Convicted Philadelphia Abortion Doctor Kermit Gosnell Dies at 85 in State Custody
Kermit Gosnell, the Philadelphia abortion provider whose 2013 trial made national headlines, has died at age 85 while serving multiple life sentences for murdering three infants born alive in his West Philadelphia clinic and for related drug‑distribution crimes. A Pennsylvania Department of Corrections spokesperson said Gosnell died March 1 at a hospital outside the prison system; he had most recently been held at State Correctional Institution–Smithfield, about 60 miles south of Pittsburgh, and no cause of death was disclosed. Gosnell’s clinic, dubbed a “house of horrors” by investigators, was exposed during a 2010 probe into prescription‑drug trafficking that found fetuses and body parts stored in bags and jars, blood‑stained furniture, and filthy instruments, as former staff testified he routinely performed illegal late‑term abortions and “snipped” the spines of newborns who showed signs of life. Beyond the murder convictions, federal prosecutors said he ran a cash‑only pill‑mill operation, pleading guilty to conspiracy to distribute oxycodone, alprazolam and codeine and maintaining a premises for illegal drug distribution. His death closes the correctional chapter of a case that has continued to fuel national fights over abortion regulation, medical oversight and how long regulators and professional boards looked the other way.
📌 Key Facts
- Kermit Gosnell, 85, died March 1 at a hospital outside Pennsylvania’s prison system while serving multiple life sentences.
- He was convicted in 2013 of three counts of first‑degree murder for killing infants born alive at his West Philadelphia abortion clinic, along with other charges.
- Gosnell also pleaded guilty in federal court to conspiracy to distribute controlled substances and maintaining a place for the illegal distribution of drugs following evidence of a large‑scale pill‑mill operation.
📊 Relevant Data
In 2021, non-Hispanic Black women accounted for 42% of reported abortions in the US, while comprising about 14% of the female population aged 15-44, resulting in an abortion rate of approximately 28.6 per 1,000 Black women compared to 6.6 per 1,000 White women.
What the data says about abortion in the U.S. — Pew Research Center
West Philadelphia, where Gosnell's clinic was located, has a population that is 76.2% non-Hispanic Black, 17.1% non-Hispanic White, and 2.0% Hispanic or Latino according to recent census data.
West Philadelphia — Wikipedia
Reasons for abortions later in pregnancy include medical concerns such as fetal anomalies (21% of cases) or maternal health risks, as well as barriers like not recognizing the pregnancy earlier (38%), difficulty deciding (30%), locating a provider (20%), raising money (19%), and arranging travel (13%).
Questions and Answers on Late-Term Abortion — Lozier Institute
Black women experience abortion rates nearly four times higher than White women, a disparity persisting for decades and linked to higher unintended pregnancy rates from socioeconomic inequities and limited access to preventive care.
Perceiving and Addressing the Pervasive Racial Disparity in Abortion — PMC - NCBI
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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