Planned Parenthood gunman reveals whether he has regrets

DENVER -- A man who acknowledged killing three people at a Colorado Planned Parenthood clinic told CBS Denver the shooting was spur-of-the-moment and he targeted the reproductive health organization because it's "murdering little babies."

In a phone call from jail, Robert Lewis Dear told the station Wednesday that he didn't plan the Nov. 27 shooting that also left nine people injured.

Dear said he believes FBI agents were following him that morning, and they tipped off employees that he was headed to the clinic.

"When I busted in that door on the side, all the people were gone," he said. "So they had been tipped off by the FBI or somebody. All the employees, everybody had gotten out the back."

Dear also said the law enforcement agency had been harassing him for years, breaking into his rural Colorado trailer and cutting holes in his clothes.

"I felt like they were going to get me, and so I am going to pick where I am going to make my last stand, and I picked Planned Parenthood because it's murdering little babies," he said. "Well, when I got there, of course, those guys knew I was armed, knew everything about me. They slither off like snakes and they get the local cops to do their dirty work, so that's why the shootout was there."

Asked if he felt anything was accomplished by his actions, Dear replied, "They got 4,000 babies get aborted every day. I guarantee you they had a lot of cancellations and I might have saved a thousand."

He also said he has no regrets: "Apologies? No, I say that they are going to execute me, that will be apology enough."

Denver FBI spokeswoman Deborah Sherman declined to comment, citing a gag order in case.

Prosecutors have charged Dear, 57, with 179 counts of first-degree murder, attempted murder, assault and other crimes.

Dear exchanged gunfire with police during an hours-long standoff while dozens of people hid inside the clinic and neighboring businesses. Dear said he expected to die that day but gave up instead. He told CBS Denver he flipped a credit card to decide whether he shou.d

During a court appearance, Dear declared himself a "warrior for the babies" and said he was guilty. A judge ordered him to undergo a mental competency exam after he said he wanted to fire his public defender and represent himself.

Dear's attorney, Daniel King, raised doubts about Dear's mental health after his repeated outbursts during court appearances.

Dear told the station, "I am sane, I am coherent, I have a college degree." He said he will refuse to cooperate with his court-appointed examiners.

"If I am coherent and sane why would I want to open Pandora's box and start answering all their questions so they can twist it around and say he's not?" Dear said.

"Well I'm just an honest man and I believe I'm guilty, so I am just going to plead guilty," he said.

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