An anti-abortion zealot under investigation after five fetuses were found inside her home last week gave a bizarre explanation for the gruesome discovery: the fetuses, she claimed, were among over 100 others recovered at an abortion clinic in Washington
So far, only five fetuses have been recovered by police. And the story was quickly and vigorously disputed by a company ensnared in the controversy, which exploded after fringe activist Lauren Handy was arrested last week for blocking people seeking services at a D.C. abortion clinic.
“During the five days they were under my stewardship, the 115 victims of abortion violence were given funeral mass for upbaptized children and 110… were given a proper burial in a private cemetery,” said Handy, the director of activism at the group Progressive Anti-Abortion Uprising. The driver’s employer, Curtis Bay Medical Waste Services, has denied the group’s account, stating that the employee took three boxes from the reproductive health center and delivered them to the group’s incineration facility.
Police Executive Assistant Chief Ashan Benedict confirmed in a press conference that the fetuses “were aborted in accordance with D.C. law” and that authorities were “not investigating this incident along those lines.”