Confirming Thomas Bell Could Bring Justice To The Aborted Babies Harvested For Parts

Share this article

By: Ryan Navarro, originally published November 4, 2025, The Federalist

Bell’s confirmation would open the door to a thorough look at abortion facilities and their tangled relationships with researchers.

Arecent nomination  hearing  was held in the U.S. Senate in which lawmakers considered Thomas March Bell, a  former  fetal tissue investigator, for the inspector general role at the Department of Health and Human Services. The Senate Committee on Finance will now determine whether his nomination is advanced to the full Senate.

If confirmed, Bell will have the opportunity to revive a 2021 federal investigation into the University of Pittsburgh’s potentially illicit use of fetal tissue obtained from aborted babies. In one particularly gruesome  study  published in 2020, the scalps of second-trimester infants aborted at an affiliated hospital were sliced off and attached to mice and rats by Pitt researchers.

Bell was  named  in March to replace former HHS Inspector General Christi Grimm, whom President Trump fired in January. In a letter sent before the hearing to U.S. Senate Committee on Finance Chairman Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, Democratic members demanded that Bell’s consideration be tabled, writing that Grimm’s removal by Trump was “unlawful and illegitimate.”

The members have been unhappy with Grimm’s potential replacement due to his criticism of how the abortion industry has conducted business. Between 2015 and 2017, Bell served as staff director and chief counsel for a House select panel  examining  the purported sale of fetal tissue for research in Planned Parenthood facilities, which have  ties  to the University of Pittsburgh.

During the hearing, Sen. James Lankford, R-Okla., criticized the Biden administration, stating that it “wouldn’t touch” abortion facility oversight, including whether facilities complied with proper medical procedures. Last year, Lankford cosponsored a  bill  aimed at ending the use of federal taxpayer funds for research involving human fetal tissue from abortions and closing legal loopholes that have enabled the trafficking of aborted fetal body parts. Bell said that he would “follow the law and follow the facts” when asked if he would track the issue.

The HHS-OIG investigation into Pitt’s fetal tissue research was  initiated  after suspicions of unlawful conduct — including claims of altered abortion procedures to obtain tissue — were  detailed  by Republican lawmakers in multiple  letters  to the Biden administration. The assertions were primarily based on a 2015 grant application submitted to the National Institutes of Health in which the university highlighted its ability to minimize the time between collecting fetal tissue and cooling it for storage.

Former Inspector General Grimm  indicated  that her office would follow up upon completion of the inquiry, and Pitt got out in front of the probe by hiring one of the university’s graduates and his law firm to conduct a regulatory assessment of the research studies involving fetal tissue. The effort seemed to pay off, as the federal investigation died off shortly after the law firm’s  report, which claimed no serious wrongdoing, was published.

The law firm review’s most glaring omission was a failure to look into the nearby hospital, UPMC Magee-Womens, which  contains  one of the university’s tissue banks and provides fetal organs for the vast majority of Pitt studies. Allegations of partial-birth abortions and the harvesting of fetal organs to enhance research outcomes went unexamined, according to the final report. Bell’s confirmation would open the door to a thorough look at this facility and its tangled relationship with the university.

Shortly after nominating Bell earlier this year, President Trump  announced  that his administration planned to “look into” the harvesting of aborted baby organs. His National Institutes of Health director, Dr. Jay Bhattacharya,  vowed  during his Senate hearing that he would discontinue the use of aborted fetal tissue in grants funded through the agency.

So far, the administration appears to be following through. Last month, the NIH  pledged  that more than a dozen human fetal tissue projects initiated by the Biden administration and intended to continue into next year would not be renewed. The University of Pittsburgh has been a major recipient of NIH funding, currently ranking  sixth  in the country for research dollars among all colleges and universities.

Ryan Navarro is a therapist in Pittsburgh who formerly interned and worked at UPMC.

Recent Posts

By Melanie Wade June 24, 2026
By: Ryan King, originally published June 22, 2026, The New York Post Golf fans attending the third round of the US Open at Shinnecock Hills Saturday were left stunned when an airplane buzzed the course towing an advertisement promoting obtaining abortion pills by mail. The ad was paid for by Mayday Health, a Massachusetts-based nonprofit dedicated to highlighting the… The post Abortion pill advertisement at US Open leaves golf fans appalled: ‘Gross and divisive’ appeared first on Cincinnati Right to Life.
By Melanie Wade June 12, 2026
By: Amy O’Donnell, originally published June 11, 2026, Society of St. Sebastian For nearly fifty years under Roe v. Wade, abortion was treated as a constitutional right deeply embedded in American law, politics, education, and culture. Organizations like Planned Parenthood aggressively promoted it, especially in low-income and minority communities. Meanwhile, pro-life advocates worked incrementally to save… The post When Protecting Life Loses Its Heart appeared first on Cincinnati Right to Life.
By Melanie Wade June 12, 2026
By: Nancy Flanders, originally published May 15, 2026, LiveAction.org A recent post on X regarding maternal mortality has gone viral, but the post uses a source from nearly two years ago that has already been debunked. Despite this, the misinformation is now making the rounds on social media and has racked up more than 8.7 million views. Yet,… The post Why a viral tweet about maternal mortality shouldn’t be taken as fact appeared first on Cincinnati Right to Life.
By Melanie Wade June 10, 2026
By: Calvin Freiburger, originally published June 5, 2026, LifeSiteNews.com The Trump administration Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has finally begun its review of the data on abortion pill harms, more than a year after the move was promised to frustrated pro-lifers. In May 2025, the Trump administration promised to review abortion pill data, but a year without… The post Trump FDA finally begins abortion pill review after pressure from pro-lifers appeared first on Cincinnati Right to Life.
By Melanie Wade June 5, 2026
By: Mary Rose, originally published June 5, 2026, The Loop/Zeale News. Parents of children with Down syndrome took to X June 4 to share stories of love and advocacy, responding to a viral post by YouTuber Jesse Ridgway in which he announced he and his wife aborted their unborn child after learning the baby had… The post “The happiest people on Earth’: Down syndrome families flood social media after YouTuber aborts baby due to Down syndrome diagnosis appeared first on Cincinnati Right to Life.
By Melanie Wade June 5, 2026
By: Elise Winland, originally published June 4, 2026, The Loop/Zeale News Chloe Cole, a 21-year-old detransitioner, urged Congress during an emotional June 3 hearing to ban gender “transition” procedures for children, alleging that doctors lied to her family and left her with irreversible physical and emotional harm. Cole — who began “transitioning” at age 12… The post Detransitioner Chloe Cole urges Congress to ban gender ‘transition’ procedures for minors during heated Senate hearing appeared first on Cincinnati Right to Life.
By Melanie Wade June 5, 2026
By: Dan Hart, originally published May 27, 2026, The Washington Stand A startling new study has revealed that the vast majority of online abortion drug vendors are shipping the pills to women whose unborn children are past the point of 10 weeks’ gestation, in violation of the FDA’s federal safety limit. The report, released by the… The post Study: 64 Online Abortion Pill Vendors Ignore 10-Week Gestational Limit appeared first on Cincinnati Right to Life.
By Melanie Wade June 3, 2026
Congratulations to the winners of this year’s Pro-Life Poster Contest!! We received 510 submissions! The students very brilliantly depicted this year’s theme “One Nation Under God, Protecting Life For All.” Here are the 20261st, 2nd, & 3rd Place Winners: Thank you to all those who participated!! The post Announcing Cincinnati Right to Life’s 2026 Poster Contest Winners! appeared first on Cincinnati Right to Life.
By Melanie Wade June 1, 2026
From Right to Life Action Coalition of Ohio State Senators are HESITATING on SupportingSub. H.B. 485, Enact the Baby Olivia Act  IMMEDIATE ALERT to CALL and EMAILThursday, May 28Friday, May 29Monday, June 1 CALLSenate Education Committee Members Sen. Andrew Brenner, Chair  614-466-8086 ohiosenate.gov/andrew-o-brenner Sen. Louis Blessing, III, Vice Chair 614-466-8068 ohiosenate.gov/louis-w-blessing-iii Sen. Al Cutrona 614-466-8285 ohiosenate.gov/al-cutrona Sen. Steve… The post ACTION ALERT! Call and Email State Senators! appeared first on Cincinnati Right to Life.
By Melanie Wade May 31, 2026
By: Calvin Freiburger, originally published May 21, 2026, LifeSiteNews WASHINGTON, D.C. (LifeSiteNews) — Top Republicans on the U.S. House Oversight Subcommittee on Delivering on Government Efficiency are seeking information from Planned Parenthood affiliates around the country on the abortion giant’s abortion practices and work “transitioning” gender-confused children. The Daily Signal reported that the committee chairman, Republican Reps. Tim… The post Republicans demand answers from Planned Parenthood on abortions, ‘gender transitions’ for minors appeared first on Cincinnati Right to Life.
Show More