Bob Enyart Live News Story:
Pro-life activists meet with one of
Colorado’s Deputy Attorneys General,
Jason Dunn, and prosecutor Jeanne Smith
September 23, 2005
By Bob Enyart, Pastor Denver Bible Church

Pro-life activists met with one of Colorado’s Deputy Attorneys General, Jason Dunn, and
prosecutor Jeanne Smith to inform them of abortion industry violations state-wide of the
mandatory reporting law for suspicion of sexual activity with underage children.  Colorado’s law
does not empower the Attorney General’s office to investigate or prosecute local crimes.  
However, Colorado Right to Life vice president Leslie Hanks, sidewalk counselor Jo Scott, and
Denver Bible Church pastor Bob Enyart argued that this matter rose to the level of the Attorney
General’s office because of its multi-jurisdictional nature.  Also, the pro-lifers asked Dunn to
recommend that Attorney General John Suthers use the lawful authority he does possess to
issue a statement to make statewide local law enforcement aware that, because of apparent
violations of mandatory reporting, abortion clinics are systematically aiding those who commit
incest and rape against children in the cover-up of these crimes.

Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains operates facilities across the state from Ft.
Collins, through Denver and Colorado Springs, to Durango.  Longtime prosecutor Smith was
familiar with the frequent prosecutions throughout Colorado of sexual predators for crimes
against minors, but could not recall any examples of cases arising from abortion clinics
complying with Colorado’s mandatory reporting law.  Smith, and Deputy Attorney General Dunn,
stated that in preparation for this meeting they had discussed the possibility of multi-
jurisdictional issues.  The pro-lifers played recorded phone-call evidence, obtained by Life
Dynamics of Denton Texas, of Colorado abortion clinics telling a woman posing as a 13-year-old
to forget that you told us the 22-year-old age of the man who had impregnated her.  Both
lawyers indicated that such information seemed insufficient to prompt the AG to investigate.  
Enyart indicated the statistical evidence, since studies show that 60% to 80% of young teens
impregnated have been violated by adults, and many of those children are brought to abortion
clinics, and yet Colorado’s law requiring reporting from such workers who “suspect” is utterly
ignored.  The officials asked if the pro-lifers had direct evidence that any abortion organization
had centralized training procedures or policies specifically designed to evade the mandatory
reporting law, which the pro-lifers did not.  Leslie Hanks then said, “These are children’s lives
that are being ruined.  This seems so wrong, that you are telling us that, as citizens, Colorado’s
Attorney General’s office cannot look into the evidence, and that we, as citizens, are the ones
who would have to investigate.”

Aside from informing these officials of this concern, the September 16, 2005 meeting yielded
three action items.  The Deputy AG agreed to raise the matter with Suthers of the AG issuing a
statement to law enforcement; the Deputy agreed to inform the pro-lifers of the outcome of that
request; and it was agreed that both parties would gather further information and meet again,
possibly next month.

This report should not be understood to imply that abortion clinics would be less condemnable
if they reported rather than systematically ignored their suspicion of child rape.  Abortion
clinics murder unborn children.  And abortion is always wrong.  In this instance, our love and
concern for violated young teenagers who get brought to an abortion clinic, often by the very
adult who raped them, parallels our effort to save the life of each and every unborn child, and to
expose the wickedness of the abortion industry.

Originally published on www.KGOV.com.


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