10/26/09
THE BEGINNING OF ME ACTUALLY PUTTING MY OWN WORDS INTO THIS BLOG
Elated and relieved, yet sad and deflated
1-30-10
Since May 31, 2009, when Scott shot and killed Dr. George Tiller, the late-term abortionist in Wichita, Kansas, life has been very overwhelming, frustrating, maddening, and even scary at times. Hopefully, this will provide a safe outlet to release.
June 23, 2009
A moral civil war: The truth is millions of Americans believe Dr ‘Baby Killer’ Tiller deserved to die
David Jones
Daily Mail: June 7, 2009
Somewhere beside a busy freeway in the dreary suburbs of Wichita, Kansas, there stands an anonymous, single-storey building. Its cream walls are stained by exhaust fumes and it has no external windows.
Guarded night and day by a private security patrol and CCTV cameras, and surrounded by ‘No Trespassing’ signs, it could be a top-security prison.
As vandals have spattered the perimeter fence with something that looks like congealed blood, it might equally be a laboratory where animal experiments are conducted.
In reality, this forbidding breeze-block rectangle is an abortion clinic – one of the most pitiful places in America.
Trading under the innocuous name of Women’s Health Care Services, for more than 30 years it has served as the last resort for a wretched procession of expectant mothers who have felt compelled to terminate their pregnancies at such a late stage that the mainstream U.S. medical profession has refused to help them.
Braving a gauntlet of howling protesters who keep a daily vigil outside the clinic, banging on their car windows and brandishing gruesome placards depicting dismembered foetuses, they have journeyed here in their thousands from all over America and even abroad.
Clutching overnight bags and often wearing clothing to disguise their condition, they range from schoolgirl rape victims to far more questionable cases, such as those who claim to be suffering from depression.
They came here because they knew that Dr George Tiller, the clinic’s controversial founder, seldom turned anyone away. Operating on the extreme edge of the minefield that is U.S. abortion law, his only stipulation was that clients must settle his $6,000 (£3,700) fee in full and up-front before he donned his surgical gowns.
As the dapper 67-year-old doctor, whose rimless glasses and soft voice lent him a vaguely sinister air, was among only a handful of physicians prepared to conduct late-term abortions (even terminating a pregnancy in the ninth month if he deemed it necessary), they had little choice but to agree. Thus, in recent years, Wichita has attained an unwanted soubriquet: Abortionville, U.S.A.
This remote city, out on the dusty Mid-Western plains, has also become the key battleground in the long-simmering war between so-called pro-lifers, who vehemently oppose abortion, and the pro-choice lobby, who defend a woman’s right to decide whether to have a baby or not.
Though we may find it difficult to comprehend in Britain, where abortion has become an accepted (and all-too often abused) and commonplace procedure, in the U.S. this struggle remains as violently divisive as any in the nation’s history, from slavery to prohibition.
And last Sunday, in what one eminent professor of moral theology described as ‘a very American crime’, Dr Tiller became its latest and most shocking casualty. As he went about his duties as an usher at the Reformation Lutheran Church – smiling, shaking hands and handing out pamphlets to worshippers – a gunman burst into the lobby and fired a single bullet into his head.
Among those startled by the balloon-like popping sound was the doctor’s wife, Jeanne, who was preparing to sing in the choir, one of her great joys.
Today, at a Methodist church selected to accommodate hundreds of mourners, Mrs Tiller and her four children will attend an altogether more sombre service: her husband’s showpiece funeral.
Within hours of the murder, Scott Roeder, a mentally unstable 51-year-old linked with extremist groups, who had staged acts of sabotage against abortion clinics for years, was stopped while driving near his home in Kansas City, 170 miles from Wichita.
If Roeder, an Old-Testament-thumping vitamin pill addict, is convicted, he will spend the rest of his life in prison. Unless, that is, his lawyers succeed in arguing he was psychologically impaired at the time of the shooting.
For all the moral dilemmas surrounding Dr Tiller’s work, we might expect the American nation to join in condemning his cold-blooded execution.
Perplexingly, however, revulsion at the murder is by no means universal. Many feel outrage, of course, yet a surprising number believe the man his enemies branded ‘Tiller the baby killer’ simply got his comeuppance.
These are not anti-abortion fanatics, but ordinary Middle Americans. Women such as the elderly news vendor at Wichita airport who, on learning why I was in town, said with a shrug: ‘I don’t lose sleep over the death of anyone who pushes a needle through a crying baby’s brain.’
Even among those who are sickened by the murder, many are reluctant to blame Roeder.
Instead, they point the finger at influential talk-show hosts such as Bill O’Reilly, the motor-mouthed voice of the extreme Right on Fox TV, who for years has waged a campaign against Dr Tiller so vitriolic that some say it was tantamount to incitement.
Having declared his outrage at the ‘heinous act of violence’ this week, Barack Obama is also under fire – from both sides.
Pro-lifers despise the liberal President for softening abortion regulations introduced by George W Bush. Pro-choicers are appalled by his appeasement of the anti-abortionists, most recently in a speech at Roman Catholic Notre Dame University, where he called for a new spirit of reconciliation between the warring factions.
Within a few days, Roeder appears to have made a mockery of the President’s entreaty. But what turned this one-time pacifist – who would tell his son off if he swatted an insect – into an allegedly fanatical killer, and why did he single out Dr Tiller?
Though these two men seemed as different as night and day – one a brilliant medical practitioner, the other a former factory worker and backstreet subversive – they shared similar traits.
Both, in their way, were devoutly religious and both were utterly convinced that when it came to their views on abortion, God was on their side; both pursued their ideologies with relentless single-mindedness.
Roeder, his ex-wife Lindsey told me, was born into a respectable Kansan household, though mental illness ran in the family. Upon retiring, his father had studied to be a Methodist minister, 51-year-old Mrs Roeder said.
Scott was reasonably bright and graduated from high school, but suffered psychiatric problems in his late teens and had little ambition. He was making envelopes in a factory when they met, in 1983, but Lindsey was attracted to his ‘happy-go-lucky’ nature and they became ’soul-mates’.
When it came to the abortion issue, the young Roeder appeared uninterested. Indeed, after his wife fell pregnant he even went with her to discuss their options at Planned Parenthood – a family planning organisation that is anathema to pro-lifers – although they kept the child.
During the early Nineties, however, he started to change. He stopped paying taxes as some form of protest at the government and began to see dark conspiracy.
He also joined subversive sects, including The Freemen, a quasi-religious cult based in the wilds of Montana who declared themselves outside all authority, and in 1996 were involved in an armed siege when the FBI surrounded their remote farmhouse seeking to arrest several members of the group. The stand-off lasted for 81 days, before the group surrendered.
In 1994, when Lindsey refused to listen to Roeder’s rambling monologues – and would not open their home to his homeless friends – he walked out on her and their son Nicholas, now 23.
It was around this time an episode occurred which may have been the catalyst for Roeder’s descent into violent anti-abortion activism.
During a U.S. TV interview this week, Lindsey mentioned that Roeder had been upset when he discovered that ‘a friend’ planned to terminate her pregnancy.
What she did not say, however, was that this unidentified friend was Roeder’s lover – and that the baby she wished to abort was his.
Whether or not Roeder’s unnamed girlfriend went ahead with the abortion we don’t know, but the very possibility was enough to send him into a near-suicidal depression.
After he recovered, he joined anti-abortion groups such as Operation Rescue (whose leader Randall Terry described Dr Tiller this week as a ‘mass murderer who reaped what he sowed’) and embarked on his fateful crusade.
In 1996, he was jailed for two years after explosives were found in his car; a conviction later overturned on appeal because the police search was judged to have been unlawful.
And six years ago, staff at an abortion clinic in Kansas considered him such a menace that they reported him to the FBI, who took no action. He was caught attempting to glue door locks there a few days before the murder, but nothing was done.
By then, Roeder had found a new hate-figure: George Tiller. He was enraged by graphic internet accounts of Tiller’s abortion procedures, which described how Tiller would stop the foetus’s heart with a drug injected through the mother’s abdomen, and then send the patient to a hotel, where she waited for up to two days until a stillbirth delivery was induced.
Last March, Roeder drove for four hours to Wichita to attend a court case involving the doctor. The evidence he heard there stoked his fury.
Under Kansas law, aborting a foetus considered to be ‘viable’ – or capable of surviving outside the womb – is only permissible when two independent medical experts agree that the mother’s health could be substantially impaired if the birth went ahead.
Dr Tiller was accused of breaching this law 19 times. The prosecution alleged that in every case he obtained the consent of the same ‘tame’ doctor – Kristin Neuhaus, who was paid $250 (£156) to $300 (£187) in cash by each patient for signing the necessary forms.
Tiller denied the charges and was acquitted. During the trial, however, the doctor – who lived in a mansion on an exclusive estate – admitted that he had conducted up to 300 late-term abortions in 2003 alone, charging a fee of $6,000 (£3,700).
Had Tiller not been shot he would have faced a fresh prosecution, this time brought by the Kansas health department, who also believed his collaboration with Dr Neuhaus to be improper.
Contained in their case was the allegation that he carried out an abortion on a 10-year-old girl, who was 28 weeks pregnant, without gaining genuinely independent consent.
Four years ago, Christin Gilbert, a 19-year-old Texan girl with Down’s syndrome, died of sepsis – an acute bacterial infection – soon after he aborted the baby she had conceived as a result of being raped.
After the injection to kill the foetus, Christin was in her hotel room when she started to suffer agonising stomach spasms. She was rushed back to the clinic, then to hospital, where she died.
After an inquiry, Dr Tiller was again exonerated. Yet, according to his detractors, his staff’s greatest concern that day was to preserve the clinic’s reputation.
Transcripts of the 911 emergency call made by one of his staff suggest they may be right. ‘Please, please, please! No lights, no sirens,’ implores the female clinic employee. She is also said to have placed the 911 operator on hold for 45 seconds while asking how much she should tell him, and playing down the seriousness of Christin’s condition.
For every damning story like this, however, the are others portraying Dr Tiller as a kindly, dedicated physician whose only motive was to help desperate women.
Among those who risked public opprobrium to support him this week (one in three Americans believes late-term abortion should be legal) was Miriam Kleiman, from Virginia, whose 29-week pregnancy he terminated nine years ago.
Scans revealed her baby to have such severe brain abnormalities that it would either die in the womb or soon after birth.
Unable to face a ‘two-month death watch’, she pleaded with her doctor in Virginia for an abortion. As the foetus was so well formed he would not help. Instead he scribbled the name ‘Tiller’ on a scrap of paper and handed it to her.
Dr Tiller and his staff couldn’t have been more professional or compassionate, recalled Mrs Kleiman, who now has two healthy sons. She wept on hearing that he had been shot.
She was not alone. But his death must have been half-expected, for over the years his clinic had been firebombed and besieged by mobs. Death threats had become routine.
The first attempt on his life was made in 1993, when Rachelle Shannon, a 37-year-old anti-abortionist shot him in both arms. Though she languishes in jail, she is still regarded as a pillar of respectability by some and became one of Roeder’s heroes.
Following that attack, the doctor had his car armour-plated, moved to a gated community, employed a bodyguard, varied his travel routine and wore a bullet-proof vest.
Knowing all this, Roeder struck at church – the place Dr Tiller relaxed his guard – and made sure to aim the pistol at his head.
On the Friday before the murder, Roeder’s ex-wife told me he had insisted on taking their son to the pictures and later for dinner. ‘Normally he observed the Sabbath on a Friday, but this was like his Last Supper,’ she said.
Perhaps so, but one question remains: knowing that fanatics such as Roeder had him in their sights, why didn’t Dr Tiller, who was, after all, a wealthy man in the autumn of his years, simply close his clinic and retire?
A reserved man with an acerbic wit (’Hi there, I’m Satan’ he once quipped when meeting opponents in the pro-choice advice centre which opened next-door to his clinic), he never intended to follow such a high-profile career. After graduating from medical school, he became a Navy flight surgeon and seemed set to remain in the military.
In 1970, however, when his parents were killed in a plane crash, he inherited his father’s medical practice; and, thumbing through the files, he discovered that Dr Tiller Senior had secretly been carrying out abortions – which were then still strictly illegal in America – for years.
By all accounts, he was aghast. After pondering on the morality of abortion, however, he decided his father had acted according to his conscience and vowed to continue his ‘noble’ work.
Dr Tiller rarely explained himself, but during his recent court hearing he said he took succour from the support of his daughters – and one conversation with them stuck in his memory.
It apparently took place when they approached him as he worked in his study, and said: ‘Daddy, if not now, when? If not you, who? Who is going to stand up for women with unexpected and badly damaged babies?’
Comforted by their backing, he found the strength to carry on. In Scott Roeder, however, he would meet a man who was also on a mission, sure in the knowledge that right was on his side.
So Dr Tiller becomes the ninth abortion doctor or clinical worker to be murdered by fanatics who purport to cherish human life during the past 15 years; a statistic that shames the Land of the Free.
With America’s unofficial civil war now at fever pitch and reconciliation beyond even the unifying powers of President Obama, ‘Tiller the baby killer’ surely won’t be the last.
A Brief History of the Radical, Violent Right: How Racist Hate Groups Joined Up with Abortion Terrorists By James Ridgeway, MotherJones.com |
In the late 1980s, Scott Roeder held a job, loved his wife and paid his taxes — as normal a life as any other Topekan.
Then life pivoted with his entrance into a group of people who considered themselves sovereign. They believed they weren’t subject to American authority, didn’t have to obey laws enacted by, as they saw it, an unjust federal government. They were Freemen.
The group, which had a moderate following in the mid-1990s, held trials against public officials, registered notices of civilian death with the government and allegedly learned how to write bogus checks that earned them hundreds of thousands of dollars.
More than a decade before he was charged in the shooting death of abortion doctor George Tiller, Roeder’s association with the Freemen movement was hardening his view that the U.S. government was corrupt and held no say over his life.
Sovereignty
Behind the doors of Topeka motel rooms in the mid-1990s, members of the Freemen held court in trials against the American government.
An air of revolution hung heavy during these often-raucous gatherings. Holed up for weekends, the group — sometimes 15 or 20 people, sometimes as many as 150 — would draw up writs of habeas corpus for people they thought wrongly imprisoned and writs of mandamus condemning other courts’ decisions.
“They felt like they were doing something valuable,” said Morris Wilson, a former member who attended these meetings. “They were shaking things up.”
To the members, they were sovereign from a corrupt government. “The Freemen’s belief was that you could give away your federal citizenship and you’re only a state citizen,” Wilson said. “You become sovereign and get yourself out from under all the crap of the government.”
What brought many to these meetings varied. Everyone had an issue, Wilson said. Maybe they were jailed for not having a license plate or were manhandled by the police. It was a time just after the botched federal raid in Waco, Texas, which soured Wilson’s view of the government. And it was the time of President Bill Clinton, who members saw as the highest of criminals.
For Roeder, former wife Lindsey Roeder said, the issue was federal taxes. And abortion.
“I agreed with him on his abortion thing,” Wilson said. “Except I got over it, and he never did.”
Criminality
Doug Mauck saw the other side.
As the sergeant in charge of criminal intelligence for the Shawnee County Sheriff’s Office at the time, he knew the workings of the Freemen well.
The group first caught his eye when it published legal notices in the Topeka Metro News, trumpeting what members said were legal filings. “This common law affidavit, in law, is true, correct and certain, being made in good faith,” began one notice.
They termed themselves “the One Supreme Court,” which didn’t impress Mauck.
“I understood the words, but I couldn’t understand the message,” he said. “It was just crazy talk, one long schizophrenic diatribe.”
Mauck knew that Wilson and Topeka-area Freeman leader Ronald Griesacker attended the Montana ranch of Leroy Schweitzer, national leader of the Freemen. There, Wilson said, members ate breakfast, cleared the table and listened to Schweitzer talk of Christian philosophy and rail against the government for hours. Then lunch, clear the table and repeat.
What they were learning, however, was how to pass bogus checks, Mauck said. He said, for example, the group wrote $400,000 on what resembled a check and presented it to Caterpillar for a $150,000 bulldozer. Then the company sent them a corporate check for the difference.
Mauck, who retired in the late 1990s, said legal wrangling let the statute of limitations run out on most cases of bank fraud in the area.
No longer around
From all indications, the Freemen movement is no longer breathing.
“If they’re still around, they’re really, really underground,” Wilson said from a ranch in Keith County in western Nebraska, where he now lives.
Sgt. Phil McKay, who helps with criminal intelligence for the sheriff’s office, said he hasn’t heard anything about the Freemen in years. Detective Janine Falley, with the Topeka Police Department’s intelligence unit, said the group is never discussed in daily briefings.
The local and national movements broke down in 1996 when a monthlong standoff at Schweitzer’s Montana ranch ended in the leader’s arrest and conviction for numerous crimes. He is still in a Colorado prison.
Griesacker, the local leader, had fortuitously left the Montana compound the day of the raid and spent two years on the run before his arrest and conviction.
It was during the standoff, and one day before the one-year anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing, that Roeder was arrested for possessing explosives. His subsequent conviction later was overturned for an improper search of his car.
Wilson said there was never any real threat from the Freemen, who he said spent a lot of time locally just playing war games in fields.
“It was mostly people getting together to shoot their guns and blow off steam,” he said. “They weren’t planning to blow up buildings or anything.”
James Carlson can be reached at (785) 295-1186 or james.carlson@cjonline.com.
WICHITA — The man charged in the slaying of late-term abortion provider George Tiller says he is “being treated as a criminal” even though he hasn’t been convicted of anything.
Scott Roeder called The Associated Press on Thursday from the Sedgwick County Jail and disputed what he called “broad brush” characterizations of him as being anti-government.
“I want people to stop and think: It is not anti-government, it is anti-corrupt government,” said Roeder, who called in response to a written request for an interview.
When asked by the AP to discuss the Tiller shooting, Roeder, 51, of Kansas City, Mo., refused to comment, saying he would talk about that later.
Roeder, a Topeka High School graduate, is charged with first-degree murder for allegedly killing Tiller with a single gunshot as the doctor handed out programs Sunday while ushering at the Lutheran church he attended. Roeder also is accused of assaulting two witnesses before leaving the church and driving away.
Roeder was arrested a few hours later, near Gardner, about 170 miles northeast of Wichita.
“I haven’t been convicted of anything, and I am being treated as a criminal,” he said in a telephone conversation that lasted about three minutes.
Roeder said he has made it through the first several days of his incarceration but is concerned about the media attention his family, particularly his elderly mother, has been getting.
“I appreciate your prayers,” he said.
Dan Monnat, the attorney for the Tiller family, declined to comment on Roeder’s statements.
Also Thursday, District Judge Warren Wilbert set bond for Roeder at $5 million.
A day earlier, public defender Steve Osburn had filed a motion asking the court to set bond for Roeder, saying bond should be granted for defendants charged with noncapital crimes.
Kansas law requires that special circumstances exist for a defendant to be eligible for the death penalty. Such circumstances include the killing of a law officer, more than one person or a victim kidnapped for ransom or rape, or killed in murder for hire. Prosecutors said the Tiller homicide case doesn’t qualify.
If convicted of the murder charge, Roeder would face a mandatory life sentence and wouldn’t be eligible for parole for at least 25 years. His preliminary hearing is scheduled for June 16, although it likely will be continued.
Tiller and his Wichita clinic have been a regular target of anti-abortion protests, including the 45-day “Summer of Mercy” event staged by Operation Rescue in 1991. His clinic was damaged by a pipe bomb in 1986, and a protester shot at him in 1993, wounding his arms.
Hundreds of people are expected at his funeral Saturday.
Story by The Associated Press
Originally published 03:29 p.m., June 4, 2009
Updated 03:45 p.m., June 4, 2009
The man charged in the slaying of Kansas late-term abortion provider George Tiller says he's "being treated as a criminal" even though he hasn't been convicted.
Scott Roeder called The Associated Press on Thursday from the Sedgwick County Jail and disputed characterizations in the media of him as being anti-government, saying he is "anti-corrupt government."
When asked by the AP to discuss the Tiller shooting, the 51-year-old Kansas City, Mo., man refused to comment, saying he would talk about that later.
Tiller was killed Sunday while serving as an usher at his church in Wichita.