They said their lawyer then contacted the Washington police to pick up the five remaining ones, which the activists said they considered evidence of violations of federal laws, including the Partial-Birth Abortion Ban Act, which bans certain methods to terminate pregnancies starting at 12 weeks.
At the news conference, they showed pictures of a Curtis Bay truck and a box with the company’s name as well as graphic video of what they described as Ms. Bukovinac and Ms. Handy opening the box at the apartment.
“Pro-life Americans will not stay silent in the face of such aggressive and barbarous violence,” said Ms. Bukovinac, who identified herself as an atheist and a “leftist.”
Curtis Bay denied the activists’ claims.
“On March 25, a Curtis Bay employee took custody of three packages from the Washington Surgery Center (Washington Surgi-Clinic) and delivered all of them to Curtis Bay’s incineration facility,” the company said in a statement. The driver did not hand packages over to the protesters or anyone else, it said. “Any allegations made otherwise are false.”
The company, which said it was cooperating with the police, added that its client agreements prohibit customers “from disposing of fetuses and human remains” using its services.
The Washington Surgi-Clinic referred questions to the National Abortion Federation, which said that providers comply with state and federal laws that regulate the handling of tissue.
“Anti-abortion individuals and groups are increasingly resorting to extreme and illegal antics to attempt to intimidate clinic workers and patients, and stop them from seeking or providing abortion care,” Melissa Fowler, the federation’s chief program officer, said in a statement. She said the groups were making false claims to encourage “medically unnecessary and politically motivated” legislative restrictions to push safe and affordable abortion care out of reach.