INDIANAPOLIS — A final disciplinary hearing for an Indianapolis doctor, who spoke publicly about providing abortion care to a 10-year-old rape victim from Ohio, opened Thursday in front of Indiana’s medical board whose members have made political contributions to the state’s Republic attorney general.

Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita has accused Dr. Caitlin Bernard violating state and federal law by failing to report child abuse to state authorities and for publicly speaking about the girl’s case, breaking patient privacy. Rokita originally submitted a complaint to the board in November 2022, requesting the Indiana Medical Licensing Board to impose “appropriate disciplinary action” on Bernard.

During the hearing Thursday, Bernard told the board that she followed state reporting requirements and hospital policy — which she has asserted repeatedly. Bernard said she notified hospital social workers of the child abuse and that Ohio authorities were already investigating the girl’s rape.

Bernard’s lawyers argued that she did not release any identifying information about the girl that would break privacy laws.

The politically contentious case fueled national debates in the wake of the overturning of Roe V. Wade last summer.

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10-year-old girl sought abortion after rape

The information about the 10-year-old girl appeared in a July 2022 IndyStar article about reduced abortion access following the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs decision in June. Ohio’s six week abortion ban was in effect for about two months before facing legal challenges and being put on hold.