California Coerced 144 Women to Be Sterilized Between 2005 and 2013: Audit

Some of the thousands of women who were forcibly sterilized by the California government decades ago are set to receive reparations of up to $25,000, making California the third state to compensate victims of the eugenics movement.

But California's proposal stands apart because it would also pay women who were coerced by the state to get sterilized while incarcerated, some as recently as 2010.

The Center for Investigative Reporting first exposed the practice in 2013, leading to an audit that uncovered 144 women who were pressured into sterilization between 2005 and 2013 with little or no evidence that officials counseled them or offered alternative treatment.

Though the women signed consent forms, the audit revealed officials in 39 cases did not complete all the legal requirements to obtain patient permission

"We must address and face our horrific history," said Lorena Garcia Zermeño, policy and communications coordinator for the advocacy group California Latinas for Reproductive Justice. "This isn't something that just happened in the past."

For more reporting from the Associated Press, see below:

CLRJ
An audit in the state of California has discovered that 144 women were coerced into being sterilized between 2005 and 2013. In this screengrab, Board Chair, California Latinas for Reproductive Justice, Jenannette Zanipatin speaks during the 33rd Gloria Awards: A Salute to Women of Vision on May 19, 2021, in New York City. Theo Wargo/Getty Images Ms. Foundation for Women

The payments will make California at least the third state—following Virginia and North Carolina—to compensate victims of the so-called eugenics movement that peaked in the 1930s. Supporters of the movement believed sterilizing people with mental illnesses, physical disabilities and other traits they deemed undesirable would improve the human race.

While California sterilized more than 20,000 people before its law was repealed in 1979, only a few hundred are still alive. The state has set aside $7.5 million for the reparations program, part of its $262.6 billion operating budget that is awaiting Gov. Gavin Newsom's signature.

California's forced sterilization program started in 1909, following similar laws in Indiana and Washington. It was by far the largest program, accounting for about a third of everyone sterilized in the United States under those laws.

California's law was so prominent that it inspired similar practices in Nazi Germany, according to Paul Lombardo, a law professor at Georgia State University and an expert on the eugenics movement.

"The promise of eugenics at the very earliest is: 'We could do away with all the state institutions—prisons, hospitals, asylums, orphanages,'" Lombardo said. "People who were in them just wouldn't be born after a while if you sterilized all of their parents."

In California, victims include Mary Franco, who was sterilized in 1934 when she was just 13. Paperwork described her as "feeble-minded" because of "sexual deviance," according to her niece, Stacy Cordova, who has researched her case.

Cordova said Franco actually was molested by a neighbor. She said her family put Franco in an institution to protect the family's reputation.

Cordova said her late aunt loved children and wanted to have a family. She married briefly when she was about 17, but Cordova said the marriage was annulled when the man discovered Franco couldn't have children. She lived a lonely life in a Mexican culture that revered big families, Cordova said.

"I don't know if it is justice. Money doesn't pay for what happened to them. But it's great to know that this is being recognized," said Cordova, who has advocated for the state to pay survivors. "For me, this is not about the money. This is about the memory."

Relatives like Cordova aren't eligible for the payments, only direct victims are.

Sterilizations in California prisons appear to date to 1999, when the state changed its policy for unknown reasons to include a sterilization procedure known as "tubal ligation" as part of inmates' medical care. Over the next decade, women reported they were coerced into this procedure, with some not fully understanding the ramifications.

A state law passed in 2014 bans sterilizations for the purpose of birth control at state prisons and local jails. The law permits sterilizations that are "medically necessary," such as removing cancer and requires facilities to report each year how many people were sterilized and for what reason.

Questionable sterilizations also occurred in facilities run by local governments. In 2018, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors apologized after more than 200 women were sterilized at the Los Angeles-USC Medical Center between 1968 and 1974.

Those people are not eligible for reparations under California's program. But advocates say they hope to include them in the future.

"It's only the beginning," said state Assemblywoman Wendy Carrillo, a Democrat from Los Angeles who has been advocating for reparations. "I can't imagine the trauma, the depression, the stress of being incarcerated, being rehabilitated and trying to start your life again in society, wanting to start a family, only to find out that that choice was taken away from you."

Of the people California sterilized under its old eugenics law, just a few hundred are still alive, according to research conducted by the Sterilization and Social Justice Lab. Including the inmates who were sterilized most recently, advocates estimate more than 600 people would be eligible for reparations.

But finding them will be difficult, with advocates predicting only about 25 percent of eligible people will ultimately apply for reparations and be paid.

California's Victim Compensation Board will run the program, with $2 million used to find victims by advertising and poring through state records. The state also set aside $1 million for plaques to honor the victims, leaving $4.5 million for reparations.

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Stacy Cordova, whose aunt was a victim of California's forced sterilization program that began in 1909, holds a framed photo of her aunt Mary Franco, Monday, July 5, 2021. Franco was sterilized when she was 13 in 1934. Jae C. Hong/AP Photo