intended to become an underground abortion referral service, but it wasn't going to stop just because in the next issue of 7he Realist | would publish an interview with somebody else. A few years later, state police raided Dr. Spencer's clinic and arrested him. He remained out of jail only by the grace of political pressure from those he'd helped. He was finally forced to retire from his practice, but | continued mine, referring callers to other physicians that he had recommended. Occasionally | would be offered money by a patient, but | never accepted it. And whenever a doctor offered me a kickback, | refused, but | also insisted that he give a discount for the same amount to those patients referred by me. Eventually, | was subpoenaed by district attorneys in two cities to appear before grand juries investigating criminal charges against abortionists. On both occasions | refused to testify, and each time the D.A. tried to frighten me into cooperating with the threat of arrest. In Liberty, New York, my name had been extorted from a patient by threatening /er with arrest. The D.A. told me that the doctor had confessed everything and they got it all on tape. He gave me until two o'clock that afternoon to change my mind about testifying, or else the police would come to take me away. HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_015065