INDIANAPOLIS — Well before she performed an abortion that gained international attention, Dr. Caitlin Bernard briefly contemplated no longer performing abortions — because someone threatened to kidnap her daughter in 2020.

Bernard discussed the threat in sworn testimony last year in a federal abortion lawsuit. Planned Parenthood alerted her to the threat after it was passed along by the FBI.

It caused her to stop working for several months at a South Bend abortion clinic, she testified. She later told the Indianapolis Star that she briefly considered no longer performing abortions.

“This is a known risk,” she said. “I knew this going into the job, I knew this going into a state like Indiana and I chose to do it anyways. So therefore when it happens I need to continue the mission I came here for.”

The threat shows the animosity Bernard faced even before providing medical care in Indianapolis to a 10-year-old child from Ohio who was raped. Bernard shared the account with the Indianapolis Star, part of the USA TODAY Network, and the story has since become a flashpoint in the national debate over abortion. Abortion opponents and some news outlets initially questioned the veracity of the story. Then last week, a man was arrested in Columbus and charged with rape. 

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After threat, Bernard debated no longer performing abortions

The threat against Bernard’s daughter was first disclosed during testimony in a federal lawsuit seeking to overturn various Indiana abortion provisions. A judge struck down half a dozen provisions  but the U.S. Court of Appeals vacated that decision after the U.S. Supreme Court decision last month overturning Roe v. Wade.