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US court drops genital mutilation charge against Indian doctor
The case is believed to be the US' first involving female genital mutilation and emerged in April 2017 when the doctor was arrested and accused of heading a conspiracy that lasted 12 years and involved seven other people.
Washington: A US federal judge has dismissed new charges against an Indian-origin doctor accused of performing female genital mutilation, in what is believed to be the first of its kind case in the country, according to media reports.
The doctor had sought a dismissal of a charge of conspiracy to travel with intent to engage in illicit sexual conduct involving two 7-year-old Minnesota girls who were brought to Metro Detroit for what prosecutors call an illegally performed procedure, The Detroit News reported.
The case is believed to be the US' first involving female genital mutilation and emerged in April 2017 when the doctor was arrested and accused of heading a conspiracy that lasted 12 years and involved seven other people, it said.
Judge Bernard Friedman dismissed the fourth superseding indictment prosecutors had filed in the case, ruling that it amounted to a vindictive prosecution.
The doctor was accused of performing genital mutilation on nine girls at a suburban Detroit clinic. She denies any crime and says she performed a religious custom. The girls were from Illinois, Michigan, and Minnesota.
She and three others were charged in April 2017 under a Female Genital Mutilation (FGM) statute passed by Congress.
Judge Friedman dismissed those charges in 2018 after ruling the statute was unconstitutional. Friedman ruled that Congress did not have the power to enact a federal law that banned female genital mutilation in the United States.
Prosecutors in March 2021 added charges of making false statements to federal officers and tampering with witnesses.
Friedman called the latest alterations to the lingering case "clearly unreasonable and indicative of vindictiveness," and ordered a dismissal in a ruling issued on Tuesday.
"It is unreasonable for the prosecutor to bring any of these charges in light of the Court's ruling that the FGM (female genital mutilation) statute is unconstitutional," MLive Media Group quoted Friedman as saying.
"All of the charges presented in the fourth superseding indictment require a showing that defendants committed, or conspired to commit, a federal offence...It is alleged that defendants falsely told law enforcement that FGM was not being performed in their community and that they conspired to, and did, tell community members to give law enforcement the same misinformation.
"But telling such lies, conspiring to do so, and coercing others to do so was not a crime during the time frame at issue (May 2016 - April 2017) because the statute making FGM a federal offence was unconstitutional," Friedman said.
The government argued that female genital mutilation was a federal offence until the court declared the law unconstitutional in November 2018.
"The Court rejects this argument," Friedman wrote in his ruling. "The Court's ruling that Congress lacked the authority to pass (the ban) means that the statute was void ab initio (from the beginning)."
The procedure, abbreviated as Female genital mutilation (FGM), is practised by some members of the Dawoodi Bohra, a Muslim sect from India that has a small community in Metro Detroit.
Authorities allege Minnesota mothers Haseena Halfal and Zainab Hariyanawala brought their daughters to Detroit in February 2017 for the procedure.
Authorities said the trip constituted a federal crime, which carries a penalty of up to 30 years in prison and a USD 250,000 fine.
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