A Kentucky woman has been slapped with charges of fetal homicide after allegedly ordering abortion drugs online, taking them at home, and burying her “developed male infant” in a shallow backyard grave—exposing the deadly nature of unregulated mail-order abortions.
Melinda Spencer, 35, walked into United Clinic in Compton on December 31, confessing she’d self-aborted, prompting staff to alert cops, who searched her property and unearthed the baby’s remains exactly as she described.
While it’s unclear if the child was born alive, the grisly scene underscores the horrors of DIY abortions, especially with pills like mifepristone and misoprostol that fail spectacularly in later pregnancies, often leaving women traumatized and babies fighting for life.
Kentucky’s pro-life laws shield most unborn children from slaughter but carve out a bizarre exemption sparing women from penalties for undergoing illegal abortions—potentially torpedoing Spencer’s fetal homicide rap, alongside her abuse of a corpse and evidence tampering counts.
Critics blast this loophole as a glaring hypocrisy, letting moms off the hook while nailing providers, all amid a surge in at-home chemical abortions. This nightmare spotlights the abortion industry’s dark underbelly, where easy-access pills enable coercion, cover-ups, and carnage without oversight, turning “choice” into a lethal gamble for the most vulnerable. As Kentucky grapples with its own legal contradictions, pro-lifers demand ironclad protections to end the farce of treating fetuses as disposable one minute and homicide victims the next, saving lives before more backyards become unmarked tombs.














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