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She was charged with manslaughter after a miscarriage. Cases like hers are becoming more common in Oklahoma. [centerforhealthjournalism.org]

 

By Kassie McClung, Illustration: Katie Mulligan/The Frontier, Center for Health Journalism, January 7, 2022

Brittney Poolaw brushed away tears as the paramedic on the witness stand raised his hand to point her out in the courtroom for the jury.

She shook her head as he described the night she had a miscarriage at a Lawton apartment complex and had to be rushed into emergency surgery.

Prosecutors argued methamphetamine use caused Poolaw’s miscarriage between 15 and 17 weeks gestation. But a state medical examiner who testified for the prosecution during the one-day trial in October said there was a complication with the placenta and the fetus had a congenital abnormality. He couldn’t say for certain whether drug use caused the pregnancy loss.

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