Despite receiving a temporary restraining order from a court in California, the Center for Medical Progress has released its fourth undercover video further exposing Planned Parenthood's controversial aborted baby parts compensation practices.
The video, which was released on Thursday, features Vice President and Medical Director of Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains, Dr. Savita Ginde, discussing compensation for aborted baby parts and the importance of having Planned Parenthood clinics communicate to handle fetus organs and tissue uniformly to protect themselves in the "public sector."
As in previous videos, CMP activists pose as tissue procurement officers for a human biologics company and discuss the possibility of securing only "intact specimens" with Ginde during a visit to a Denver "mega-abortion clinic" headquarters.
During the conversation, Ginde tells the undercover activists that the clinic receives somewhere between three and seven "specimens" each day, but only 10 percent of the specimens are intact.
"Sometimes, if we get, if someone delivers before we are able to see them for a procedure, then we are intact," she says, explaining that abortion providers must be trained to look for intact specimens so they don't crush them in the process of the abortion.
The CMP activist then tells Ginde that he wants to pay "top dollar" for the "specimens" because he wants to make sure his suppliers are happy.
"So it could look like we're paying you for specimens so lets talk about it correctly. We all know that yes, that's what we we're doing," the investigator said. "So yes, I am paying you but how we're talking about, out there in the public square."
The video then shows Ginde stating how it's important to get all Planned Parenthood affiliates who are doing similar deals for intact specimens on the same page, and explains that classifying such deals as "research" makes them look like less of a "business venture."
"But we have to know who else is doing this, because if you have someone in a real anti state that's going to be doing this for you, they're probably going to get caught," Ginde adds.
Ginde further states that Planned Parenthood's attorney "got it figured out" in case the organization is caught selling fetal parts across state lines.
"We talked to him in the beginning," Ginde says. "We were like, 'We don't want to get called on it,' you know, selling fetal parts across states. You know what I mean? Like, no one wants to get [caught]. I'm confident that our legal will make sure that we are not put in that situation."
Later, the investigators are taken to the clinic's pathological laboratory, where they were showed different aborted fetal parts in pie dishes and were asked to identify what fit their definition of intact specimens.
In one particularly disturbing scene, Ginde states while looking at one pie dish, "It's a baby." Later on, a clinic medical assistant shows another pie dish and says, "Another boy."
Vicki Cowart, CEO of Planned Parenthood of the Rocky Mountains, has since claimed the video is "another misleading and deceptively edited video" from "extremists who entered our facility based on misrepresentations and an elaborate, years-long fraudulent scheme."
Planned Parenthood has also said it abides by all laws and require the consent of the woman undergoing the procedure before the fetal parts are donated.
Meanwhile, as the Center for Medical Progress prepares to release at least eight more undercover videos, the Los Angeles Superior Court on Tuesday banned the organization from releasing any more footage that feature employees of California Planned Parenthood affiliate StemExpress.
However, David Daleiden, the man behind CMP, told Fox News host Sean Hannity that the order was "too limited" to block the release of a fourth video.
"They try to get away from the fact that they're selling the body parts of aborted babies - and that that's illegal," Daleiden said, explaining that Ginde doesn't ever say she's concerned about following the law in the video.
"You hear her say that she's concerned about not getting caught and about not getting called on selling body parts," he noted.