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StemExpress CEO admits selling beating baby hearts, intact baby heads in Daleiden hearing
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<p class="gmail-article-tags gmail-hide-print"><a href="https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/stemexpress-ceo-admits-selling-beating-baby-hearts-intact-baby-heads-in-daleiden-hearing">https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/stemexpress-ceo-admits-selling-beating-baby-hearts-intact-baby-heads-in-daleiden-hearing</a></p>
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<p>SAN FRANCISCO, September 6, 2019 (<a href="https://www.lifesitenews.com/">LifeSiteNews</a>)
— The CEO of StemExpress admitted in court Thursday that her biotech
company supplies beating fetal hearts and intact fetal heads to medical
researchers.</p>
<p>She also admitted at the preliminary hearing of David Daleiden and
Sandra Merritt of the Center for Medical Progress that the baby’s head
could be procured attached to the baby’s body or “could be torn away.”</p>
<p>“That is an especially gruesome admission, but it begs the question:
how did they get these fully intact human children?” says Peter Breen of
the Thomas More Society, which is representing Daleiden at the hearing.</p>
<p>“If you have a fetus with an intact head and an intact body, and
intact extremities, that is something that would indicate that child was
born alive, and then had their organs cut out of them, or that that
child was the victim of an illegal partial-birth abortion,” he told
LifeSiteNews.</p>
<p>“Both of these are gruesome and violent acts.”</p>
<p>CMP’s Daleiden and Merritt are charged with 15 felony counts of
illegal taping of confidential information in connection with undercover
videos they released in 2015 after a three-year covert investigation
into the buying and selling of baby body parts, which is a felony.</p>
<p>The covertly recorded videos exposed StemExpress as the go-to in
California for Planned Parenthood’s trafficking in baby body parts, and
the biotech company cut its ties with Planned Parenthood shortly after
these were released.</p>
<p>CMP’s legal team is arguing in the preliminary hearing that the law
does not consider conversations that can be overheard confidential and
that covert recording is allowed when done to investigate violent
crimes.</p>
<p>On Thursday, the court saw video clips of the StemExpress CEO,
identified as Doe 12, meeting in May 2015 with Daleiden and Merritt, who
were posing as owners of a biotech company.</p>
<p>Doe 12 says in the video there’s a great demand for “raw fetal
tissue,” and that the “insanely fragile” neural or brain tissue is best
shipped in a “whole calvarium,” or head, whereupon Daleiden says, “Just
make sure the eyes are closed.”</p>
<p>“Yeah,” laughs Doe 12, “Tell the lab techs its coming…it’s almost like they don’t want to know what it is.”</p>
<p>Doe 12 was far less forthcoming in her testimony Thursday, as Breen noted.</p>
<p>“One thing we’ve observed throughout these proceedings is that these
witnesses were much more candid when they spoke to David and Susan on
the undercover video than they are on the stand,” he told LifeSiteNews.</p>
<p>“However, we have been able to establish certain facts that are
important through their testimony, and when they deviate from the video,
we’ve been able to use the video to show that they’re not telling the
truth on the stand,” Breen said.</p>
<p>“That’s important to show that the attorney general is using
witnesses who are willing to stretch the truth, and our side is exposing
that truth.”</p>
<p>Breen told the court that StemExpress was mentioned in connection
with Stanford University studies where Langendorff perfusion was used, a
technique that “requires a beating heart.”</p>
<p>“Does StemExpress supply fetal hearts to Stanford?” he asked Doe 12.</p>
<p>She hesitated to answer because, she said, “there’s so much targeting of researchers.”</p>
<p>However, Judge Christopher Hite told her the question was relevant.</p>
<p>“Yes, we have provided heart tissue to Stanford,” Doe 12 said.</p>
<p>She also admitted that CMP photos are accurate and that sometimes a
baby’s intact calvarium is attached to the baby’s body and sometimes it
is not.</p>
<p>In another key exchange, Doe 12 testified that her company requests
that parties sign a nondisclosure agreement or NDA before discussing
business.</p>
<p>But while Doe 12 met with Daleiden and Merritt in late May, the NDA
for the meeting was signed in late June, according to an email from
StemExpress to CMP that Breen produced in court.</p>
<p>Nor was Doe 12 able to produce evidence the NDA had been sent to Daleiden and Merritt before the meeting.</p>
<p>“After talking about how important a NDA is, the only evidence in the
record is that the NDA was not sent out until a month after this
supposedly highly confidential meeting,” Breen told LifeSiteNews.</p>
<p>“So that was a really significant point. That’s why there was so much argument on it,” he said.</p>
<p>“At the same time, the statute is clear: if there is a reasonable
expectation that the conversation can be overhead, then it doesn’t count
as a confidential conversation,” he said.</p>
<p>“So our contention is, if you’re sitting there at a restaurant with
wait staff around you and coming and going as they please, you can be
overheard, that’s a clear exception to the statute.”</p>
<p>Breen also quizzed Doe 12 about the Planned Parenthood consent form that StemExpress used in 2015.</p>
<p>Former StemExpress technician <a href="https://www.lifesitenews.com/news/breaking-stemexpress-cuts-ties-with-planned-parenthood-after-fetal-body-par">Holly O’Donnell</a>
supplied the PP consent form to CMP. She also is featured in two CMP
videos describing in graphic detail the process of sorting through
dismembered arms and legs of aborted babies.</p>
<p>The form states there will be no changes to the abortion procedure because of the decision to donate blood or fetal tissue.</p>
<p>When Doe 12 said she couldn’t recall what the form said, Breen played
for the court “a portion of the video tape where she bragged about
memorizing the [PP consent] form down to the control numbers,” he told
LifeSiteNews.</p>
<p>Doe 12 also told the court she couldn’t recall what the current StemExpress consent form stipulates.</p>
<p>“She wouldn’t admit that patients are not told their abortion
procedures could be changed, but we know it to be true,” Breen told
LifeSiteNews.</p>
<p>“So we’re using the videos to be able to show these people are not being straight with the court,” he said.</p>
<p>“And so you shouldn’t believe them with anything they’re saying.”</p>
<p>The hearing resumes Tuesday, and Doe 12 returns next week to complete her testimony.</p></div>
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