January 12, 2010 2:46 PM

The Tiller Murder And Its Ramifications

By
CBSNews
FILE - In this March 23, 2009 file photo Dr. George Tiller, enters the courtroom on the first day of his jury trial in Wichita, Kan. Tiller was shot and killed as he entered his church Sunday morning May 31, 2009 in Wichita. (AP/Mike Hutmacher, Wichita Ea

FILE - In this March 23, 2009 file photo Dr. George Tiller, enters the courtroom on the first day of his jury trial in Wichita, Kan. Tiller was shot and killed as he entered his church Sunday morning May 31, 2009 in Wichita. (AP/Mike Hutmacher, Wichita Ea (AP/Mike Hutmacher, Wichita Eagle)

(CBS)  This column was written by Nancy Northup, President of the Center for Reproductive Rights

In 2007, 38-year-old Sarah Coe* and her husband were finally having their first child, after trying to get pregnant for three years. In her twenty-second week of pregnancy, Sarah's doctors diagnosed a severe condition which denies oxygen to the brain and leads to fetal death during pregnancy or birth. She and her husband sought medical and spiritual advice and decided to terminate the pregnancy. Unable to find a doctor on the East Coast who performed abortions later in pregnancy, they were directed to Kansas provider Dr. George Tiller.

Sarah was telling this story last year because anti-choice activists in Kansas had convened a grand jury that was subpoenaing her medical records and those of 2000 other women. During the case, she said she was "blown away by the kindness" and care she received from Dr. Tiller and his staff. At the time, she thought, "It scares me. If something happens to Dr. Tiller, where would women turn?" With the murder of Dr. Tiller on Sunday, the frightening void for women like Sarah is now a reality.

Dr. Tiller was one of just a few physicians in the country who provide abortions later in pregnancy for women who face substantial health risks and have been diagnosed with severe fetal abnormalities. His services made him the target of the anti-choice movement for more than three decades. Their goal was to shut down his practice, and their tactics were extreme: bombing, attempted assassination, clinic vandalism, and threats and harassment against his patients and family.

In 2008, Kansans for Life and Operation Rescue, anti-choice organizations intent on putting Dr. Tiller out of business, dusted off an 1887 Kansas law that allows citizens to impanel a grand jury to launch a criminal investigation. Once convened, the grand jury attempted to subpoena the private medical records of approximately 2000 of Dr. Tiller's patients as part of an investigation into whether he had violated Kansas law. The state criminalizes post-viability abortions unless a woman's life or health is in danger. So the grand jury went on a fishing expedition to see if Dr. Tiller was violating the law.

The Center for Reproductive Rights represented his patients, arguing that the subpoenas profoundly intruded upon their privacy and were in reality part of a personal vendetta the anti-choice groups had against Dr. Tiller. Ultimately, the grand jury was prevented from its broad brush attempt to get his patients records, but the incident was an example of the relentless harassment the anti-choice groups used to try and shut Dr. Tiller down.

Despite frequent attacks on his physical security, professional reputation, and personal and family life, Dr. Tiller kept his clinic doors open for 34 years, courageously defending women's constitutional right to safe abortion care-a service vital to women's fundamental human right to life and health.

Dr. Tiller's death was a tragic murder. But this was not an isolated act of violence.

Since 1993, three other doctors, three clinic workers, and a volunteer escort in the U.S. have been killed by anti-abortion extremists. Others have been seriously injured in such attacks. Medical professionals and clinic staff who provide abortion services endure daily harassment including pervasive intimidation, mounting legal restrictions that single out abortion providers, and persistent stigma in the medical and general communities. Many physicians have been forced to abandon their practices unable to comply with onerous regulations or out of necessity to protect themselves and their families. Dr. Tiller's death puts a clear point on the marginalization and stigmatization of abortion and the very serious problem of access to abortion in this country.

This tragedy should remind Americans that this violence against doctors who provide abortions has exacerbated the shortage of providers and ultimately harms women seeking services. It should change how we in this country view and protect these women's rights defenders. It is time for the nation to step up to ensure that women like Sarah Coe will have a safe place to turn.

(*Sarah Coe is a pseudonym. She was part of a plaintiff class in In the Matter of the Grand Jury Investigation & Jane Doe, Anne Roe, Sarah Coe, and Paula Poe v. Hon. Michael Corrigan and Hon. Paul Buchanan KS).)




By Nancy Northup

Copyright 2010 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 32 Comments
by MrBag June 12, 2009 9:31 AM EDT
Terrorism is defined as acts of violence committed by groups that view themselves as victimized by some notable historical wrong. The man who killed George Tiller was not a terrorist. He was an extremist acting on his own.
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by jimbob133 June 4, 2009 10:57 AM EDT
This is getting allot of attention. What about the muslim that killed a very young man and wounded another. But the media doesnt care about our own.
Reply to this comment
by gmancubfan June 4, 2009 12:51 AM EDT
The media has always been biased on the abortion issue because it is top heavy with self proclaimed enlightened and intellectual superior snobs who look down on the folks who look at abortion for what it is - the murder of unborn children. Oh, but it can't be because all those Harvard, Princeton and Stanford intellectual high brows can't possibly be wrong, can they? If they say that killing unborn babies is a secondary issue to women's right to do what they want with their bodies, well they must be right, after all they are so superior to the rest of us. How could we possibly think that killing unborn babies is an unspeakable horror, an atrocity, a crime against humanity? Why, the Ivy League elite and intellectuals in the media could not possibly be wrong, could they? After all, they know much more than the rest of us yahoos who don't know anything, don't they? They just couldn't be wrong, could they? They wouldn't advocate the right of a doctor to murder an unborn baby, would they?
Oh my, I hear someone knocking on my door. Oh no! It's the PC police! They are going to drag me away because my vews are politically incorrect. Well, serves me right for thinking that in America we can express our views freely without some elite media meister pulling the plug. Gee, maybe next time I should just jump on an old band wagon that is losing its wheels, and pretend I am pro choice like so many other people I know.are doing.
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by knowjohn June 3, 2009 7:57 PM EDT
To worship a work of art or literature created by man, the Bible, as the divine or inerrant word of God, is idolatry. To proclaim to act or speak in the name of God, especially based on an idol, is blasphemy. Evil is as evil does. Now we see the result.
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by jimbom121 June 3, 2009 3:18 PM EDT
"Why are pro abortion advocates so reluctant to discuss the details of the very procedure they condone? Dr. Tiller ended the lives of viable, healthy fetuses up until birth - legally, I might add.
Does that make it right?
Posted by norahsnow "
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Please do yoru research. The only "healthy" fetus's this was done to were the small pct that were due to rape, incest or the health of the mother. Get yoru facts straight, most of these procedures are done because the fetus can not survive on its own.
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by iDragon13 June 3, 2009 2:50 PM EDT
"mention the fact that this poor man deserved what he received."

Pardon me, poor choice of words. That this man deserved what he recieved is not a fact. It is a poorly educated opinion of those who are militantly "anti-choice".
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by iDragon13 June 3, 2009 2:41 PM EDT
"Why are pro abortion advocates so reluctant to discuss the details of the very procedure they condone? Dr. Tiller ended the lives of viable, healthy fetuses up until birth - legally, I might add.
Does that make it right?
Posted by norahsnow "

Your choice of words indicates exactly why an intelligent discussion of the issue is not possible with you. We are not PRO-ABORTION. Who in the world is? We are PRO-CHOICE!!! Choice, as in "the law". You would label yourself as "pro-life", which I am sure you are, at least until the child is born and then your concern typically ends. But, in point of fact, your true moniker should be ANTI-CHOICE, for that is where the crux of the debate lies. Not in pro-life or pro-abortion, but CHOICE, AS IN THE LAW!!!!! I will gladly discuss the details of the procedure ad nauseum, it is terrible and sad, but that, again, is not the point.

And it is disgusting, to say the least, how "pro-life/anti-choice" advocates, even mention the fact that this poor man deserved what he received. How dare you!?!?!? But, keep it up. You will continue to give organized religion a bad name until we wake up as a country and criminalize it.
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by superbird6pk June 3, 2009 2:37 PM EDT
The right-wing Taliban has been very busy this week. First, they murder Dr. Tiller and then they burn down a topless coffee shop in Vermont (both victims were operating within the law). "Believe as we do, or we will kill you and/or destroy your property."
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by noloyalisti June 3, 2009 2:22 PM EDT
We cannot outlaw procedures that are necessary to protect the health of the mother and the future health of her children. The problem is the right wing conservative and Christians do everything they can to advocate for the unborn while supporting murder (by invasions and occupations) and against the health of the mothers (through cutting social programs unless they are from the Church).

What we need to do is to educate about birth control from an early age. That is what cuts down on the number of abortions necessary. But that has nothing to do with many of the abortions that brave doctor did.
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by norahsnow June 3, 2009 1:42 PM EDT
Why are pro abortion advocates so reluctant to discuss the details of the very procedure they condone? Dr. Tiller ended the lives of viable, healthy fetuses up until birth - legally, I might add.
Does that make it right?
Reply to this comment
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