Prosecutors seek constraints in Ind. poison case Associated Press Copyright 2013 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed. Updated 2:13 am, Friday, March 8, 2013 INDIANAPOLIS (AP) — Prosecutors who charged a mother with murdering her infant because she ate rat poison while pregnant are asking an Indiana judge to take steps during the trial that critics say are meant to stifle any sympathy jurors might have for a woman who's become an international cause. Bei Bei Shuai's story has generated a wave of global news coverage, as well as support from people who fear the case could open the door for pregnant women to be prosecuted for doing anything authorities deem dangerous to a fetus. Prosecutors are asking Judge Sheila Carlisle to bar courtroom spectators from wearing buttons expressing opinions about Shuai and to bar defense attorneys from questioning witnesses about their religious beliefs or from asking questions that might create sympathy for Shuai. "The scope of this motion extends beyond what I was used to seeing in my almost 10 years of practice as a prosecutor and a defense attorney," said Shawn Boyne, a professor at the Indiana University School of Law in Indianapolis. "Since it is the defendant's right to a fair trial that we are concerned with, I don't understand why the state would be prejudiced by this speech," she said in an email. Ed Pilkington, chief U.S.