Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Prosecutors Drop Charges Against Activists Behind Planned Parenthood Videos
Houston-area prosecutors dropped charges on Tuesday against two anti-abortion activists indicted for using illegal government identifications to secretly film a Texas Planned Parenthood facility, saying they could not adequately investigate the case. David Daleiden and Sandra Merritt were indicted by a grand jury in January and faced up to 20 years in prison after being charged with tampering with a governmental record. Harris County District Attorney Devon Anderson said in a statement her office was limited in what it can investigate under Texas law due to procedural matters with the grand jury process. (Herskovitz, 7/26)
鈥淭he grand jury took the investigation where the facts led it, however Texas law limits what can be investigated after a grand jury extension order is issued,鈥 District Attorney Devon Anderson said in a statement. 鈥淚n light of this and after careful research and review, this office dismissed the indictments.鈥 Anderson, a Republican who ran as a 鈥減roud, pro-life Texan mother of two鈥 during the 2014 election, supported the charges when they were handed down in January, stressing at the time that at the outset of the investigation, she stated that 鈥渨e must go where the evidence leads us.鈥 That didn鈥檛 sit well with many members of her party. (Graczyk, 7/26)
David Daleiden, one of the activists, said just hours after the ruling that he plans to release 鈥渕ore shocking and damning鈥 footage involving Planned Parenthood once a gag order is lifted in a civil case in California. Mr. Daleiden, 27 years old, and Sandra Merritt, 63, each faced a felony charge of tampering with government records for using fake California driver鈥檚 licenses to access a Planned Parenthood clinic. The charge carried a possible sentence of up to 20 years in prison. (Hobbs, 7/26)
Planned Parenthood had hailed the grand jury's actions as vindication of its vehement denials that its staff violated any laws. Tuesday鈥檚 dismissal of charges against the activists clears up a twist in Texas Republican鈥檚 ongoing fight against the women鈥檚 health organization, but Planned Parenthood officials said the charges were dismissed on a technicality and not because the activists are innocent. (Ura, 7/26)