Washington, D.C. — Last summer, U.S. Senator Jon Ossoff’s investigation revealed shocking abuse of pregnant women in Georgia’s prisons and jails. Now, Sen. Ossoff is introducing bipartisan legislation to protect incarcerated pregnant women from abuse.
Sens. Ossoff and John Kennedy (R-LA) this week introduced the bipartisan Births in Custody Reporting Act to strengthen Federal oversight of pregnancy care in prisons and jails.
The bipartisan bill would require states to report to the Attorney General information regarding pregnancy care and outcomes for individuals in custody, including the number of pregnant individuals in custody, their length of stay in custody, any pregnancy outcomes that occur while such individuals are in custody, and whether births took place inside the facility or at a hospital.
Under the bipartisan legislation, states that fail to provide the requested data to the Attorney General would face up to a 10% reduction in Federal funding.
“The humanitarian crisis behind bars in the State of Georgia and across the United States is one of the most extreme civil rights problems happening in the country today,” Sen. Ossoff said. “As part of my sustained work to safeguard human rights, I’m introducing this bipartisan bill to better protect pregnant women in prisons and jails in Georgia and nationwide.”
Last summer, as Chair of the Human Rights Subcommittee, Sen. Ossoff conducted an investigation into the abuse of pregnant women in Georgia state prisons and jails.
In July, Sen. Ossoff revealed that his investigation uncovered pervasive abuse of pregnant women in prison, including women who were forced to undergo C-sections against their will, pregnant women who were shackled around their stomachs (despite the practice being widely illegal already), and women who gave birth unassisted while imprisoned.
In August, Sen. Ossoff heard testimony from Georgia women, including from a Georgia woman who testified that she was forced to give birth into her underwear at Clayton County Jail, despite testifying that she pleaded for months for medical assistance.
Click here to read the Births in Custody Reporting Act.
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