“Dr. Caitlin Bernard wrote the rapist was approximately 17 years old in a filing to Indiana's Department of Health. The accused rapist is 27 years old,” Salcedo said. “Gee, it would kind of be kind of an important detail. Don't you think?”
“The rabid, pro-abortion doctor here reported that the 27-year-old was a minor. The question is, Brianna, why would they do these things?” Salcedo then asked.
“We still have a lot of questions about this 10-year-old girl’s story,” Lyman echoed. “Why is he listed as 17 when he's 27?”
“The doctor who performed the abortion on the child appears to have listed Fuentes' age as 17,” wrote Townhall’s Matt Vespa. “She's only off by a decade. What's she hiding?”
Fox, the PJMedia writer who was central in manufacturing the outrage, also made it out to be something sinister. “Someone isn’t telling the truth,” Fox wrote. “How did that number get on that form and why?”
Conservative website Townhall mentioned the discrepancy in two posts by different writers, each hinting at a cover-up. “Even if Dr. Bernard truly did not know Fuentes' age, it's curious that she entered an age where he would also be a minor,” Rebecca Downs speculated. Her colleague Nick Arama sounded a similar note: “So why is his age reflected as a minor, and who was behind this?”
At Twitchy, Sam Janney wrote that Bernard “looks to have lied about the age of the alleged rapist on her report” and added, “Why would she lie about his age?” The headline of the piece framed the news as “shady.”
Other outlets were less overt in their conspiratorial thinking, but the intent behind their innuendo is unmistakable.
“It is unclear why Fuentes’s age was misrepresented by Bernard,” John Binder wrote at Breitbart.
“The Indiana doctor who performed an abortion on a 10-year-old girl from Ohio misreported the rapist as a minor,” wrote Ashe Schow at The Daily Wire.
Conservative media pushed other baseless attempted smears as well. Several highlighted that Bernard appears to have filed her report on the day after the initial Indy Star story was published, suggesting that the doctor was more interested in publicity than the child’s safety.
The Daily Wire wrote an ambiguous headline that read, in part: “10-Year-Old’s Abortion Doc Reported Rape After Media Queries.” The body copy made clear, however, that the outlet was referring to Bernard’s contact with the Star – not the conservative backlash. “Dr. Caitlin Bernard filed a report with the Indiana Department of Health on July 2, the day after the Indianapolis Star reported her story about performing an abortion on a young girl who allegedly had to travel to Indiana due to Ohio abortion laws,” Schow wrote. The clear insinuation was that Bernard prioritized speaking with the media over filing the required paperwork.
Janney, at Twitchy, was more overtly conspiratorial: “Why would she call the media first?”
Many conservative outlets also used a Telemundo interview with the mother of the victim to sensationalize the story of the family, rather than focus on the cruel anti-abortion policies that made the child’s travel necessary.
All of these attacks are retrofitted attempts to manufacture a conspiracy where there isn’t one, distracting from the very real tragedy at the heart of this case. They’re also part of a decades-long intimidation and violence campaign against abortion providers that will likely intensify in the coming months and years. Even prior to this round of attacks, Bernard had been subjected to kidnapping threats against her daughter in 2020.
The danger is not just from the media or right-wing activists either. A new complaint from the former dean of Indiana University’s Maurer School of Law alleges that Indiana’s Attorney General intended to “harass and intimidate” abortion providers, following disparaging comments he made on Fox News about Bernard.
In the weeks since the Dobbs decision overturning Roe v. Wade, many pregnant people and providers have come forward with horror stories about what they’ve been forced to go through. That’s the real story, and conservatives are desperate to bury it.