A federal judge who told a mother she should get sterilized gave her a reduced sentence after she followed his suggestion.
Summer Thyme Creel of Oklahoma tested positive for meth when arrested in 2017 for using counterfeit checks.
Based on the fact that the 34-year-old already had seven children and gave up parental rights to six of them; and the overlap of her positive drug tests over the years with her cycles of pregnancy, U.S. District Judge Stephen Friot made the unusual suggestion that Creel be sterilized to prevent further births tainted by hard drugs.
“Comparing the dates of Ms. Creel’s periods of habitual use of crack cocaine and methamphetamine … with the dates of birth of her seven children, it appears highly likely that some of Ms. Creel’s children were conceived, carried, and born while Ms. Creel was a habitual user of these illicit substances,” the judge wrote.
It was clarified that the judge suggested sterilization as opposed to ordering it.
“I spoke with her in detail about it and she voluntarily wanted to do it,” her court-appointed defense attorney, Brett Behenna, told NewsOK.
And the move paid off. Creel was given a reduced sentence of a year in federal prison and three years on supervised release for passing counterfeit checks.
Some experts criticized Friot’s suggestion.
“For decades,” Pandit said, “sterilization was used as a way to control populations considered ‘undesirable’—immigrants, people of color, poor people, those with mental illnesses and disabilities. Tying Ms. Creel’s sentencing to her sterilization formalizes the coercion—the threat of a harsher sentence is manipulative and dangerous, and aligns with a legacy of eugenic practices through the U.S.”
But Friot defended his suggestion, saying the U.S. Supreme Court “has yet to recognize a constitutional right to bring crack- or methamphetamine-addicted babies into this world.”