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I mean, I actually did call in a suspected case one time, and I got trouble for that.
"Should have called management first, you know, found out if that was reportable or not."
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I mean I actually did call in a suspected case one time and I got trouble for that
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  • 00:00

    Lila Rose: When it comes to reports of sexual assault and sexual harassment, Planned Parenthood

  • 00:03

    has used the slogan that we should "Trust Women."

  • 00:05

    Cecile Richards: Well, I think the first lesson is to trust women.

  • 00:09

    And listen to women.

  • 00:10

    Lila Rose: So let's follow that advice and listen to the testimonies of these four women,

  • 00:14

    who are former Planned Parenthood workers and managers, who all say the same thing:

  • 00:19

    that Planned Parenthood routinely covers up child sexual abuse.

  • 00:23

    Catherine Adair: So many things would happen in that counseling room that really bothered me.

  • 00:28

    There'd be girls coming in with their abusers.

  • 00:35

    Against all protocol, the abuser would be let into the counseling room.

  • 00:40

    That was where they were supposed to sort of be separated from who they were with, and

  • 00:43

    men were never allowed back there, but on—with these young girls, they'd be allowed back there.

  • 00:48

    And even if they knew—even if I went to the manager and I said "Look, there's something

  • 00:52

    going on here."

  • 00:54

    She would say, "She's better off with the abortion.

  • 00:58

    We can't do anything about what's going on at home,

  • 01:02

    but at least we can give her the abortion."

  • 01:04

    Or we'd have women who don't speak English who'd come in.

  • 01:08

    I remember one woman in particular, she was from Somalia, she came in with her husband,

  • 01:14

    her brother-in-law, and one of their friends who spoke English, broken English, and she

  • 01:21

    sat there the entire time looking at the floor and the brother and the brother-in-law were

  • 01:28

    talking and—very sort of strongly and the gentleman that spoke English was like, "Just

  • 01:33

    give her the abortion.

  • 01:34

    Just give her the abortion.

  • 01:35

    That's what she wants.

  • 01:36

    It's what she wants."

  • 01:37

    And I went to my supervisor, I said, "I can't be sure that this is what this woman wants

  • 01:41

    because she can't speak for herself and she looks very nervous and she's looking at the

  • 01:45

    floor and she seems intimidated to me.

  • 01:47

    I think she's being forced into this."

  • 01:50

    And so my manager came in and said to the man that spoke English, "Could you have her

  • 01:57

    say that this is what she wants?"

  • 02:00

    So the man said to her in her language whatever he said and she nodded her head and she said,

  • 02:05

    "It's fine."

  • 02:06

    And off she went to have the abortion.

  • 02:09

    And I remember that specifically because I remember thinking,

  • 02:16

    "But this is supposed to be her choice.

  • 02:20

    How do we know this is her choice?

  • 02:21

    How do we know?

  • 02:22

    We don't know, and yet we're allowing this to happen to her."

  • 02:26

    Monica Cline: I was teaching on human trafficking and statutory rape, and was telling Planned

  • 02:30

    Parenthood staff of Corpus Christi and the Gulf Coast, basically, you’ve got to report

  • 02:37

    when you see a girl coming in with an older man who you can tell is not her father.

  • 02:41

    You know something’s wrong, you’ve got to report that; it’s considered human trafficking.

  • 02:46

    It is also considered statutory rape; you’ve got to report this.

  • 02:51

    And they started laughing.

  • 02:52

    And I said, ‘I don’t think there was anything I said that was funny.

  • 02:57

    What’s going on here?’

  • 02:58

    And the response was, ‘Honey, if she’s not having sex with this man this week she’ll

  • 03:03

    have another one next week.’

  • 03:05

    And so their view of our children is distorted.

  • 03:08

    It’s dehumanized.

  • 03:10

    I don’t know why their hearts are hardened, but they are.

  • 03:15

    And so when a girl or a young man goes there for an abortion, or condoms or testing, they

  • 03:22

    don’t see them with compassion anymore, if they ever did.

  • 03:27

    They see them as just, almost like an animal who can’t control themselves,

  • 03:32

    “They’re always gonna have sex, so we’re just going to give them enough lube and condoms

  • 03:36

    and hope they come in to get tested before they get some kind of cancer.”

  • 03:40

    They’re not gonna stop statutory rape.

  • 03:43

    One of the things that they even mentioned was, they adopted George Bush’s "don’t

  • 03:47

    ask, don’t tell [policy]" in the military for homosexuality, so they said, “Well if

  • 03:51

    it’s good enough for Bush, it’s good enough for us.

  • 03:53

    If we don’t ask how old her partner is, we don’t have to tell.”

  • 03:57

    And so Planned Parenthood actually allows victims of human trafficking to continue to

  • 04:02

    be victims of human trafficking.

  • 04:06

    And they’re okay with that.

  • 04:07

    I went back to my office and I told my supervisor, listen, I’m trying to teach them about key

  • 04:12

    concepts on title X; they’re admitting that they’re not gonna report cases of statutory rape.

  • 04:17

    The response from my supervisor was, “You’re job is to teach them the key concepts, and

  • 04:23

    that’s it.”

  • 04:24

    She was really upset with me that I challenged that.

  • 04:27

    Lila Rose: How did Planned Parenthood—your Planned Parenthood, the other ones you knew

  • 04:30

    about—treat cases of child sexual abuse?

  • 04:32

    Sue Thayer: We were all required to be mandatory reporters.

  • 04:36

    But if we saw a case of questionable abuse or even for sure—I mean, this—this kid

  • 04:45

    is being abused—we really were discouraged from calling it in, just because, they didn't

  • 04:53

    want to have the trouble.

  • 04:54

    The angry parent, the angry boyfriend, whatever it was.

  • 05:00

    So more than once, I was told, "No."

  • 05:02

    You know, "That is not reportable.

  • 05:03

    You don't need to call it in."

  • 05:05

    Lila Rose: So Planned Parenthood management was telling you—and you would even ask about

  • 05:08

    cases of suspected child sexual abuse—and they would tell you, "Don't call it in."

  • 05:12

    Sue Thayer: "Don't call it in."

  • 05:13

    Correct.

  • 05:14

    Lila Rose: Of young girls going in, suspected abuse.

  • 05:17

    Sue Thayer: Correct.

  • 05:18

    Mm-hm.

  • 05:19

    Correct.

  • 05:20

    Lila Rose: So after the investigations that were happening that Live Action was doing,

  • 05:22

    and exposing what was happening at Planned Parenthood with child sexual abuse cover-up—my

  • 05:25

    photo ends up in—in the facility—did Planned Parenthood address that with the staff at

  • 05:30

    all?

  • 05:31

    Do a re—change their policy to start reporting?

  • 05:34

    Sue Thayer: No.

  • 05:36

    No.

  • 05:37

    Quite the contrary.

  • 05:39

    I mean, I actually did call in a suspected case one time, and I got trouble for that.

  • 05:50

    "Should have called management first, you know, found out if that was reportable or not."

  • 05:54

    And I just called it in because I knew it needed to be reported.

  • 05:58

    And I was a mandatory reporter because of being a foster parent as well, so I felt like

  • 06:03

    I really needed to.

  • 06:04

    But that was—that was frowned upon.

  • 06:06

    Lila Rose: So you had a warning poster up of me, but there was no reporting—

  • 06:11

    Sue Thayer: Mm-mm.

  • 06:12

    Lila Rose: —and it was in fact discouraged to report child sexual abuse.

  • 06:15

    Sue Thayer: Mm-hm. Correct.

  • 06:17

    Lila Rose: Incredible.

  • 06:18

    Sue Thayer: Mm-hm.

  • 06:19

    Lila Rose: And heartbreaking for those victims.

  • 06:20

    Sue Thayer: Right. Yeah.

  • 06:21

    Lila Rose: Marianne, you said that while working at Planned Parenthood for almost two-and-a-half

  • 06:25

    years, there were some instances that you saw where you felt that there was a blatant

  • 06:30

    disregard for the rights of women.

  • 06:32

    Can you share some of those instances?

  • 06:34

    Marianne Anderson: There's one case that—it still haunts me to this day.

  • 06:38

    It was a young girl.

  • 06:40

    She was Asian, didn't speak any English, and came in with a man that was just clinging to her.

  • 06:48

    Had his arm around her the whole time.

  • 06:50

    Wanted to answer all the questions for her.

  • 06:53

    Fill out the paperwork for her.

  • 06:57

    He knew every—all of her particulars, even knew the dates of her last menstrual cycle.

  • 07:03

    He knew every particular about this girl.

  • 07:08

    When it came time to do the ultrasound, they were not allowed to take anybody back there

  • 07:13

    with them, and he was pretty upset about that.

  • 07:17

    "Well, I have to do the talking for her.

  • 07:20

    She doesn't know very much English."

  • 07:22

    They had a language line, it was available.

  • 07:24

    We had a phone that they could call and get interpreters, and they had this girl using

  • 07:31

    the language line to talk about it.

  • 07:33

    She told the lady that did the ultrasound that there was a lot of women that lived in

  • 07:39

    the house where she was, and they kind of lived out in the country, and she just felt

  • 07:45

    like she was alone out there, and she said, "We didn't even sometimes have clothes that

  • 07:51

    we needed to wear.

  • 07:54

    Sometimes we didn't have food."

  • 07:58

    I just have nightmares to this day thinking that this poor girl was probably living in

  • 08:02

    a home where she was kept under wraps.

  • 08:06

    Lila Rose: This girl was a younger woman you're sharing and—

  • 08:11

    Marriane Anderson: Yes.

  • 08:12

    Lila Rose: Once you had her talking on a language interpretation line, she shared she was living

  • 08:16

    in a home with a lot of other young— Marianne Anderson: —Lot of other women,

  • 08:19

    yes—

  • 08:20

    Lila Rose: —And that they didn't—sometimes have clothes or food—

  • 08:22

    Marianne Anderson: —And they could hardly even really communicate with each other.

  • 08:25

    It was just different backgrounds that lived in this house.

  • 08:29

    Lila Rose: —And the man that had walked in with this young woman who's trying to speak

  • 08:33

    for her, answer the questions for her, what did he say his relationship to her was?

  • 08:37

    Marianne Anderson: I don't know if he ever did—I think he said, "This is my girlfriend.

  • 08:41

    This is my girlfriend."

  • 08:42

    He also accused her—told her that she had to get an abortion because he says, "I'm not

  • 08:48

    sure if this baby's mine anyway."

  • 08:50

    Lila Rose: Wow Marianne Anderson: And she told us that he

  • 08:53

    was the only man that lived there.

  • 08:55

    Lila Rose: Was there alarm bells raised?

  • 08:58

    What did Planned Parenthood do?

  • 08:59

    Marianne Anderson: No.

  • 09:00

    Not really.

  • 09:01

    And I went as far as to write down her information and came so close to just trying to report

  • 09:06

    it myself, but I was told—I told my coworker I was thinking about doing this she says,

  • 09:13

    "I would not recommend that."

  • 09:14

    She says, "Unless you want a lot problems I would recommend you don't do that

  • 09:19

    Lila Rose: So when your coworker said, "Don't make the report, you know, because you'll ge

  • 09:23

    problems" was she talking about management? What was she talking about?

  • 09:26

    Marianne Anderson: I'm sure management. Yes. Yes, "They just—we don't need to get involved.

  • 09:32

    We don't need to get involved."

  • 09:35

    Lila Rose: Did management encourage reporting saying, "If you see a suspicious

  • 09:38

    situation where a woman looks like she's in trouble" like this sounds like this was, I mean—

  • 09:42

    Marianne Anderson: Not really, no they did not,

  • 09:48

    unless they were under the age of fourteen and it was required to be reported.

  • 09:50

    But other than that, no. They really didn't encourage that.

  • 09:55

    Lila Rose: And you're seeing this happening no reports, you know, this awful situation with

  • 10:01

    this young woman coming in, how did that make you feel?

  • 10:02

    Marianne Anderson: Degraded, like women don't really matter.

  • 10:05

    Men—

  • 10:06

    some men can be very controlling but I think Planned Parenthood

  • 10:12

    even added to that.

All

The example sentences of REPORTABLE in videos (1 in total of 1)

" should modal have verb, base form called verb, past participle management noun, singular or mass first adjective , you personal pronoun know verb, non-3rd person singular present , found verb, past participle out preposition or subordinating conjunction if preposition or subordinating conjunction that determiner was verb, past tense reportable adjective or coordinating conjunction not adverb . "

Definition and meaning of REPORTABLE

What does "reportable mean?"

adjective
Meriting report.