by
Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
February 27,
2008
Los
Angeles, CA (LifeNews.com) -- A magazine published by pro-life
students at UCLA has conducted a probe into whether or not Planned
Parenthood still harbors some of the racist policies it has been accused
of promoting since its founding. The Advocate called Planned Parenthood
centers in several states and found officials supportive of abortions
on black Americans.
On Tuesday, the magazine released phone recordings of Planned Parenthood staffers approving a donor's racist agenda.
The magazine conducted a probe in seven states to find out how the staff members would react to a racist donor who wanted his donation used to promote abortions on African Americans. The magazine said it was shocked by the results.
An actor, posing as a racist donor, called Planned Parenthood development centers and asked that his donation be used to abort African American babies in order to "lower the number of black people."
"Each branch agreed to process the racially earmarked donation, with some encouraging the racist motive behind it," the Advocate editors told LifeNews.com. "None expressed concern about the racist reasoning for the donation."
The magazine says the caller told Idaho Planned Parenthood that "the less black kids out there the better."
IPP Director of Development Autumn Kersey called his position "understandable" and indicated she was excited to process his donation.
The magazine said an Ohio Planned Parenthood representative, Lisa Hutton, told the donor that Planned Parenthood "will accept the money for whatever reason."
UCLA senior Jose Manaiza, a 2007 nominee for the UCLA Student of The Year award and winner of the 2007 UCLA Chancellor's Service Award, is outraged by the news and called on the university to end its ties with Planned Parenthood.
He told LifeNews.com he hopes fellow African American students and the entire UCLA student body will "commit to this new era of the Civil Rights Movement and fight any type of racism from Planned Parenthood."
UCLA
students have spoken with Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs Janina
Montero, who has so far declined to comment on the investigation the
magazine conducted.


