and 2002 in Indiana ended up in the
garage of Klopfer’s home in Will County, Illinois. Klopfer died on Sept.
3 and his widow and her sister found the remains last week and alerted
the authorities.

Will County authorities said Thursday that the remains would be sent back to Indiana, and Hill said his office is coordinating their return.

He said preliminary findings indicate that all of the remains came from Klopfer’s three former Indiana clinics.

Hill said Klopfer had a record of maintaining “deplorable conditions” and violating regulatory controls at his clinics.

“He certainly was problematic in life and as it turns out he continues to present problems in his death,” he said.

Indiana’s
Medical Licensing Board suspended Klopfer’s medical license in 2016
after finding numerous violations, including a failure to ensure that
qualified staff were present when patients received or recovered from
medications given before and during abortions.

Although Klopfer is
dead, Hill said part of his office’s investigation will seek to
determine whether any other licensed professionals were aware that the
remains were moved from Indiana to his Illinois property, and if they
had a hand in moving them.

“That’s what we’re trying to determine —
how this happened, who was involved and what if anything we can do
about it. And going forward, what can we do to prevent these types of
things from happening in the future,” he said.

That investigation
is complicated by the fact that the abortions occurred nearly 20 years
ago and such uncertainties as when the fetal remains may have been moved
and what Indiana’s laws were at that point in time.

“This is a daunting task,” Hill said.

Previous coverage