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- Xref: sparky talk.abortion:53151 alt.abortion.inequity:6202 alt.dads-rights:3116 talk.religion.misc:24647 talk.politics.misc:65413
- Newsgroups: talk.abortion,alt.abortion.inequity,alt.dads-rights,talk.religion.misc,talk.politics.misc
- Path: sparky!uunet!haven.umd.edu!darwin.sura.net!gatech!taco!csl36h.csl.ncsu.edu!dsholtsi
- From: dsholtsi@csl36h.csl.ncsu.edu (Doug Holtsinger)
- Subject: Re: Amazing Religious Bias?????
- Message-ID: <1992Dec28.024441.19894@ncsu.edu>
- Followup-To: talk.abortion
- Sender: news@ncsu.edu (USENET News System)
- Reply-To: dsholtsi@csl36h.csl.ncsu.edu (Doug Holtsinger)
- Organization: North Carolina State University
- References: <Bzw2xC.440@wpg.com> <1992Dec28.014427.17833@wetware.com>
- Distribution: na
- Date: Mon, 28 Dec 1992 02:44:41 GMT
- Lines: 227
-
- In article <1992Dec28.014427.17833@wetware.com>
- drieux@wetware.com (drieux, just drieux) writes:
-
- > In Light of the recent court ruling in california,
- > referenced in the FREE-L mailing list, that a man who
- > had become a monk in the roman catholic church was
- > no longer vulnerable to chld support payments, does
- > not the following appear to be more Proof of the
- > 1. SeXularHumanist Konspirakii.....
- >
- > [.. article about an anti-abortion leader ..]
-
- Since 'drieux' apparently buys into the theory that
- 'one bad apple spoils the bunch', I thought he might
- be interested in the following article about an
- abortion doctor who faces allegations of misconduct
- and a jail sentence for income tax evasion.
-
- ----
- Abortion Doctor's Empire Crashes
- The Raleigh News and Observer,
- Saturday, October 3, 1992 reprinted w/o permission
-
-
- CHAPEL HILL -- For most doctors, performing abortions is no way
- to make a buck. The work is too fraught with protesters, teary-
- eyed patients and moral turmoil.
-
- But for Dr. William E. Brenner, 55, director of the Triangle
- Women's Health Center, doing abortions was a way to build a small
- empire.
-
- Profits from his successful clinic went into a $700,000 Hatteras
- yacht, a beachfront condo in the Bahamas, office buildings and
- rental houses and empty lots waiting for development. Some went
- into an offshore bank account, shielded from the Internal Revenue
- Service.
-
- But on Sunday, he will report to the Cumberland County Jail to
- begin serving a four-month sentence for federal income tax eva-
- sion. The Internal Revenue Service says the Chapel Hill doctor
- and former University of North Carolina professor owes more than
- $1 million in unpaid taxes, interest and penalties.
-
- Meanwhile, the state Board of Medical Examiners is investigating
- allegations that Brenner overstated the age of fetuses so he
- could overcharge women for abortions. As a result of that charge,
- or his felony conviction, the board could revoke his medical
- license.
-
- For now, the clinic remains open, staffed by another physician.
-
- Dr. Takey Crist, a Jacksonville doctor who was on the faculty at
- UNC-CH during Brenner's tenure there, watched as Brenner's life
- traced an arc from bright researcher to rich doctor to federal
- convict.
-
- ``I can't judge Bill Brenner,'' Crist says. ``But I feel like I
- knew him and what bothers me is -- Why? What happened to Bill?
- Can it happen to any of us? ... When something like this happens,
- it takes a little bit from all of us.''
-
- Abortion was part of Brenner's career even before it was legal in
- most states. While a professor at UNC-CH during the 1970s, he was
- known for his research on using prostaglandins, hormone-like sub-
- stances, to terminate pregnancy.
-
- He also studied fetal development, developing with his mentor,
- Dr. Charles Hendricks, a fetal-growth chart that obstetricians
- still use today. During his 12 years at UNC-CH, Brenner published
- more than 100 papers and traveled the world lecturing.
-
- ``He was a very bright, very articulate obstetrician-gynecologist
- who did a lot of original research,'' Crist says. ``His patients
- liked him, the residents liked him, the students liked him.''
-
- But by the late 1970s, Brenner, who declined to be interviewed,
- was beginning to alienate colleagues in the department.
-
- In a letter asking a judge for leniency in sentencing Brenner,
- Grover C. McCain Jr., a Chapel Hill lawyer, said Brenner was
- resented because he often testified against other physicians in
- malpractice suits.
-
- ``For this Bill has been punished by his colleagues and profes-
- sion,'' wrote McCain, who declined to be interviewed. ``It
- eventually led to a worsening of his relationship with the then-
- chairman of the department and ... to Bill quitting his tenured
- position there to accept the chairmanship at the University of
- Nevada.''
-
- Brenner left for Reno in late 1981, but he wasn't gone long. In
- the spring of 1982, he returned to Chapel Hill to open the Trian-
- gle Women's Health Center.
-
- In the early years, the health center offered a full range of
- maternity and gynecological services. Brenner offered deliveries
- and routine gynecological care as well as abortions.
-
- But over time, abortion became a bigger part of the practice.
- Brenner stopped doing obstetrics. In November, Brenner said the
- clinic performed about 2,300 abortions the previous year, making
- it one of the largest abortion providers in the Triangle.
-
- Patients have looked to the clinic as a safe, clean place to have
- an abortion. Its location on the fourth floor of a medical office
- building makes it a difficult target for pro-life protesters.
-
- The clinic's fees are a little lower than its competitors: $225
- for first-trimester abortions as opposed to $250 to $300.
-
- Court records show the practice was profitable. Between 1984 and
- 1987, gross receipts amounted to about $800,000 a year. During
- that time, Brenner received a salary of about $350,000, according
- to records.
-
- He had other income as well.
-
- Beginning in 1983, when his son, Billy, took over as business
- manager, Brenner started to invest in real estate in the Caroli-
- nas and the Bahamas.
-
- Beverly Brenner, the doctor's ex-wife, says she and her then-
- husband often would spend 10 days out of every month at their
- marble-floored beachfront condominium in the Bahamas.
-
- In 1986, Brenner cut his hours at the health center and started
- working one day a week at the Fayetteville clinic. In 1987, he
- earned $66,000--more than $1,200 a day--for doing abortions
- there. All the money was sent to a Bahamas bank account and not
- reported on Brenner's tax returns, according to court records.
- The scheme would become the centerpiece of the IRS case.
-
- On March 1, 1988, Beverly Brenner left her husband. In court
- records, she said Brenner was abusive.
-
- Friends of Brenner's say he was devastated by his wife's depar-
- ture.
-
- In a letter to the judge who sentenced Brenner, Dr. John-Henry
- Pfifferling, a friend, wrote, ``When Dr. Brenner's wife left him
- ... I was aware of the immense trauma it imposed on him. He was
- severely stressed and I was very concerned about him.''
-
- Soon after Mrs. Brenner left her husband, the IRS began an inves-
- tigation. She says she didn't turn her husband in, but did
- cooperate with investigators.
-
- And information that came out during their lengthy and bitter
- divorce proceedings helped the IRS case.
-
- Divorce records reveal the scope of Brenner's holdings. In 1989,
- records show he owned rental and undeveloped properties around
- the Triangle, a beach house in South Carolina, a condominium and
- building lots in the Bahamas and lakefront property on Hyco Lake,
- North Carolina.
-
- A financial statement released during the divorce proceedings
- estimated Brenner's net worth in 1988 at more than $3.2 million,
- Mrs. Brenner says.
-
- In 1990, as the IRS investigation intensified, the state Depart-
- ment of Human Resources suspended Brenner's abortion license for
- a month, citing staffing problems, improper disposal of aborted
- material and overbilling of insurance companies. One patient was
- charged $320 for an abortion, according to department records;
- her insurance company was billed $1,269.
-
- In addition, employees told investigators that ``if the doctor
- determines the patient to be further along upon exam in the
- operating room, patients are then asked to get up from the table
- and go to the front office to pay more money,'' after being given
- a sedative, according to agency records.
-
- In 1991, the IRS case came together and Brenner was indicted on
- two counts of tax evasion. In a related case, his son, Billy, was
- charged with trying to hide $136,700 from the IRS.
-
- Earlier this year, the doctor pleaded guilty and was sentenced to
- prison and fined $15,000. That's the sentence he will begin serv-
- ing at noon Sunday.
-
- Billy Brenner pleaded guilty in July 1991 and last month was put
- on three years probation--including two months in a halfway
- house, followed by two months of house arrest.
-
- Beyond the criminal case is a thorny civil battle with the IRS,
- which claims the elder Brenner owes $1.3 million in unpaid taxes,
- interest and penalties.
-
- Publicity about Brenner's problems has led some local health care
- providers--including the UNC-CH Student Health Service and
- Planned Parenthood of Orange and Durham counties--to stop refer-
- ring patients to his clinic.
-
- In addition, there is the problem with the state Board of Medical
- Examiners, which has charged Brenner with ``regularly and con-
- sistently'' recording advanced ages for fetuses he aborted,
- allowing for overcharges.
-
- ``If anyone in the United States would know the age of a fetus by
- weight, it would be my father,'' Brian Brenner, who worked as
- marketing manager for his father, said in an interview in August.
- We don't have any incentive to overguess gestational age. The
- public trust is important to us.''
-
- Friends of Brenner's say they think the federal indictment and
- other events have changed him.
-
- Two years ago he remarried. His wife had a baby girl in March
- 1991.
-
- ``I believe he does recognize his errors,'' McCain wrote in his
- letter to the judge, ``and I also believe that he has re-
- dedicated his life to his new family and things non-material.''
-
- As news of Brenner's problems has spread through the community,
- friends and former colleagues have wondered what happened to the
- promising young professor.
-
- ``I remember thinking that when Bill returned to Chapel Hill to
- open his medical practice he was a changed individual,'' McCain
- wrote. ``He seemed to have forgotten his loftier goals when he
- was pursuing research and seemed concentrated on business and
- money.''
-
-
-