[Politech] Ashcroft subpoena'd info on women with partial birth abortions [priv]

From: Declan McCullagh (declan@private)
Date: Wed Feb 11 2004 - 21:53:24 PST

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    Subject: FW: FYI - Ashcroft subpoenaed medical records
    Date: Wed, 11 Feb 2004 11:54:29 -0500
    From: [reliable source snipped]
    To: <declan@private>
    
    Someone forwarded this to me w/no source info.  Text references "Crain's
    sister publication Modern Healthcare," which I googled to verify the
    story exists.  It does.
    
    
    
    	Judge denies Ashcroft's request for patient medical records
    
    	By Mark Taylor
    	February 09, 2004
    
    	A move by U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft to subpoena the
    medical records of 40 patients who received so-called partial-birth
    abortions at Northwestern Memorial Hospital in Chicago was halted-at
    least temporarily-when a Chicago federal judge quashed the information
    request.
    
    	The ruling is the first in a series of subpoenas by the U.S.
    Justice Department seeking the medical records of patients from seven
    physicians and at least five hospitals, Crain's sister publication
    Modern Healthcare has learned. Besides Northwestern, Mr. Ashcroft is
    seeking patient records from University of Michigan Hospitals and Health
    Centers in Ann Arbor; Hahnemann University Hospital in Philadelphia,
    owned by Tenet Healthcare Corp.; Columbia Presbyterian Medical Center
    and Weill Cornell Medical Center of New York Presbyterian Hospital both
    of which are part of the New York-Presbyterian Healthcare System; and an
    unidentified San Francisco-area hospital.
    
    	In a 16-page decision, U.S. Chief District Judge Charles Kocoras
    denied the government's request to obtain patient medical records from
    Northwestern, citing the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability
    Act of 1996 (HIPAA) and Illinois' medical privacy law.
    
    	Northwestern received the subpoena in December, a month after
    obstetrician/gynecologist Cassing Hammond, a member of Northwestern's
    staff and medical school faculty, was served with subpoenas seeking his
    patient records. Hammond is one of seven doctors and three groups who
    has challenged the constitutionality of the Partial Birth Abortion Ban
    Act of 2003. The American Civil Liberties Union is representing the
    National Abortion Federation; Planned Parenthood and the Center for
    Reproductive Rights, which are all filing challenges to the law. A
    hearing for all of the challenges has been scheduled for March 29 in
    U.S. District Court in New York.
    
    	Dr. Hammond refused comment last week. His case is pending.
    
    	Sources at New York Presbyterian and Hahnemann who requested
    anonymity confirmed the subpoenas at those hospitals. The University of
    Michigan had not returned calls for comment at deadline.
    
    [...]
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