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sealeen37 · 2 years
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You will never touch our children again!       -Molly Weasley
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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Real or not real?
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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“Women in England and Wales who have suffered miscarriages or stillbirths are being investigated by police on suspicion of having illegal abortions, with some forced to hand over their phones and laptops for invasive “digital strip searches”.
In one case in 2021, a 15-year-old girl who had an unexplained early stillbirth was subjected to a year-long criminal investigation that saw her text messages and search history examined. Police dropped the case after a coroner concluded the pregnancy ended because of natural causes.
The teenager was investigated under the 1861 Offences Against the Person Act, which says it is unlawful to procure a miscarriage using “poison”, “an instrument” or “other means whatsoever”, and that those found guilty can be jailed for life.
The 1967 Abortion Act transformed women’s healthcare by legalising terminations in England, Wales and Scotland up to 28 weeks, with the legal limit since reduced to 24 weeks. But abortions are only lawful in circumstances where two doctors agree that continuing the pregnancy would be risky for the physical or mental health of the woman.
The old law was never repealed, so anyone who has an unregulated abortion or tries to terminate their pregnancy without supervision from medics is acting unlawfully. Anyone assisting them can also be prosecuted.
Police have launched dozens of investigations into suspected breaches of the law in the past 10 years, according to analysis of crime logs and Home Office data, with the alleged offences including cases where women took abortion pills bought on the internet and induced their own abortions by drinking herbal remedies without supervision from doctors.
Campaigners and politicians say the legislation criminalises women over a healthcare issue and deters some from seeking aftercare for fear of repercussions.The British Medical Association, the Royal College of Midwives and the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists have all called for abortion to be decriminalised, with the BMA saying the current “punitive approach” hampers the ability of doctors to provide supportive care.
Details of the criminal investigations were revealed in records obtained by the Observer under freedom of information laws. We contacted 44 police forces in England, Wales and Scotland to ask for logs relating to recent cases of procuring illegal abortion, including the number of offences and how many of the investigations had led to a suspect being arrested or charged.
In one case involving Surrey police in 2016, a potential offence was recorded after a woman was reported to have taken abortion pills that had not been obtained from a medical professional. The force said such reports were rare and would be investigated on a case by case basis.
In Norfolk, where three incidents were recorded between 2017 and 2020, police were called after a pregnant woman told her social worker she had started clotting after taking “loads of pills”.
In another case in Norfolk, which, unlike many of the forces, provided detailed information, a woman was admitted to hospital for swallowing eight misoprostol tablets – used with mifepristone to induce medical abortion – which had not been obtained through a doctor. She was thought to be 26 weeks’ pregnant, two weeks past the legal limit, according to the logs.In those cases the women were not arrested or charged because prosecution was not considered to be in the public interest. But in other cases action has been taken, with women arrested and charged, and some investigations are still going on.
In all, in the 10 years to April 2022, police in England and Wales have recorded 67 cases of procuring an illegal abortion. Police Scotland said it had no recent cases.
In some of the cases, the suspects were men or third parties accused of coercing women to have abortions. Anti-abortion groups argue that the law is useful in bringing abusers to justice, but reproductive-rights campaigners point out that coerced abortion can be prosecuted under other laws, such as those relating to battery, GBH or poisoning, which do not also criminalise women.
MSI Reproductive Choices, a charity and abortion provider, said it knew of cases where the 1861 law had been used to investigate women and girls who had lost their pregnancies through natural causes.
In the case of the 15-year-old, police were called by hospital staff who believed the teenager had taken a substance bought on the internet to end her pregnancy. They were aware that she had previously contacted an abortion provider to obtain information about a possible termination, and that it could not go ahead because it was just after the 24-week legal limit.
The teenager’s phone and laptop were seized and examined for evidence of supposed wrongdoing, including text messages she had exchanged with her boyfriend expressing worry about the pregnancy. The case was dropped after postmortem tests found the baby had probably been stillborn because of natural causes, according to a report seen by the Observer.
The findings follow a rolling back of reproductive rights in the US after the supreme court overturned its 1973 decision in Roe v Wade, a landmark ruling that guaranteed the constitutional right to an abortion for women. The ruling has led to increased scrutiny of reproductive rights in Britain and demands for legislative changes to protect access to abortion.
Labour MP Stella Creasy said action was needed to enshrine access to abortion in law as a human right and is calling for it to be included in Britain’s bill of rights, which is going through parliament.She said cases where women were suspected of inducing a miscarriage should be approached as safeguarding issues in most circumstances, rather than criminal ones.
“People will be shocked to find out that women are being investigated for having a miscarriage or seeking an abortion in England and Wales. This is not a mark of a civilised society,” she said.
Dr Jonathan Lord, NHS gynaecologist and medical director at MSI Reproductive Choices, said cases were often a “fishing expedition” and raised concerns that Google searches and messaging history could be weaponised against women.
“We urgently need to follow the lead of more enlightened societies such as Canada, New Zealand and Australia, which have decriminalised abortion so that women have autonomy to make their own decisions about their own bodies, and pregnancy loss is managed as a healthcare issue with care and compassion, not as a potential crime,” he said.”
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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Oh angel, how I've missed you;
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But do I miss you or just the idea of you?
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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Chapter 28 of Hogwarts: A Home by coralcollective
Art by @incendiosketches on Instagram
“Don’t apologize to me, Granger.”
Whatever possessed her to do it—frustration with his petulant behavior, the burning need for answers, an inexplicable yet innate desire to touch him—she snatched his elbow, turning him towards her.  “Wait!” 
Pleading. There was no other way to describe it.  A plea for patience. A plea for answers. A plea for just this small touch.  
His eyes fixed on the place where her small hand gripped the crook of his arm. Tiny fingers—too short. Palm—too small. Her grip couldn’t even begin to wrap around his arm, to try and truly stop his movements.  And yet…he froze. Utterly transfixed on that touch. One that mimicked his from that day in the library where he too had been possessed by some instinct. 
“Wait…” She breathed out again. She looked up into his face, his face that was tilted down towards hers, sharing the same breathing space. She watched the silver in his eyes, his pupils shifting sizes, narrowing and widening like they couldn’t decide how much light to let in, like they were reflecting some kind of indecision going on behind them. He wasn’t looking at her, didn’t seem to even really be paying attention to their proximity. His eyes were blurred almost.
And then it hit her. 
“You’re an occlumens.” She whispered, trying her hardest not to break the quiet of the moment. As the words passed through her lips, his vision sharpened suddenly. Sharpened and fixated on her mouth, where the movement of her lips had drawn him out of whatever internal debate he’d been sifting through. 
“You lied and said you didn’t recognize us.” She kept her voice so quiet that he wouldn’t have heard her if they weren’t so close. But something, something, made her draw even closer, inch herself forward until the arm she held in her grasp was flush against her body. Touching despite the danger of it all. Like a moth to a flame. 
“You kept her out of my head.” Her lips were the only thing moving between them. He didn’t even seem to be breathing. He didn’t deny it. And it didn’t matter, Hermione had watched it. Had watched and been in denial since. 
“You saved us.” 
“Hardly.” He refuted in an equally hushed tone, gaze never wavering. 
Her lips felt dry under his scrutiny. She pulled her lower lip in, wetting it with her tongue, letting it scrape between her teeth back into place. She watched as his expressive eyes turned what could only be described as predatory. She wasn’t paying attention to anything but the incredible shifts in those fascinating steel depths; didn’t notice his movement until she felt his thumb rest on the swell of her lower lip, pulling it down slightly. She felt the coolness of the pad of his thumb on the damp skin, felt him drag it so that the tip of that thumb just barely grazed the inner wetness of her lip, almost as if he were considering dipping it into her mouth entirely and was fighting not to, resisting.
He let his arm fall away, back to his side.  “Don’t apologize to me, Granger.” His voice was rough, held back. “I owe you a thousand apologies.” 
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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It's for some stupid noble reason isn't it?
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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ⓘ this user believes books are of upmost importance with maybe oxygen being a close second
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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Good girls are just bag girl who haven't been caught
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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Weasley is our king!
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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 If only you could talk to girls in equations. Just girls?                                                      No. Not just girls.
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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The Potter Kids
James Sirius
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Albus Severus
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Lily Luna
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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It must be very fragile, if a handful of berries can bring it down.
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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Always the tone of surprise...
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sealeen37 · 2 years
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When fear arrives, something is about to happen.
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