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11/23/09

Scott Roeder's Defense Attorney Uses Necessity Defense in George Tiller Killing by Steven Ertelt LifeNews.com Editor November 23, 2009

Wichita, KS (LifeNews.com) -- The defense attorney for former militia activist Scott Roeder, who is charged with killing late-term abortion practitioner George Tiller, is using the necessity defense. That tells the court Roeder feels compelled to kill Tiller because the lives of unborn children were in danger had he not killed him.

The legal papers with the defense come after a recent interview in which Roeder essentially admitted he killed Tiller.

"Defending innocent life – that is what prompted me. It is pretty simple," he said.

The legal motion filed today also comes after defense attorney Steve Osburn said he would not use a necessity defense to defend Roeder.

But the filing asserts Roeder has an "absolute right" to present the defense, according to an AP report. Prosecutors have been hoping to ban the defense and a hearing on whether it will be allowed is set for December 22.

"For the Court to grant the State's motion to prohibit `any evidence' in support of the necessity defense would be premature, and contrary to Kansas law," Osburn wrote, according to AP. "In addition, it would be rank speculation on the part of the state (and the Court if it were to grant said Motion) as to the purpose of any and all evidence that the Defendant may seek to introduce."

Roeder is charged with one count of first-degree murder in the death of Tiller, who pro-life advocates had hoped would lose his medical license for violating various state laws.

He also faces two counts of aggravated assault for allegedly threatening two people in the church where he reportedly killed Tiller.

Shortly after the recent interview, Osburn told reporters that the justifiable homicide defense did not exist under Kansas law and that Roeder's defense team did not plan to use the strategy.

"We have explored that possibility," Osburn said at the time. "That does not seem to be the approach that is viable, nor is it the approach we intend to use."

AP indicates Osburn did not say why he went ahead with the necessity defense, but indicated he may have tried to confuse prosecutors with his previous comments.

Georgia Cole, spokeswoman for the Sedgwick County District Attorney's Office, would not talk about the case in public and said prosecutors would address it in court.

In the recent interview, Roeder also indicated he would kill another abortion practitioner if he is ever released from prison.
"[E]ven if one changed her mind it would be worth it,” he told AP from jail. “No, I don't have any regrets."

Roeder faces life in prison with the possibility of parole after 25 years if convicted of first-degree murder.

Tiller was one of the few abortion practitioners in the United States to do late-term abortions and he had been a subject of legal and peaceful efforts by pro-life groups at the time of the shooting.

Hundreds of pro-life groups condemned the Tiller shooting immediately or in the days following, but that didn't stop abortion advocates from claiming they supported the killing or calling the majority of Americans who take a pro-life view "terrorists."

Roeder, who shot Tiller prior to a Michigan man killing a pro-life advocate outside a local high school for protesting abortion, will not go on trial until next year.

The date had been scheduled but is now set for January 25, 2010. That is just three days after the 37th anniversary of the infamous Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision that allowed virtually unlimited abortions -- which likely means that the trial will color the mainstream media's coverage of the anniversary.

Church member Gary Hoepner was the first witness called at a preliminary hearing for Roeder in July and said Roeder pointed a gun at Tiller's head and killed him.

“I wasn't sure if it was a cap gun or what," Hoepner said, noting that he wasn't certain that the assailant had a real gun to use to hurt Tiller. “I couldn't believe what I was seeing."

Hoepner said he and Tiller were discussing Tiller's fondness of doughnuts at the time he was shot.

Roeder is also charged with aggravated assault for allegedly threatening Hoepner and another member of the church as he fled the scene.

"'I've got a gun and I'll shoot you'," Hoepner recalled Roeder saying. "I believed him and I stopped."

After the incident, Hoepner told the court that he wrote down the license plate of Roeder's vehicle and informed police.

The court also heard that Roeder attended Tiller's church several times before, including the Sunday prior to the church service during which he allegedly shot the abortion practitioner.

With plenty of evidence and witnesses, a case will likely move forward and speculation is on what type of defense Roeder's attorneys will rely on during the trial. Some observers say they could say Roeder suffered from mental illness at various times in his life.

Roeder says he is not mentally ill now, although his family members have told the media that he has suffered from mental health issues throughout his life. He was diagnosed with schizophrenia in his late teens and Roeder blames that on drug use at the time.

Justice Department spokesman Alejandro Miyar told AP that the federal government is looking at federal charges against Roeder in connection with Tiller's death.

Abortion slaying suspect may use necessity defense By ROXANA HEGEMAN - Associated Press Writer

Abortion slaying suspect may use necessity defense

- Associated Press Writer

WICHITA, Kan. -- Seemingly contradicting his own public statements, an attorney for the man accused of gunning down a Kansas abortion provider has argued in court documents that his client has an "absolute right" to present a defense that argues the killing was justified to stop abortion.

A defense motion made public Monday seeks to thwart prosecutors' efforts to ban the so-called necessity defense from Scott Roeder's murder and aggravated assault trial. A hearing on the issue is set for Dec. 22.

"For the Court to grant the State's motion to prohibit 'any evidence' in support of the necessity defense would be premature, and contrary to Kansas law," the defense wrote. "In addition, it would be rank speculation on the part of the state (and the Court if it were to grant said Motion) as to the purpose of any and all evidence that the Defendant may seek to introduce."

Roeder, 51, of Kansas City, Mo., is charged with one count of first-degree murder in Dr. George Tiller's death and two counts of aggravated assault for allegedly threatening two ushers who tried to stop him during the May 31 melee in the foyer of the doctor's Wichita church. Roeder has pleaded not guilty and is scheduled to go to trial on Jan 11.

He told The Associated Press on Nov. 9 that he shot Tiller to protect unborn children and he planned to present a necessity defense at his trial. He also said one of his two public defenders, Mark Rudy, had given him the "green light" to talk to the media about it.

But the following day, lead defense attorney Steve Osburn told reporters the necessity defense did not exist in Kansas law and the defense team did not plan to present that strategy.

"We have explored that possibility," Osburn said at the time. "That does not seem to be the approach that is viable, nor is it the approach we intend to use."

On Monday, Osburn declined to clarify the discrepancy between the court filing and his earlier statement, but he suggested he may have used the media to confuse prosecutors about the defense strategy.

Rudy did not immediately return a call for comment Monday. Georgia Cole, spokeswoman for the Sedgwick County District Attorney's Office, declined to talk about the case, saying prosecutors would make their arguments in court.

The defense motion argued that Roeder has an absolute right to present the necessity defense, and the state's motion is "nothing more than an attempt to force the defense to reveal their defense strategy and forgo what may be a valid defense."

In the wake of Roeder's confession, prosecutors filed court papers seeking to ban the necessity defense at his trial.

WICHITA, Kan. -- To bolster their argument, they cited a criminal trespass case involving an abortion clinic in which the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that to allow the personal beliefs of a person to justify criminal activity to stop a law-abiding citizen from exercising his rights would "not only lead to chaos but would be tantamount to sanctioning anarchy."

Roeder's public defenders responded that his case differs because a trespass at an abortion clinic is just a potential temporary interruption of the practice of abortion.

"It is inconclusive whether the lives of the unborn were spared as a result of the act of criminal trespass," they wrote. "In the instant case, the result of the alleged murder resulted in the termination of abortions being performed in the City of Wichita by the victim, Dr. George Tiller."

Defense attorneys noted the Supreme Court also said that whether "the necessity defense should be adopted or recognized in Kansas may best be left for another day."

Roeder's public defenders used similar arguments to counter a move by prosecutors to ban any evidence or argument to the jury to influence them to vote for acquittal regardless of the evidence, a practice known as jury nullification.

Although Roeder's attorneys are purportedly keeping their defense strategy secret, they have filed numerous motions that may offer a glimpse into their case.

In one motion for discovery, they are seeking Tiller's professional calendars, appointment books, records of scheduled procedures or similar documents for the dates of May 1 to June 30. Prosecutors responded that they do not have the documents and that such items are irrelevant and inadmissible at the trial.

Another defense motion seeks to prohibit the use of peremptory jury strikes by the prosecution on the basis of a prospective juror's beliefs and actions as religious or anti-abortion. Prosecutors responded that such strikes are permissible if a potential juror's actions and beliefs lead to a concern that juror may be unwilling to convict even if the evidence supports a conviction.


Accused in Tiller killing may seek 'necessity defense'

Accused in Tiller killing may seek 'necessity defense'


WICHITA | The defense for the man accused of shooting abortion provider George Tiller is fighting prosecutors' efforts to ban the so-called necessity defense from his trial.

Defense attorneys for Scott Roeder filed a motion arguing he has a right to present his defense. Roeder has publicly said his shooting of Tiller was justified to save "unborn children."

The defense motion made public Monday seemingly contradicts public statements by public defender Steve Osburn that such a necessity defense did not exist in Kansas law. Osburn declined to clarify the discrepancy, but suggested he may have used the media to confuse prosecutors as to his defense strategy.

Court documents argue the state request to ban a necessity defense is intrusive into the defendant's trial strategy.

Posted on Mon, Nov. 23, 2009 10:23 AM

11/18/09

Times Leader and AP - FBI got warning about suspect in Kan. doctor death By ROXANA HEGEMAN

FBI got warning about suspect in Kan. doctor death

By ROXANA HEGEMAN

More than a month before the shooting of a high-profile abortion doctor, the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Kansas City received an anonymous letter warning that the man now charged in the case "would do physical harm" to Dr. George Tiller or any other abortion provider, the agency said.

The letter writer, who later revealed himself to the FBI, and his wife are together in a bitter custody battle over a girl fathered by Scott Roeder, the man accused in Tiller's May 31 death. The April 3 letter contained no specific or credible threat, according to the FBI.

Mark Archer, of Tunkhannock, Pa., acknowledged in an interview with The Associated Press this week that he sent the letter in an effort to get the FBI to put Roeder on its no-fly list as a "domestic terrorist" so Roeder could not visit his 7-year-old daughter.

"I did have an ulterior motive," Archer said.

Roeder is charged with first-degree murder and aggravated assault in the shooting at Tiller's church. He has pleaded not guilty, but confessed to reporters Monday that he shot Tiller, saying it was necessary to protect the unborn.

Prosecutors on Thursday asked a judge to bar the so-called necessity defense from Roeder's trial, scheduled for January. Roeder's public defender has said he has no plans to present such a defense.

FBI spokeswoman Bridget Patton said she did not believe there was surveillance of Roeder at the time of the shooting because of the letter, and said she did not know if Tiller was told about it.

"We get intelligence in every day _ it is looked at, it is screened, it is vetted, it is followed up on," Patton said. "This is anonymous information that came in. The information is still taken in as intelligence _ but again there was not a direct, specific, credible threat there."

Roeder confirmed his lawyers had shown him a copy of the anonymous letter while going over case material, and said he instantly recognized who likely sent it.

"It goes to show a little bit of his motive and the fact he wants to make it harder on me," Roeder said in a phone call from jail Thursday.

Attorney Lee Thompson, who represents the Tiller family, said Friday he would reserve comment on the letter until he has a chance to visit with his client and the district attorney's office.

In a phone interview from Pennsylvania, Archer said he basically did a "psychological profile" of Roeder.

Archer said he tied together Roeder's 1996 arrest for having explosives in his car and a September 2008 conversation Roeder had with Susan Archer during a custody visit, during which he told her he had no qualms about blowing up an abortion clinic. He also considered blog postings Roeder reportedly wrote advocating protests at Tiller's church.

Someone posting to the Web site of anti-abortion group Operation Rescue in May 2007 used the name "Scott Roeder" in response to a scheduled vigil to "pray for an end to George R. Tiller's late-term abortion business."

"Bleass everyone for attending and praying in May to bring justice to Tiller and the closing of his death camp," the posting read. "Sometime soon, would it be feasible to organize as many people as possible to attend Tillers church (inside, not just outside) to have much more of a presence and possibly ask questions of the Pastor, Deacons, Elders and members while there? Doesn't seem like it would hurt anything but bring more attention to Tiller."

Archer said his letter included links to that posting.

Archer eventually acknowledged to the FBI that he wrote the letter _ when agents came to Pennsylvania after the shooting to investigate Roeder's frequent trips there, he said.

"They wanted to make sure I wasn't in cahoots with Scott on killing Dr. Tiller," said Archer, who declined to disclose his occupation. "I just did a psychological profile on Scott and basically guessed he would do bodily harm to Tiller."

Roeder fathered the child while living with the girl's mother in 2001, but the girl was born after Susan and Mark Archer got married, Archer said. Roeder has court-supervised visitation rights, but the court prohibited him from telling the girl he is her father, Archer said.

11/15/09

Homeland Insecurity By Jeannie DeAngelis

Homeland Insecurity

Homeland Insecurity

By Jeannie DeAngelis

Nidal Malik Hasan singlehandedly gunned down 43 American soldiers at Ft. Hood, killing thirteen in the process. Janet Napolitano, and US Army Chief General George Casey's first reaction was to publically express concern about possible repercussions directed toward Muslims.

Months ago, when Nidal Hasan was spouting off anti-American rhetoric, the US Army, as well as the federal government, should have been as concerned about safety as they are about cultural and religious sensitivity. Instead, while Hasan plotted to attack American soldiers, Big Sis focused on right-wing extremism in the form of pro-lifers, upstanding members of the American military and law abiding gun owners.

The unconscionable actions of Nidal Malik Hasan are slowly being revealed to be domestic homegrown terrorism by a Muslim with radical ties. Yet rather than acknowledge the obvious, the left wing media is joining federal level proprietors of political correctness in depicting Major Hasan as a victim of things like "mortification" and "secondary trauma."

True to form, Liberals are attempting to identify what motivated the Army Major to premeditate and ambush a room full of innocent soldiers. And while empathy and thoughtful consideration are commendable, a question arises as to why compassion is never extended to murderers who lash out under less politically correct circumstances?

Take for instance the slaying of late term abortionist Dr. George Tiller, who was shot dead in the foyer of a church by Army of God-style, pro-life extremist, Scott P. Roeder. Except for the measure of effort to understand individual motives, Dr. Tiller's killer and Nidal Malik Hasan have a lot in common. Both are assassins and both are extremists. But immediately following Tiller's death, Janet Napolitano failed to issue a warning to the pro-choice community to tamp down reaction to prevent a wave of anti-pro-life sentiment.

Neither Napolitano nor publications like Time Magazine chronicled how Tiller's dedication to late term abortion might have instigated a disturbed man, so "mortified" by the procedure that he took justice into his own hands. Instead Roeder was portrayed as a wild-eyed vigilante, set on exacting a Biblical "eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth."

Roeder and Hasan, however, are both equally "fanatic" zealots dedicated to a cause. According to Roeder his "...entire motive was in defense of the unborn," while recent reports indicate Nidal considered his action a defense against a Middle East "war against Islam."

Nidal declared the battle cry of "God is great" as he shouted "Allahu Akbar" while gunning down American soldiers. Roeder chillingly cited the death of George Tiller as, "a victory for all the unborn children."

Athough Roeder and Hasan acted alone, each had roots in larger organizations. We now know Hasan had contacts with Al Qaeda months ago. Roeder associated with the 1990's anti-government group the Freeman and subscribed to Prayer and Action News, which unjustly defends homicide in response to abortion. Unlike the response to Hasan, however, following the demise of George Tiller the left wing media was breathless in their efforts to tie Scott Roeder's actions to non-violent groups like Operation Rescue, who publically denounced the murder as, "...vigilantism and a cowardly act" and offered prayers for Tiller's family.

Immediately following the attack at Ft. Hood, some Muslim groups stepped forward to denounce the actions of Major Hasan. Yet while warning the nation that pro-lifers have domestic terrorism potential, Napolitano has yet to warn Americans about groups like Revolution Muslim, who, while disparaging dead American soldiers as "slain terrorists at Fort Hood," sent Nidal Hasan get well wishes lauding his "preemptive" actions and calling him "an officer and a gentleman."

After Tiller's murder, US Attorney General Eric Holder ordered added protection for other doctors identified as being at risk for future targeting by copycat killers.

A startling statistic, which Napolitano failed to cite in her Homeland Security treatise, is that fanatical pro-life bomb throwers are responsible for the death of eight people, five of which are doctors, in sixteen years. The 43 people being gunned down in one afternoon at Ft. Hood, coupled together with the lost in all terrorist attacks including those on 9-11, which is quite a staggering comparison to the murder of abortion doctors, which pale in comparison.

In the meantime, one has to wonder how many other radical Islamic fanatics are concealed within the ranks of the American military, or has that question even been asked? American radical Islamist Anwar Al Awalki praised Hasan following the shooting suggesting that, "...the only way a Muslim can justify serving in the U.S. military is if he intends to "follow in the footsteps of men like Nidal?"

One is forced to wonder whether Homeland Security and the US Military are so busy handing out Qur'ans and prayer mats (sajjāda) that they fail to recognize Awalki's statement as a call to jihad?

Nevertheless, unlike the initial reaction to the death of Dr. Tiller at the hands of a disturbed religious fanatic, the Obama administration continues to encourage America to refrain from "jumping to conclusions" about the radical Islamic factor involved in the Ft. Hood massacre. Obviously learning nothing from the politically correct effort to alert Americans to boogie men while genuine threats lurk in the midst.

Out of 1.4 million active American service men and women there are 3,500 self identified Muslims presently serving in the military, whose affiliations remain unknown, and remain so as Scott Roeder sits safely in jail.

Homeland Security and the US Army put Dr. Nidal Malak Hasan in the position of providing psychiatric therapy to US troops returning from war. Soldiers considered, "...attractive recruits for right-wing groups looking for combat skills and experience so as to boost their violent capabilities." As a result of those valiant efforts, those vested with responsibility to protect America failed to recognize a terrorist willing to kill even the fellow soldiers he counseled to prove fervent devotion to a cause.

11/14/09

FBI got warning about suspect in Kan. doctor death By ROXANA HEGEMAN (AP)

FBI got warning about suspect in Kan. doctor death
By ROXANA HEGEMAN (AP)

WICHITA, Kan. — More than a month before the shooting of a high-profile abortion doctor, the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Kansas City received an anonymous letter warning that the man now charged in the case "would do physical harm" to Dr. George Tiller or any other abortion provider, the agency said.

The letter writer, who later revealed himself to the FBI, and his wife are together in a bitter custody battle over a girl fathered by Scott Roeder, the man accused in Tiller's May 31 death. The April 3 letter contained no specific or credible threat, according to the FBI.

Mark Archer, of Tunkhannock, Pa., acknowledged in an interview with The Associated Press this week that he sent the letter in an effort to get the FBI to put Roeder on its no-fly list as a "domestic terrorist" so Roeder could not visit his 7-year-old daughter.

"I did have an ulterior motive," Archer said.

Roeder is charged with first-degree murder and aggravated assault in the shooting at Tiller's church. He has pleaded not guilty, but confessed to reporters Monday that he shot Tiller, saying it was necessary to protect the unborn.

Prosecutors on Thursday asked a judge to bar the so-called necessity defense from Roeder's trial, scheduled for January. Roeder's public defender has said he has no plans to present such a defense.

FBI spokeswoman Bridget Patton said she did not believe there was surveillance of Roeder at the time of the shooting because of the letter, and said she did not know if Tiller was told about it.

"We get intelligence in every day — it is looked at, it is screened, it is vetted, it is followed up on," Patton said. "This is anonymous information that came in. The information is still taken in as intelligence — but again there was not a direct, specific, credible threat there."

Roeder confirmed his lawyers had shown him a copy of the anonymous letter while going over case material, and said he instantly recognized who likely sent it.

"It goes to show a little bit of his motive and the fact he wants to make it harder on me," Roeder said in a phone call from jail Thursday.

Attorney Lee Thompson, who represents the Tiller family, said Friday he would reserve comment on the letter until he has a chance to visit with his client and the district attorney's office.

In a phone interview from Pennsylvania, Archer said he basically did a "psychological profile" of Roeder.

Archer said he tied together Roeder's 1996 arrest for having explosives in his car and a September 2008 conversation Roeder had with Susan Archer during a custody visit, during which he told her he had no qualms about blowing up an abortion clinic. He also considered blog postings Roeder reportedly wrote advocating protests at Tiller's church.

Someone posting to the Web site of anti-abortion group Operation Rescue in May 2007 used the name "Scott Roeder" in response to a scheduled vigil to "pray for an end to George R. Tiller's late-term abortion business."

"Bleass everyone for attending and praying in May to bring justice to Tiller and the closing of his death camp," the posting read. "Sometime soon, would it be feasible to organize as many people as possible to attend Tillers church (inside, not just outside) to have much more of a presence and possibly ask questions of the Pastor, Deacons, Elders and members while there? Doesn't seem like it would hurt anything but bring more attention to Tiller."

Archer said his letter included links to that posting.

Archer eventually acknowledged to the FBI that he wrote the letter — when agents came to Pennsylvania after the shooting to investigate Roeder's frequent trips there, he said.

"They wanted to make sure I wasn't in cahoots with Scott on killing Dr. Tiller," said Archer, who declined to disclose his occupation. "I just did a psychological profile on Scott and basically guessed he would do bodily harm to Tiller."

Roeder fathered the child while living with the girl's mother in 2001, but the girl was born after Susan and Mark Archer got married, Archer said. Roeder has court-supervised visitation rights, but the court prohibited him from telling the girl he is her father, Archer said.

11/13/09

FBI got warning about suspect in Kan. doctor death By ROXANA HEGEMAN Associated Press Writer

FBI got warning about suspect in Kan. doctor death

AP - FBI got warning about suspect in Tiller's death

FBI got warning about suspect in Tiller's death


- The Federal Bureau of Investigation says that more than a month before Dr. George Tiller was shot and killed, it received a letter warning them about the man now charged in the case.

FBI spokeswoman Bridget Patton says the letter warned that Scott Roeder would physically harm Tiller or any other abortion provider.

The letter was written in April by Mark Archer. He and his wife are in the midst of a bitter custody battle with Roeder over a child Roeder fathered.

Roeder has been charged with first-degree murder and aggravated assault in Tiller's death.

Patton says the agency found no specific, credible threat in the letter.

FBI received letter warning that Roeder was threat to Tiller by Judy Thomas from the Kansas City Star

FBI received letter warning that Roeder was threat to Tiller


The month before Wichita abortion doctor George Tiller was gunned down, the FBI received a letter warning authorities that Scott Roeder was a threat to Tiller and other abortion providers, agency officials said Friday.

The letter, written in April and sent anonymously to the Kansas City FBI office, said that Roeder “has the potential to be a domestic terrorist” and that “given the right opportunity he would do physical harm to Dr. Tiller and any other abortionist he would come across.”

But FBI spokesman Joel Sealer said Friday that the agency determined that the letter contained no specific or credible threats.

Tiller was killed May 31 while ushering in his church. Roeder of Kansas City was charged with first-degree murder and is scheduled to go to trial Jan. 11.

The Pennsylvania man who wrote the letter said he did so because he was hoping the FBI would question Roeder and put him on a “no-fly” list for terrorists. That allegedly was done to prevent Roeder from making visits to see a child Roeder fathered with a woman the Pennsylvania man later married. Roeder had been in a custody dispute for years over the child.

The man provided his letter to The Kansas City Star, and the FBI confirmed its existence.

| Judy L. Thomas, jthomas@kcstar.com

Posted on Fri, Nov. 13, 2009 10:39 PM

11/11/09

Both sides of abortion issue agree: Tiller's killing not justified

Both sides of abortion issue agree: Tiller's killing not justified


BY DION LEFLER AND DEB GRUVER

The Wichita Eagle

WICHITA — Activists on both sides of the abortion issue say that despite his claims that his actions were necessary, Scott Roeder was unjustified in killing Wichita abortion provider George Tiller.

Abortion-choice supporters called the act cold-blooded murder, while abortion opponents said it flies in the face of what their movement stands for.

On Monday, Roeder admitted to reporters from the Associated Press and the Kansas City Star that he had shot Tiller to death May 31 while Tiller was serving as an usher at Reformation Lutheran Church in Wichita.

Roeder said his defense will be that his actions were necessary because "pre-born children were in imminent danger" from abortions performed at Tiller's clinic in Wichita.

People who support abortion rights were heartened that Roeder confessed but disappointed he showed no remorse.

"I'm glad he confessed and admitted his crime," said Warren Hern, a Boulder, Colo., physician who provides abortion services, "and I hope that he has a sentence that reflects the horror of his crime."

Hern had known Tiller as a friend and colleague for years and recently saw his family at a memorial service during a National Abortion Federation meeting in Denver.

"It's a terrible loss," Hern said Monday. "I think this is the worst thing that's happened in the whole abortion controversy since the beginning."

Troy Newman, president of the Wichita-based anti-abortion group Operation Rescue, has condemned the killing and said he rejects Roeder's claim that it could be justified to prevent abortions.

Newman said he's aware of so-called "defensive action statements" that have been circulated for years, calling the killing of abortion providers justifiable homicide, but he strongly disagrees.

"It's not a pro-life position, whatever they're calling it," Newman said. "Anything that takes the life of a human being is not a pro-life action."

Newman said only a tiny fraction of abortion opponents believe it is justifiable to kill doctors.

"It's so small that statistically speaking, it's nonexistent," Newman said.

Peggy Bowman, who was Tiller's spokeswoman in the 1990s, said she thinks Roeder's defense is "totally pathetic."

"I don't think he could come up with a defense that would work, so he might as well pick something. ... I mean, how many people saw him do what he did? It seems to me he might as well confess."

There is no justification for killing doctors who provide abortion care, said Vicki Saporta, president of the National Abortion Federation.

"Roeder's act was cold-blooded murder, and he should be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the law," she said. "We can't allow extremists to take the law into their own hands in order to achieve their political objectives."

Abortion opponents, however, say that instead of advancing their political objectives, actions like Roeder's set them back.

"I give Scott Roeder the benefit of the doubt and agree that he may have acted out of noble intentions," said Mark Gietzen, president of the Kansas Coalition for Life. "Nevertheless, the reality is that Scott has hurt the pro-life movement at least a thousand times more than he has helped it."

Gietzen organized a continuous demonstration against abortion outside Tiller's clinic from May 9, 2004, until Tiller's death. He once sued Tiller, alleging that the doctor intentionally struck him with his car.

But Gietzen said life is God's to give or take and that killing to prevent abortion is as wrong as performing abortions.

"All of the people who have taken the law into their own hands and have murdered or attempted to murder an abortionist — Scott Roeder, Shelly Shannon and Paul Hill — have one thing in common," he said. "They have acted out of some degree of ignorance, arrogance or stupidity."

Operation Rescue doggedly pursued efforts to shut down Tiller's clinic for years through legislation and the courts.

Roeder had contacted Operation Rescue before the shooting to obtain dates and times of court proceedings involving Tiller.

But Newman and others said they tried to avoid Roeder because he made them uncomfortable.

Newman said condemning the anti-abortion movement for Roeder's actions would be the equivalent of condemning all Muslims for the actions of Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan, the suspected triggerman in the mass shootings last week at the Fort Hood Army Base in Texas.

"We wouldn't think of labeling every Muslim, millions and millions of them," he said. "Why is it when one person acts alone that we want to label the entire pro-life movement?"

Lowell Michelson, the pastor at Reformation Lutheran Church, said some members of his congregation remain greatly disturbed by the shooting at their church, "but it's not dominating our service life in the way that it was."

He said he wasn't surprised by Roeder's admission he killed Tiller.

"I think we were expecting that he would confess but not express any remorse," Michelson said.

"It's just so sad," he added. "I come from a different point of view, so I don't know that I'll understand his actions in the name of love and preserving life."

Reach Dion Lefler at 316-268-6527 or Deb Gruver at 316-268-6400 or dgruver@wichitaeagle.com.

11/10/09

Pro-life Roeder confesses to killing

Pro-life Roeder confesses to killing

YouTube - Man Confesses to Shooting Kansas Abortion Provider

YouTube - Man Confesses to Shooting Kansas Abortion Provider

Can Scott Roeder Really Use The "Necessity Defense?"

Can Scott Roeder Really Use The "Necessity Defense?"




Scott Roeder has confessed to the murder of abortion provider Dr. George Tiller, but plans to use a "necessity defense" in his trial, claiming his crime was necessary to prevent abortions. Could he succeed?

This version of the necessity defense sounds like something out of Law & Order, but it has been tried before. Paul Jennings Hill, who murdered an abortion doctor and his bodyguard, attempted to use the defense, but was barred from doing so. He was later executed. Clayton Waagner, a domestic terrorist who sent hundreds of envelopes containing fake anthrax to abortion clinics, also tried to advance a necessity defense in his 2003 trial. He too was barred from doing so by a judge, and was convicted of threatening to use weapons of mass destruction. In 1993 and 2007, courts ruled that the necessity defense cannot be used in crimes against abortion providers — and for good reason. The Free Dictionary identifies three main elements of the defense:

(1) the defendant acted to avoid a significant risk of harm; (2) no adequate lawful means could have been used to escape the harm; and (3) the harm avoided was greater than that caused by breaking the law

In the 1993 case, the Kansas Supreme Court ruled that the "harm avoided" cannot be a legal activity like abortion. Law professor Margaret Raymond says Roeder's case is unlikely to overturn this decision. She explains,

Typically, you don't get to use that defense in murder cases. The problem with a necessity defense in this case is that it is hard to say that something that the law permits is an act that must be prohibited at the cost of death.

Though the defense is unlikely to get him acquitted, or even to be allowed by a judge, Roeder is receiving some support. His public defender seems flummoxed by his choice — he says, "I'm not sure if we've had a parting of our thoughts here or what. We'll have to talk with Scott and see what's going on in his head, I guess" — but Roeder has met with Georgia lawyer Michael Hirsh, an expert in similar defenses. Hirsh hasn't commented on Roeder's case, but he did say in a previous interview,

The fact is that there is a mountain of scientific evidence that shows the humanity of an unborn child. And Dr. Tiller was notorious, by his own designs, for specializing in late-term abortions. So there's no denying by rational people the humanity of an unborn child, and the only difference in the unborn child and you and me is size, age and location.

Roeder's goal may be less to get an acquittal and more to turn his trial into a referendum on abortion. That was Waagner's aim back in 2003. Of that trial, Salon's Frederick Clarkson wrote,

Originally, Waagner wanted to use his trial as an international media stage to put abortion on trial. [...] He was bitterly disappointed that he was not allowed to use the necessity defense, and made a point of getting the judge to reassure him that he could appeal partly on the court's denial. Acting as his own attorney, Waagner tried to raise his issues at every turn.

Dave Leach, who helped organize the short-lived eBay auction to pay Roeder's legal fees, also wants "to put abortion on trial." He says that by admitting to the murder, Roeder has shifted the focus to whether his crime was justified:

In probably all previous cases, the dog-and-pony show proceeded, the prosecutor bringing in his witnesses to prove what nobody seriously contests. That way there is an appearance of a right to trial by jury. The jury gets to weigh the facts, which the defendant does not contest. But I have proposed to Scott that he stipulate to the alleged facts, making the dog-and-pony show irrelevant to any additional information the jury needs to make its determination, and dramatically isolating the necessity defense as the sole contested issue of the case.

He adds,

Legally protecting a harm does not render it harmless. The necessity defense requires reasonable people to judge whether a harm is in fact harmless, regardless of how courts or lawmakers feel about it.

Leach thinks a jury will acquit Roeder, which is almost certainly false. His trial may spark abortion debate, but probably not in the way he wants. Yesterday a group of abortion foes, many of them jailed for crimes against abortion providers, signed a letter arguing that Tiller's murder was justified. Kathy Spillar of the Feminist Majority Foundation responds,

This clearly shows [Roeder's] connection to the most extremist branch of the anti-abortion movement, which has long advocated this defense, that somehow the murder of doctors is justifiable. It's a defense that should not be allowed, but it shows his deep connections. We can only hope that law enforcement is looking into those connections and any possible involvement in the murder of Dr. Tiller.

The more people in the anti-abortion movement stand up to excuse the killing of abortion doctors, the less Roeder looks like a lone gunman. And if, indeed, many in the anti-choice camp condone murder, their claims of compassion and moral uprightness lose credibility. Roeder's defense strategy may well attract attention to the anti-abortion cause — but that attention may be negative.

Murder Suspect Confesses To Killing Abortion Provider [LA Times]
Suspect Admits To Tiller Murder, Will Attempt Necessity Defense [Iowa Independent]
Des Moines Man Hopes To Free Alleged Tiller Assassin With ‘Necessity Defense' [Iowa Independent]
Suspect In George Tiller Murder Confesses; Experts Doubt Defense [Wichita Eagle]
Suspect Confesses To Killing Wichita Abortion Doctor George Tiller [American Chronicle]

Related: The Quiet Fall Of An American Terrorist [Salon]


Send an email to Anna North, the author of this post, at annanorth@jezebel.com.

Lawyer: No 'Necessity Defense' Planned For Roeder ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press Writer

Lawyer: No 'Necessity Defense' Planned For Roeder

Nov 10, 2009 6:03 pm US/Eastern
ROXANA HEGEMAN, Associated Press Writer
WICHITA, Kan. (AP) ― An anti-abortion opponent says he's the one who killed a Kansas abortion provider — and did it because it was necessary to save lives. But one of his attorneys says there's no such thing as a "necessity defense" in state law, and that is not the strategy the defense team plans to present at his trial.

Scott Roeder told The Associated Press in a telephone call from jail on Monday that he plans to argue at his trial that he was justified in shooting Dr. George Tiller to protect unborn children.

"We have explored that possibility," public defender Steve Osburn said a day after his client's confession. "That does not seem to be the approach that is viable, nor is it the approach we intend to use."

Roeder, 51, of Kansas City, Mo., is charged with one count of first-degree murder in Tiller's death and two counts of aggravated assault for allegedly threatening two ushers who tried to stop him during the May 31 melee in the foyer of the doctor's Wichita church. Roeder has pleaded not guilty and is scheduled to go to trial in January.

He told the AP he has no regrets about killing Tiller.

His calls to the AP and the Kansas City Star came on the same day several strident abortion opponents released their "Defensive Action Statement 3rd Edition" that proclaims any force that can be used to defend the life of a "born child is legitimate to defend the life of an unborn child."

Osburn said he has discussed with Roeder "on numerous occasions" that a necessity defense was not viable, despite what his client was hearing from others. Roeder has said he is looking for an attorney who will present such a defense but cannot afford to hire one.

His former wife said Tuesday that she was in another room when she heard a television news report play an audio clip of his confession to the AP. Lindsey Roeder said she found it surreal to hear her ex-husband's voice.

"Even though you heard other people say, 'I saw him do it,' even though I have heard since 1993 how he feels about justifiable homicide in response to abortion, it made it all very real," she said. "It was no longer just something we saw on TV or heard in the papers."

Both sides downplayed the impact Roeder's statements to the media would have on their cases.

"It is what it is. He is his own man and we are going to move forward," said Mark Rudy, Roeder's other public defender.

The defense worked out a plan some time ago on how to proceed with the case, and that plan has not changed, Osburn said. He declined to give specifics on the plan.

"I would highly doubt that the state would attempt to call reporters up to the stand to talk about their conversations with Scott, and I say that because they are not going to want to open this up into arguments about things such as justification, when life begins and all those issues," Rudy said.

"I anticipate that they will try to keep this narrow, to the point and try it as a typical murder case," he said. "Therefore they aren't gonna want to open the door to certain other issues that would undoubtedly come out if the media was put up on the stand."

But Rudy left open the possibility that the defense would subpoena the media.

Asked whether his client's public admission make it harder to defend him, Rudy replied: "It depends on how efficient you are at dodging a subpoena."

Georgia Cole, spokeswoman for the Sedgwick County District Attorney's Office, declined to talk about any specifics of the prosecution's case but said Roeder's confession doesn't have any real effect.

"We will continue to prepare for trial and present our case as in all murder cases," Cole said.

E. Jay Greeno, the attorney who defended Shelley Shannon for shooting and wounding Tiller in 1993, sympathized with the difficulties faced by Roeder's attorneys when representing a client who has a different agenda. Shannon also confessed to the media.

"I respect Shelley Shannon for her conviction," Greeno said. "I don't agree with her methods or her position, but she gave up her liberty for what she believes in and continues to do so."

Dave Leach, an Iowa abortion opponent and longtime friend of Roeder, has been coordinating a public relations campaign to push for a necessity defense in Roeder's case. Leach put together the "Defensive Action Statement 3rd Edition."

Supporters contend Roeder cannot get a true "trial by jury" unless jurors are allowed to consider whether he was justified in killing Tiller to prevent a greater harm. By admitting to the shooting itself, Roeder hopes to focus the trial on that single issue.

The first Defensive Action Statement was written by Paul Hill in 1993 and signed by 29 people in support of Michael Griffin's shooting of Dr. David Gunn, a Florida abortion provider. The next year, Hill killed Dr. John Britton and his bodyguard. A second statement, signed by 28 people, supported those killings. Hill was executed in 2003.

"It is as true now as it was the first time around," Joshua Graff, a Williamsport, Md., abortion opponent wrote to Leach, asking him to add his name to the third edition.


Shooter of Abortion Practitioner George Tiller to Rely on Justifiable Homicide by Steven Ertelt LifeNews.com Editor November 10, 2009

Shooter of Abortion Practitioner George Tiller to Rely on Justifiable Homicide

by Steven Ertelt
LifeNews.com Editor
November 10
, 2009

Wichita, KS (LifeNews.com) -- The man who stands accused of shooting and killing late-term abortion practitioner George Tiller plans to rely on a justifiable homicide defense in court. Scott Roeder told The Associated Press in a 30-minute phone interview that he was motivated to kill Tiller because he does abortions.

In the interview, Roeder admits to killing Tiller and plans to use the defense even though courts have traditionally rejected it.

"Defending innocent life – that is what prompted me. It is pretty simple," the 51-yea-old former militia activists not affiliated with any pro-life groups, told AP.

Roeder also indicated he would kill another abortion practitioner if he is ever released from prison.

"[E]ven if one changed her mind it would be worth it,” he told AP from jail. “No, I don't have any regrets."

Defense attorneys are not likely to rely on self-defense as a possible defense for Roeder because Roeder was not defending himself or anyone else at the time of the shooting.

But Roeder, if in a conflict with his public defender, could dismiss him and represent himself with the justifiable homicide defense or find an attorney who will.

Roeder faces life in prison with the possibility of parole after 25 years if convicted of first-degree murder.

Tiller was one of the few abortion practitioners in the United States to do late-term abortions and he had been a subject of legal and peaceful efforts by pro-life groups at the time of the shooting.

Organizations had been working to get the state medical board to revoke Tiller's license because of allegations that some of the abortions he did violated state law but not having an independent physician certify they were necessary.

Hundreds of pro-life groups condemned the Tiller shooting immediately or in the days following, but that didn't stop abortion advocates from claiming they supported the killing or calling the majority of Americans who take a pro-life view "terrorists." http://www.lifenews.com/state4186.html

Roeder, who shot Tiller prior to a Michigan man killing a pro-life advocate outside a local high school for protesting abortion, will not go on trial until next year. The Sedgwick County District Attorney's office said last month that it is not prepared to take Roeder to trial until next year.

The date had been scheduled but is now set for January 25, 2010. That is just three days after the 37th anniversary of the infamous Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision that allowed virtually unlimited abortions -- which likely means that the trial will color the mainstream media's coverage of the anniversary.


Church member Gary Hoepner was the first witness called at a preliminary hearing for Roeder in July and said Roeder pointed a gun at Tiller's head and killed him.

“I wasn't sure if it was a cap gun or what," Hoepner said, noting that he wasn't certain that the assailant had a real gun to use to hurt Tiller. “I couldn't believe what I was seeing."

Hoepner said he and Tiller were discussing Tiller's fondness of doughnuts at the time he was shot.

Roeder is also charged with aggravated assault for allegedly threatening Hoepner and another member of the church as he fled the scene.

"'I've got a gun and I'll shoot you'," Hoepner recalled Roeder saying. "I believed him and I stopped."

After the incident, Hoepner told the court that he wrote down the license plate of Roeder's vehicle and informed police.

The court also heard that Roeder attended Tiller's church several times before, including the Sunday prior to the church service during which he allegedly shot the abortion practitioner.

With plenty of evidence and witnesses, a case will likely move forward and speculation is on what type of defense Roeder's attorneys will rely on during the trial. Some observers say they could say Roeder suffered from mental illness at various times in his life.

Roeder says he is not mentally ill now, although his family members have told the media that he has suffered from mental health issues throughout his life. He was diagnosed with schizophrenia in his late teens and Roeder blames that on drug use at the time.

Justice Department spokesman Alejandro Miyar told AP that the federal government is looking at federal charges against Roeder in connection with Tiller's death.

City of Wichita v. Tilson (1993)

CITY OF WICHITA v. TILSON, 253 Kan. 285, 855 P.2d 911 (1993)

CITY OF WICHITA v. TILSON, 253 Kan. 285, 855 P.2d 911 (Kan. 06/28/1993)

[1] Supreme Court of Kansas

[2] 68, 575

[3] 253 Kan. 285, 855 P.2d 911, 1993

[4] June 28, 1993.

[5] CITY OF WICHITA, KANSAS, a municipal corporation, Appellant, v. ELIZABETH TILSON, Appellee.

[6] Sharon L. Chalker, assistant city attorney, argued the cause and Gary E. Rebenstorf, city attorney, was with her on the briefs for appellant. Steven W. Graber, of Hutchinson, argued the cause and was on the brief for appellee. Page 286 Louise Melling, of Reproductive Freedom Project, American Civil Liberties Foundation, of New York, New York, and Jim Lawing, of Wichita, were on the brief for amici curiae American Civil Liberties Union, et al. Richard D. Cimino, and Raphael F. Hanley, of St. Marys, were on the brief for amicus curiae Right to Life of Kansas, Inc. John E. Cowles, of McDonald, Tinker, Skaer, Quinn & Herrington, P.A., of Wichita, was on the brief for amicus curiae Women's Health Care Services, P.A.

[7] The City of Wichita appeals from the trial court's ruling that the justification by necessity defense absolved the defendant, Elizabeth A. Tilson, of criminal liability for her actions in trespassing on property owned by the Wichita Family Planning Clinic, Inc., (Clinic) on August 3, 1991. This appeal is taken pursuant to K.S.A. 22-3602(b)(3) on a question reserved by the City. We sustain the appeal.

[8] The facts are not seriously disputed. On August 3, 1991, Elizabeth A. Tilson was arrested for trespassing on property of the Clinic located at 3013 East Central in Wichita, Kansas. The Clinic does not deny that it provides abortion services to some of its patients. Ms. Tilson and others were gathered at both entrances of the Clinic attempting to stop patrons from entering the Clinic. Ms. Deborah Riggs, administrator of the Clinic, asked the individuals to leave the premises. The protesters failed to respond to the request. Ms. Riggs then called Captain William Watson of the Wichita Police Department to the scene. Ms. Riggs asked Captain Watson to request the individuals to leave the Clinic premises. The protesters made no response to his command.

[9] Ms. Tilson was subsequently arrested by Officer Gary Smith for criminal trespass in violation of Section 5.66.050(a) (1992) of the Code of the City of Wichita which provides in part:

"Criminal trespass is entering or remaining upon or in any land, structure, vehicle, aircraft or watercraft by a person who knows he/she is not authorized or privileged to do so, and:

"(a) Such person enters or remains therein in defiance of an order not to enter or to leave such premises [or] property personally communicated to such person by the owner thereof or other authorized person;

. . . .

[10] "Any person who commits a criminal trespass within the corporate limits of the city of Wichita shall be deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction thereof shall be punished by a fine of not more than one thousand

[253 Kan. 287]

dollars or imprisonment which shall not exceed six months, or by both such fine and imprisonment. (Ord. No. 39-765, § 1)."

[11] On November 13, 1991, the defendant was found guilty in Wichita Municipal Court of criminal trespass in violation of the city ordinance. The court ordered her to pay a $1,000 fine, serve six months in the Sedgwick County Adult Detention Facility, and pay all court costs. On the same date, the defendant appealed her conviction to the Sedgwick County District Court.

[12] On January 14, 1992, the district court held a pretrial conference to determine if the court would hear evidence on the issue of when human life begins. At the hearing, the defendant noted that she would be asking the court to make the determination when life begins and at what point in time life has constitutional protection. The trial court found that evidence of when life begins was relevant and would be admitted. On January 21, 1992, the court ruled that it would allow the defendant to present evidence on any common-law defense, including the defense of necessity.

[13] At trial, the defendant admitted that she blocked the entrance to the Clinic but asserted that her actions were excused by the necessity defense. Specifically, she claimed her actions were justified because "abortion takes the life of an unborn baby, and I wanted to prevent that, and I wanted to prevent the detrimental effect that happens to the woman, the father of the baby, the grandparents and brothers and sisters involved." There was no evidence introduced, and no claim has been made by the defendant, that the abortions performed by the Clinic were illegal or that the Clinic was operating in any illegal manner. Defendant in her brief, as she did before this court, takes great umbrage with being referred to as a "protester" and instead portrays herself as being on a "rescue" mission. By whatever name or designation she chooses to be known, it is admitted that she violated the criminal code of the City of Wichita.

[14] On July 20, 1992, following a three-day bench trial, Judge Paul Clark held that the defendant had violated § 5.66.050(a) of the Code of the City of Wichita. He further held, however, that the defendant was absolved of any criminal liability for her actions, based upon the necessity defense. Judge Clark, in a 25-page memorandum opinion, held that the doctrine of justification by necessity was recognized under Kansas law. He additionally held

[253 Kan. 288]

that the doctrine was applicable to the defendant's actions and justified her trespassing upon the Clinic property for the purpose of saving a human life. At trial, over the objections of the City, the defendant was allowed to introduce expert testimony on the question of when life begins. The City did not attempt to controvert such evidence but instead took the position that the evidence was inadmissible because it was irrelevant to the issues before the court and that the necessity defense did not apply to the charges in this case.

[15] Pursuant to K.S.A. 22-3602(b)(3), the City of Wichita timely appeals from the trial court's holding that the necessity defense was applicable to the defendant's act of criminal trespass on the property of the Clinic.

[16] The issues as stated by the City in its docketing statement read:

"1. Did the District Court err in holding that the necessity defense was recognized by Kansas law on August 3, 1991?

"2. Did the District Court err in concluding that the necessity defense was applicable to the facts of this case thereby discharging the Defendant from criminal liability for her actions in violating Section 5.66.050(a) of the Code of the City of Wichita?"

[17] The City contends that the trial court erred in concluding that the necessity defense was recognized by Kansas law and applied to defendant's criminal acts of trespass. These issues are questions of law subject to broad appellate review. State, ex rel., v. Doolin & Shaw, 209 Kan. 244, 261, 497 P.2d 138 (1972).

[18] Before turning to the specific issues on appeal, some background on the necessity defense is deemed advisable. Necessity is a common-law defense recognized in some jurisdictions, while in others it has been adopted by statute. Several states which have no statute on the defense have not determined whether the common-law defense will be recognized. It has been referred to by various terms, including "justification," "choice of evils," or "competing harms." Depending upon the jurisdiction, various elements must be proven in order for a defendant to establish the defense. Section 3.02 of the Model Penal Code, adopted by a number of states and relied upon by the City, provides one formulation of the necessity defense:

[253 Kan. 289]

[19]

"(1) Conduct that the actor believes to be necessary to avoid a harm or evil to himself or to another is justifiable, provided that:

(a) the harm or evil sought to be avoided by such conduct is greater than that sought to be prevented by the law defining the offense charged; and

(b) neither the Code nor other law defining the offense provides exceptions or defenses dealing with the specific situation involved; and

(c) a legislative purpose to exclude the justification claimed does not otherwise plainly appear." Model Penal Code § 3.02 (1962), 10 U.L.A. 477 (1962).

[20] In his treatise on criminal law defenses, Professor Robinson explains the necessity defense another way:

[21]

"The lesser evils defense, sometimes called `choice of evils' or `necessity' or the general justification defense, is recognized in about one-half of American jurisdictions. It is perhaps the best illustration of the structure and operation of justification defenses generally. It explicitly relies upon the rationale inherent in all justifications: while the defendant may have caused the harm or evil contemplated by an offense, given the justifying circumstances, he has not caused a net harm or evil and is therefore to be exculpated. The principle of this general justification defense may be stated as follows:

"Lesser Evils. Conduct constituting an offense is justified if:

"(1) any legally-protected interest is unjustifiably threatened, or an opportunity to further such an interest is presented; and

"(2) the actor engages in conduct, constituting the offense,

(a) when and to the extent necessary to protect or further the interest,

(b) that avoids a harm or evil or furthers a legal interest greater than the harm or evil caused by actor's conduct." (Italics in original.) 2 Robinson, Criminal Law Defenses § 124(a) pp. 45-46 (1984).

[22] Necessity is generally considered to be an affirmative defense that must be proved by the defendant, usually beyond a reasonable doubt. State v. O'Brien, 784 S.W.2d 187, 189 (Mo. App. 1989). Also, "[t]he burden of production for the defense of lesser evils (choice of evils, necessity) is always on the defendant." 2 Robinson, Criminal Law Defenses § 124(a), p. 47. However, some jurisdictions treat the defense as an "ordinary" defense that must be disproved by the prosecution beyond a reasonable doubt. See, e.g., Commonwealth v. Brugmann, 13 Mass. App. 373, 379, 433 N.E.2d 457 (1982).

[23] Regardless of what name is attached to the defense (and for the sake of simplicity we will refer to it as the necessity defense) one thing is clear: The harm or evil which a defendant, who

[253 Kan. 290]

asserts the necessity defense, seeks to prevent must be a legal harm or evil as opposed to a moral or ethical belief of the individual defendant.

[24] The City contends that there is no judicial decision in Kansas which expressly recognizes the necessity defense. It notes that the trial court relied upon State v. Taylor, 138 Kan. 407, 26 P.2d 598 (1933), for its determination that the defense was recognized under Kansas law. The City, however, correctly points out that the defense of necessity was not an issue in Taylor, nor did the case set forth the elements of such a defense.

[25] In Taylor, the defendant was charged with shooting his estranged wife and her brother. The defendant attempted to remove one of his children from the home of his brother-in-law. The defendant alleged that he acted in self-defense in shooting his brother-in-law. Taylor, however, does not mention or recognize the necessity defense. The passage from Taylor relied upon by the trial court in its memorandum opinion has no bearing upon the defense of necessity. Taylor does not support the trial court's holding that the necessity defense is recognized under Kansas law.

[26] The City then observes that the only reported case in Kansas which discusses but failed to recognize the necessity defense is State v. Greene, 5 Kan. App. 2d 698, 623 P.2d 933 (1981). In Greene the defendants, protesters at the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, asserted that the compulsion defense set forth in K.S.A. 21-3209(1) relieved them of criminal liability. The Kansas Court of Appeals held that the defendants were not entitled to an instruction regarding the compulsion defense because the defense did not apply to acts which the legislature had expressly concluded not to be criminal. In Greene the issue involved the applicability of the statutory compulsion defense which may be related to or synonymous with the necessity defense in some jurisdictions and/or under certain circumstances. In considering the compulsion defense as it applied to activities of the defendants, who were opposed to nuclear power, at the Wolf Creek nuclear power plant, the court did discuss several cases wherein the defense had been asserted at nuclear power plants, but it did not recognize the necessity defense as viable in Kansas. In fact, the defendant conceded in her brief, "State v. Greene,

[253 Kan. 291]

5 Kan. App. 2d 698, 623 P.2d 933 (1981), does not apply. It does not address the justification defense." Additionally, amicus curiae Right to Life of Kansas, Inc., asserts in its brief, "We concur with the Appellant's statement that Kansas has never expressly adopted or recognized the necessity defense." Our own research confirms that the parties and amicus are correct and that the necessity defense, except as codified in statutes such as those relating to self-defense and compulsion, has not been adopted or recognized in Kansas. Nor do we find it necessary in the resolution of this appeal to make such a determination. Whether the necessity defense should be adopted or recognized in Kansas may best be left for another day.

[27] The issue before us is simply whether the necessity defense, if it were recognized, even applies at all in a case such as this one. Although we decline to specifically determine whether the necessity defense should be adopted or recognized in Kansas, to decide the issue before us it is necessary to consider the issue in light of the necessity defense and its applicability to the charges in this case.

[28] It is established, beyond any argument, that since 1973 a woman has an unfettered constitutional right to an abortion during the first trimester of pregnancy and a somewhat more restricted right to abortion thereafter. Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113, 35 L.Ed.2d 147, 93 S.Ct. 705 (1973). In that case the Supreme Court held:

"(a) For the stage prior to approximately the end of the first trimester, the abortion decision and its effectuation must be left to the medical judgment of the pregnant woman's attending physician.

"(b) For the stage subsequent to approximately the end of the first trimester, the State, in promoting its interest in the health of the mother, may, if it chooses, regulate the abortion procedure in ways that are reasonably related to maternal health.

"(c) For the stage subsequent to viability, the State in promoting its interest in the potentiality of human life may, if it chooses, regulate, and even proscribe, abortion except where it is necessary, in appropriate medical judgment, for the preservation of the life or health of the mother." Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. at 164-65.

[29] The City maintains that because no legal harm is caused by an abortion, "the harm caused by the defendant's criminal acts exceeds the harm sought to be prevented by the City's ordinance."

[253 Kan. 292]

The City notes that defendants in several jurisdictions have raised the necessity defense in situations involving trespass or public protest, including those against abortions, and that the "overwhelming majority of jurisdictions have rejected the defense."

[30] Numerous courts> have considered whether the necessity defense applies to abortion trespass cases. See Annot., "Choice of Evils," Necessity, Duress, or Similar Defense to State or Local Criminal Charges Based on Acts of Public Protest, 3 A.L.R.5th 521.

[31] Every appellate court to date which has considered the issue has held that abortion clinic protesters, or "rescuers" as they prefer to be called, are precluded, as a matter of law, from raising a necessity defense when charged with trespass. See Allison v. City of Birmingham, 580 So.2d 1377 (Ala. Crim. App. 1991), cert. denied 580 So.2d 1390 (Ala. 1991); Cleveland v. Municipality of Anchorage, 631 P.2d 1073 (Alaska 1981); Pursley v. State, 21 Ark. App. 107, 730 S.W.2d 250 (1987), rev. refused July 22, 1987; People v. Garziano, 230 Cal.App.3d 241, 281 Cal.Rptr. 307, rev. denied August 1, 1991, cert. denied 116 L.Ed.2d 750 (1991); State v. Clarke, 24 Conn. App. 541, 590 A.2d 468, cert. denied 219 Conn. 910 (1991); Gaetano v. United States, 406 A.2d 1291 (D.C. 1979); Hoover v. State, 198 Ga. App. 481, 402 S.E.2d 92 (1991); People v. Krizka, 92 Ill. App.3d 288, 416 N.E.2d 36 (1980); Sigma Repro. Health Cen. v. State, 297 Md. 660, 467 A.2d 483 (1983); State v. O'Brien, 784 S.W.2d 187 (Mo. App. 1989); State v. Cozzens, 241 Neb. 565, 490 N.W.2d 184 (1992); People v. Crowley, 142 Misc.2d 663, 538 N.Y.S.2d 146 (1989); State v. Thomas, 103 N.C. App. 264, 405 S.E.2d 214, cert. denied 329 N.C. 792 (1991); State v. Sahr, 470 N.W.2d 185 (N.D. 1991); Kettering v. Berry, 57 Ohio App.3d 66, 567 N.E.2d 316 (1990); State v. Clowes, 310 Or. 686, 801 P.2d 789 (1990); Com. v. Wall, 372 Pa. Super. 534, 539 A.2d 1325, appeal denied 521 Pa. 604 (1988); State v. Morton, 1991 W L 80204 (Tenn. Cr. App.) (unpublished op.), appeal denied (1991); Crabb v. State, 754 S.W.2d 742 (Tex App. 1988), cert. denied 493 U.S. 815 (1989); Buckley v. City of Falls Church, 7 Va. App. 32, 371 S.E.2d 827 (1988).

[253 Kan. 293]

[32] The only reported case which we have found that recognized the necessity defense in an abortion clinic/trespass case is a Rochester, New York, city court case. People v. Archer, 143 Misc.2d 390, 537 N.Y.S.2d 726 (1988). The decision in Archer was limited to late-term abortions, and in its opinion the court recognized that "Roe prohibits the State statutory necessity defense whenever there are intentional interruptions which interfere with the performance of first trimester abortions." 143 Misc. 2 d at 403. Archer is not persuasive on any issue before this court and is inapplicable to the facts here.

[33] The courts> have invoked several different rationales in rejecting application of the defense. The majority of courts> reason that because abortion is a lawful, constitutionally protected act, it is not a legally recognized harm which can justify illegal conduct.

[34] In State v. O'Brien, 784 S.W.2d 187 (Mo. App. 1989), the defendant was charged with trespass at an abortion clinic and, as in our case, asserted the necessity defense, contending she was on a rescue mission to save and protect unborn children. She attempted, as defendant did here, to introduce evidence of when life begins in support of her defense. The Missouri court stated:

"Since abortion remains a constitutionally protected right, the defense of necessity must be viewed in that context.

"Viewed in that setting every court which has considered the defense of necessity has for various reasons, rejected it when asserted in trespass-abortion proceedings. . . .

"In short, the defense of necessity asserted here cannot be utilized when the harm sought to be avoided (abortion) remains a constitutionally protected activity and the harm incurred (trespass) is in violation of the law." 784 S.W.2d at 192.

Another court has reasoned:

[35] "Through judicial decision and legislative determination denying abortion recognition as a harm, the law has preempted the central inquiry of the necessity defense: whether the activity sought to be stopped or the criminal conduct employed to stop it is the `greater harm.' By denying abortion classification as a harm the law has determined that the greater harm per se is in the criminal conduct. The defense of necessity which has been created by the law may not, therefore, be employed to justify or excuse it." Kettering v. Berry, 57 Ohio App.3d at 68-69.

[253 Kan. 294]

[36] In Com. v. Markum, 373 Pa. Super. 341, 541 A.2d 347, appeal denied 520 Pa. 615 cert. denied 489 U.S. 1080 (1988), the defendants were convicted of criminal trespass. They alleged that the crimes were justified to prevent the loss of a human life. The court held that the necessity defense was unavailable because a woman's right to obtain an abortion was protected by the United States Constitution. The court stated:

"As we have noted, pre-viability abortion is lawful by virtue of state statute and federal constitutional law. The United States Supreme Court, from Roe through its progeny, has consistently held that the state's interest in protecting fetal life does not become compelling, and cannot infringe on a woman's right to choose abortion, until the fetus is viable. Roe at 163-64, 93 S.Ct. at 732. Appellants do not suggest that viability and conception are simultaneous occurrences. We find that a legally sanctioned activity cannot be termed a public disaster." Com. v. Markum, 373 Pa. Super at 349.

[37] In People v. Krizka, 92 Ill. App.3d 288, the defendants were charged with trespass on medical center property to prevent abortion. The defendants asserted the necessity defense based upon their contention that life begins at conception and that they were attempting to save lives. The court stated:

[38]

"Defendants here contend that they had to commit the acts of criminal trespass in order to prevent the deaths of fetuses, which they perceived as the greater injury. We disagree with defendants' contention because the `injury' prevented by the acts of criminal trespass is not a legally recognized injury." 92 Ill. App.3d at 290.

After briefly discussing Roe and its progeny, the court continued:

"We therefore conclude that defendants did not engage in illegal conduct because they were faced with a choice of evils. Rather, they intentionally trespassed on complainant's property in order to interfere with the rights of others. . . . Under Roe, an abortion during the first trimester of pregnancy is not a legally recognizable injury, and therefore, defendants' trespass was not justified by reason of necessity.

"Defendants attempt to circumvent the effect of Roe and to bolster their defense of necessity by arguing that they reasonably believed that they acted to prevent the destruction of human life. They point to language in Roe in which the court declined to speculate on when human life begins. [Citation omitted.] Defendants argue that life begins at the time of conception, and that they were denied due process of law because the trial court refused to admit evidence which was proffered to support this contention.

[39] "True, in Roe, the court acknowledged the existence of competing views regarding the point at which life begins. However, the Court declined to

[253 Kan. 295]

adopt the position that life beings at conception, giving recognition instead to the right of a woman to make her own abortion decision during the first trimester. [Citation omitted.] We do not believe that the Court in Roe intended courts> to make a case-by-case judicial determination of when life begins. We therefore reject defendants' argument." 92 Ill. App.3d at 290-91.

[40] In State v. Sahr, 470 N.W.2d 185 (N.D. 1991), the court was faced with an abortion-trespass case in which the defense was, again, the same as that asserted by the defendant in the present case. The defendants in Sahr asserted the necessity defense based upon their beliefs that life begins at conception and their actions were justified to save innocent human lives. The court discussed at some length the necessity defense and, having done so, stated:

"As a result, we conclude that we need not determine the precise scope of the necessity defense available in this state. In our view, the defendants' criminal trespasses at medical clinics to prevent legal abortions may not be justified under any reasonable formulation of the necessity defense.

"The evil, harm, or injury sought to be avoided, or the interest sought to be promoted, by the commission of a crime must be legally cognizance to be justified as necessity. `[I]n most cases of civil disobedience a lesser evils defense will be barred. This is because as long as the laws or policies being protested have been lawfully adopted, they are conclusive evidence of the community's view on the issue.' 2 P. Robinson, Criminal Law Defenses § 124(d)(1), at 52. Abortion in the first trimester of pregnancy is not a legally recognized harm, and, therefore, prevention of abortion is not a legally recognized interest to promote.

. . . .

"The element of a legally cognizance injury for the necessity defense has been identified repeatedly in decisions on other criminal attempts to protest abortions at medical clinics. . . . In sum, a claim of necessity cannot be used to justify a crime that simply interferes with another person's right to lawful activity." 470 N.W.2d at 191-192.

[41] Finally, in Com. v. Wall, 372 Pa. Super. 534, the court was faced with the same arguments and after reviewing the necessity defense the court held the necessity defense did not apply in an abortion-trespass setting. The court found that the defendants had failed to establish any of the requirements to justify a necessity defense. Having done so, the court went on to state:

[42] "Despite the above [the appellant's inability to satisfy any of the elements of the necessity defense], appellant nevertheless insists that he was justified in violating the law in this case because his actions were motivated by higher principles. To accept appellant's argument would be tantamount to judicially

[253 Kan. 296]

sanctioning vigilantism. If every person were to act upon his or her personal beliefs in this manner, and we were to sanction the act, the result would be utter chaos. In a society of laws and not of individuals, we cannot allow each individual to determine, based upon his or her personal beliefs. whether another person may exercise her constitutional rights and then allow that individual to assert the defense of justification to escape criminal liability. We recognize that, despite our proscription, some individuals, because of firmly held and honestly believed convictions, will feel compelled to break the law. If they choose to do so, however, they must be prepared to face the consequences. Thus, such private attempts to circumvent the law with the aim to deprive a pregnant woman of her right to obtain an abortion will not be tolerated by this Court. Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, we conclude that the trial court properly determined that appellant was not entitled to raise the justification defense." 372 Pa. Super. at 543-44.

[43] We concur with the statements of the Pennsylvania court and others cited herein. To allow the personal, ethical, moral, or religious beliefs of a person, no matter how sincere or well-intended, as a justification for criminal activity aimed at preventing a law-abiding citizen from exercising her legal and constitutional rights would not only lead to chaos but would be tantamount to sanctioning anarchy.

[44] Defendant argues that as she had expert medical testimony that life begins at conception, the necessity defense must be allowed. We do not agree. When the objective sought is to prevent by criminal activity a lawful, constitutional right, the defense of necessity is inapplicable, and evidence of when life begins is irrelevant and should not have been admitted.

[45] While we could review the myriad of other cases on the specific issue before us, nothing would be gained by doing so. As stated earlier, all of the appellate court decisions hold that the necessity defense is not applicable in abortion-trespass criminal prosecutions. We again point out that our opinion should not be construed as an indication that we recognize or adopt the necessity defense as the law in Kansas. We make no such determination here. Defendant has wholly failed to demonstrate that the necessity defense would apply to this case even if the defense was recognized.

[46] The appeal is sustained.

[253 Kan. 297]