Category: Daily Caller
DAVID BLACKMON: New Study Shows How GOP Can Win On Affordability Issue
win the argument in November
‘Never Relent’: Trump Admin Strikes ISIS Targets In Syria
‘Never Relent’: Trump Admin Strikes ISIS Targets In Syria
USDA Pauses Grants To Minnesota Amid Somali Fraud Crackdown
The state must provide payment justifications for all grants since January 2025 within 30 days and all grants moving forward, Secretary Brooke Rollins wrote.
Exclusive: ‘A Warning for the Rest of the Country’ — Navy SEAL Running for Senate Sounds Alarm Over ICE Shooting, Fraud in Minnesota
As Minnesota emerges at the center of both an ICE agent‑involved fatal shooting in Minneapolis and a massive fraud scandal, former Navy SEAL Andrew Schwarze is seizing the moment to introduce himself as a candidate for U.S. Senate. Appearing on Breitbart News Saturday with Washington Bureau Chief Matthew Boyle, Schwarze framed his campaign as a call to action for Minnesotans and the rest of the nation.
The post Exclusive: ‘A Warning for the Rest of the Country’ — Navy SEAL Running for Senate Sounds Alarm Over ICE Shooting, Fraud in Minnesota appeared first on Breitbart.
How a pro-life law in Kentucky lets mothers get away with murder

Melinda Spencer allegedly took abortion pills, ended the life of her unborn son, and buried his remains in a shallow grave in her backyard.
Yet a law in Kentucky exempting women from prosecution after obtaining an abortion — a law supported by the most influential pro-life organization in the state — appears to have prevented prosecutors from holding Spencer accountable for murder.
If a state refuses to make murder illegal for everyone, then some human beings will remain unprotected by design.
According to court documents cited by local media, Spencer, 35, told Kentucky State Police that the child “was not her boyfriend’s, and she did not want him to find out she was pregnant with another man’s baby.”
To conceal the pregnancy, Spencer allegedly ordered abortion pills online, intending to end the life of her unborn child without medical supervision.
Police say Spencer took the pills the day after Christmas, placed her deceased son in a light bulb box, and buried him in a shallow grave in her backyard. An autopsy determined the child was around 20 weeks’ gestation at the time of his death.
Initially Spencer was charged with first-degree fetal homicide, abuse of a corpse, concealing the birth of an infant, and tampering with physical evidence.
This week, however, Kentucky prosecutors dropped the homicide charge — not because they doubt that Spencer intentionally caused the death of her unborn child but because Kentucky law explicitly prohibits prosecuting a pregnant woman who murders her own unborn child.
Miranda King, the prosecutor overseeing the case, acknowledged this limitation directly. In a public statement, she explained that the relevant statute “prohibits the prosecution of a pregnant woman who caused the death of her unborn child.” Spencer still faces the remaining, lesser charges.
King made clear that this frustrating outcome was not her preference.
“I sought this job with the intention of being a pro-life prosecutor but must do so within the boundaries allowed by the Kentucky state law I’m sworn to defend,” she said. “I will prosecute the remaining lawful charges fully and fairly.”
Kentucky is widely regarded as a conservative state with strong pro-life laws. Many Americans assume abortion was effectively banned there after the Supreme Court overturned Roe v. Wade in 2022. This case exposes how incomplete that assumption is.
RELATED: Why the pro-life movement fails without a Christian worldview
jcphoto via iStock/Getty Images
Kentucky’s leading pro-life advocacy organization, Kentucky Right to Life, has long supported laws that shield women from criminal liability for abortion. In practice, this ensures that abortion remains legal for women, even if clinics are closed.
In 2021, Kentucky Right to Life joined more than 70 other pro-life organizations in signing a national letter declaring opposition to “any measure seeking to criminalize or punish women” who obtain abortions.
Since then, the organization has opposed multiple abolition bills that would have established equal protection under the law for unborn children — specifically because such legislation would allow for the prosecution of mothers who willfully procure abortions.
Addia Wuchner, Kentucky Right to Life’s executive director, opposed an abolition bill in 2023 on the grounds that it might expose mothers to criminal charges. She took the same position last year, arguing that women are victims of coercion by the abortion industry.
That framing has deadly consequences.
Photo by Mandel NGAN / AFP via Getty Images
Following Spencer’s arrest, Wuchner publicly expressed sympathy for the accused, describing Spencer as likely being “on her own” and calling that “probably the greatest tragedy,” before adding that “of course … a child’s life was lost.”
The ordering is revealing. The alleged murder of a child was treated as secondary to the emotional state of the alleged murderer. Empathy displaced justice and accountability.
There are cases in which women are coerced into abortions under genuine duress. But coercion cannot be presumed as a universal explanation. By all available evidence, Spencer appears to have acted deliberately. Kentucky law nevertheless forecloses full accountability — and ensures that the central act in this case cannot be adjudicated as homicide.
Since the Supreme Court overturned Roe, states like Kentucky have continued to see record abortion levels, largely through self-managed chemical abortions ordered online. Laws that categorically exempt women from prosecution guarantee this outcome.
If a state refuses to make murder illegal for everyone, then some human beings will remain unprotected by design. And when that exemption applies even in cases involving concealment, burial, and admitted intent, justice becomes impossible by statute.
So long as that remains the case, women who willfully kill their unborn children in Kentucky will continue to get away with murder.
‘REVOLTING LIES’: CNN Refers to Suspected Gangmembers in DHS Confrontation as ‘Married Couple’ [WATCH]
New “Maryland Man” just dropped… The official DHS X account unloaded on CNN this week for framing a dangerous altercation with suspected Tren de Aragua members as excessive force against an innocent “married couple.
Trump’s First 12 Months: The Economy, Venezuela, and the American Electorate
In the short 12 months since Donald Trump became president for the second time, his tenure thus far can be…
Wife Of Woman Killed By ICE Agent Breaks Silence, Says They ‘Stopped To Support Our Neighbors’
‘You want to come at us?’
Trump Admin Accidentally Doxxes ICE Agent Involved In Shooting
‘They should delete their story immediately’
search
categories
Archives
navigation
Recent posts
- 4 arrested in Makati for sale of fake anti-cancer drugs — CIDG April 11, 2026
- NBI nabs suspect in bogus charity scam April 11, 2026
- Man climbs onto US military aircraft in Ireland, attacks it with hatchet: report April 11, 2026
- Self-proclaimed ‘prophet’ with underage ‘wives’ exposed after couple he trusted helped uncover abuse ring April 11, 2026
- Remove your personal info from the web — stop it from coming back April 11, 2026
- Samsung Messages ending? What Android owners must know April 11, 2026
- House Republican plans motion to oust Swalwell from Congress amid sexual assault allegations April 11, 2026


![CNN ‘REVOLTING LIES’: CNN Refers to Suspected Gangmembers in DHS Confrontation as ‘Married Couple’ [WATCH]](https://hannity.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/CNN-300x169.png)





