California Judge Dismisses Final Felony in Daleiden Planned Parenthood Video Case, Orders Expungement
A San Francisco County judge has dismissed the final remaining felony charge against undercover activist David Daleiden and ordered his yearslong criminal case expunged, formally ending a prosecution that began under then–California Attorney General Kamala Harris after his 2015 videos targeting Planned Parenthood’s fetal‑tissue practices. Daleiden and fellow undercover journalist Sandra Merritt had faced 15 felony counts filed by AG Xavier Becerra in 2017, but in January 2025 both pleaded no contest to a single felony each under a settlement that dismissed the rest and imposed no jail time, fines, or admission of wrongdoing in exchange for staying away from and not naming the recorded individuals and ceasing unlawful recordings. Current Attorney General Rob Bonta had publicly cast that plea deal as a victory for reproductive‑health access, emphasizing that his office had secured felony convictions even as pro‑life groups and Daleiden denounced the case as political "lawfare" launched in the Harris era. Daleiden announced on X that the "final charge has been DISMISSED and the case completely expunged" after what he called a months‑long administrative delay and a "bizarre" last‑minute bid by Planned Parenthood and the National Abortion Federation to upend the state’s agreement. The closure of the case caps a decade‑long fight over whether his covert recordings constituted protected investigative journalism or illegal, surreptitious taping under California law, and is already being used on social media by anti‑abortion activists to argue that Democratic AGs weaponized state power to shield Planned Parenthood from scrutiny.
📌 Key Facts
- San Francisco County Judge Brian Ferrall dismissed the last remaining felony charge against David Daleiden and ordered the case expunged this week.
- Daleiden and Sandra Merritt were originally hit with 15 felony counts in 2017 after an investigation opened under Kamala Harris and charges were filed by Xavier Becerra.
- In January 2025 they pleaded no contest to one felony each under a deal that dismissed the rest, imposed no jail time or fines, and barred further unlawful recordings or contact with those recorded.
- California Attorney General Rob Bonta previously touted the plea deal as securing felony convictions to protect access to reproductive health care.
- Daleiden says Planned Parenthood Federation of America and the National Abortion Federation made a last‑minute attempt to undo the settlement before the final dismissal.
📊 Relevant Data
In 2022, the abortion rate among Black women was 28.3 abortions per 1,000 women aged 15-44, which is 4.3 times higher than the rate among White women (6.6 per 1,000), while the abortion ratio for Black women was 532 abortions per 1,000 live births, 4.0 times higher than for White women (133 per 1,000).
Abortion Surveillance — United States, 2022 — CDC MMWR
In 2022, the abortion rate among Hispanic women was 13.2 abortions per 1,000 women aged 15-44, which is 2.0 times higher than the rate among White women (6.6 per 1,000), while the abortion ratio for Hispanic women was 209 abortions per 1,000 live births, 1.6 times higher than for White women (133 per 1,000).
Abortion Surveillance — United States, 2022 — CDC MMWR
Abortion rates differ across racial and ethnic groups, reflecting systemic inequalities in healthcare access, income, and contraception access.
U.S. abortion statistics — Hey Jane
The vast majority of abortions (about 95%) are the result of unintended pregnancies, which includes pregnancies that are mistimed as well as those that are unwanted.
Abortion in the US: What you need to know — Brookings Institution
Effective January 2026, the National Institutes of Health (NIH) has ended support for research using human fetal tissue from elective abortions, implementing a major policy shift that prohibits the use of NIH funds for such research.
NIH Announces Major Policy Shift to End Use of Human Fetal Tissue in NIH-Supported Research — NIH
📰 Source Timeline (1)
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