Mo. Senate committee hears bill criminalizing pregnant drug use
JEFFERSON CITY — It’s hard to find a middle ground between those for and those against abortion rights in Missouri. But both have come together against a bill from Sen. Brad Lager, R-Savannah, heard by the Senate Judiciary Committee tonight.
Lager’s bill would criminalize illegal drug use during pregnancy. Detractors think this would lead to drug-using expectant mothers to avoid prenatal care or seek abortions rather than be caught with drugs in their systems.
Sen. Jack Goodman, R-Mt. Vernon, suggested a clause that would prevent prosecution if the woman was seeking treatment. Lager agreed, but bill opponent Sen. Jolie Justus, D-Kansas City, said she wasn’t sold.
Justus said the mechanism already in place — permanent removal of the child — is sufficient.
And many others testified against the bill.
“We sit here in a room of privilege, but there are those who live in dire circumstances that we are blessed not to understand,” said Colleen Coble of the Missouri Coalition Against Domestic and Sexual Violence.
To those the bill addresses, “the public policy means nothing,” Coble said. “What they know is, you go to the doctor, you go to jail.”
Representatives from the American Civil Liberties Union, Planned Parenthood and Missouri Catholic Conference also testified against the bill.
But Lager didn’t budge.
“I just believe strongly that this type of action and this type of behavior cannot be condoned,” he said.
The committee could vote on the bill as early as next week.



…………..Mr Lager, your opponents on this bill are correct. Your bill will do nothing else except to keep some pregnent women from seeing a doctor…….but I’ll bet that does not matter a hoot to you.
I’ll bet you campaigned on a “tough on crime” ticket, and that maintaining your political image is more important to you than is a pregnant women avoiding a doctor visit for fear of going to jail.