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- <text id=94TT0132>
- <title>
- Feb. 07, 1994: Your Activist, My Mobster
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Feb. 07, 1994 Lock 'Em Up And Throw Away The Key
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SUPREME COURT, Page 32
- Your Activist, My Mobster
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A ruling by the high court enables foes to use a voracious racketeering
- law against pro-life leaders
- </p>
- <p>By David Van Biema--Reported by Julie Johnson/Washington, Elizabeth Taylor/Chicago
- and Sarah Tippit/Orlando
- </p>
- <p> Imagine the five-and-ten on the corner. In walk some shady
- types from the local social club. Nice place, say the boys.
- For a mere 500 bucks a week maybe it won't go up in flames.
- Like poor Mr. Kim's a week ago. Or Mr. O'Malley's before that.
- </p>
- <p> That's a racket. Now, instead of a five-and-ten, picture an
- abortion clinic. And while you're at it, how about a miraculous
- conversion: turn the hoodlums into militant Christians, whose
- only payoff is in heaven. They still threaten violence, but
- not for money. That's a racket?
- </p>
- <p> You can't rule it out just because the perpetrators are nonprofit,
- indicated a unanimous Supreme Court last week. Writing for his
- colleagues in the case National Organization for Women, Inc.,
- et al. v. Scheidler, et al., Chief Justice William Rehnquist
- held that even though antiabortion activists do not seek financial
- gain, they may still be hit with suits under the Racketeer Influenced
- and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) law, an extremely effective
- prosecutor's tool forged in 1970. He pointed out that it was
- money lost by victims rather than money gained by the perpetrators
- that informed his decision. The blockades have indeed been costly
- (see chart).
- </p>
- <p> The ruling delighted pro-choicers, some perhaps inordinately.
- Judith Lichtman, president of the Women's Legal Defense Fund,
- said, "It's a victory for women"--though the applicability
- of that statement may depend on whether a woman is for or against
- abortion rights. She continued, "By this decision, the court
- rightly recognized the danger that this national conspiracy
- of harassment, stalkings, bombings, shootings and chemical attacks
- poses to women and health care providers." But that may be an
- overstatement of a far narrower opinion.
- </p>
- <p> When pro-lifer Michael Griffin shot abortion doctor David Gunn
- in March of last year, the killing helped crystallize a growing
- public skepticism that the confrontational blockade-and-harass
- tactics of organizations like Randall Terry's Operation Rescue
- and Joseph Scheidler's Pro-Life Action Network accurately reflected
- the compassionate motivations of many pro-lifers. The pro-choice
- movement, not surprisingly, had already noticed a growing violence
- among its opposition, and associated it quite directly with
- the ascension of groups like Terry's and Scheidler's. Since
- the mid-1980s the choicers had been searching for a sort of
- statutory guard dog that might take a bite out of not only antiabortion
- foot soldiers but also their leaders, whom they were already
- calling Mob-tainted epithets such as "kingpins." When the Supreme
- Court last year rejected one such suggestion, an 1871 law aimed
- at the Ku Klux Klan, NOW turned to RICO.
- </p>
- <p> It is certainly a law with teeth--and a voracious appetite.
- Drafted in extremely unrestrictive language during a period
- of concern over organized crime, it enables conviction of all
- members of a "criminal enterprise," not just the gunsels. And
- its penalties are steep: up to 20 years in jail for each criminal
- count and triple damages in civil judgments. RICO quickly proved
- a sterling Mob stopper, as dozens of capos like New York City's
- John Gotti can testify. But when lawyers in the mid-'80s realized
- how broadly written it was, it mutated wildly. Prosecutors turned
- it on white-collar criminals like junk-bond-king Michael Milken.
- Plaintiffs in normal civil suits (a famous one involved litigious
- rabbis) used it to extract lucrative awards or far better settlements.
- It was invoked in sexual harassment suits.
- </p>
- <p> By 1989, RICO had so much momentum that NOW, embarked on a large
- antitrust case it had first brought in Delaware, changed the
- suit's focus to racketeering under the direction of Fay Clayton,
- a Chicago lawyer with RICO experience. The defendant list was
- amended to include Terry as well as Scheidler, and the alleged
- rackets grew to include forcible "invasion" of clinics, burglary
- (a theft from a dumpster of fetal material) and arson.
- </p>
- <p> The suit failed at the district court level and on appeal: the
- seventh circuit, while noting that clinic violence was "reprehensible,"
- refused to let Clayton try to prove that the defendants had
- committed it. The reasoning: a criminal "enterprise" must be
- dedicated to economic gain. Last week, however, Rehnquist disagreed.
- "We do not think this is so," he wrote simply. And "nowhere
- in [RICO] is there any indication that an economic motive
- is required."
- </p>
- <p> Upon reading that, the defendants, at least initially, acted
- a lot like losers. They cried foul, proclaimed defiance and
- plotted evasion. "A vulgar betrayal of over 200 years of tolerance
- toward protest," said Terry. Reverend Keith Tucci, also of Rescue,
- notes that RICO might force currently open protesters into a
- more violent underground. Scheidler pooh-poohs triple damages
- on grounds of his own poverty--"you can't get blood from a
- turnip"--and then reels off a couple of nonviolent schemes
- that might sidestep RICO. Spilling cranberry juice on white
- snow to simulate fetal blood might have impact, he suggests;
- as would abandoning old cars in clinic driveways as a "vehicle
- sit-in."
- </p>
- <p> Their lawyer, however, is more upbeat. "I lost Round No. 1 on
- economics," says Notre Dame law professor G. Robert Blakey,
- who argued before the court. "But I'll win Round No. 2 on innocence."
- In order to make her newly revived case, Clayton must prove
- that the pro-lifers engaged twice or more in crimes covered
- by RICO, and that they did so in connection with the defendants.
- She claims abundant evidence to this effect. For his part, Blakey
- brandishes a letter from the explosives chief at the federal
- Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms stating that "there
- is no indication that any particular group has acted in unison
- on the abortion clinic arsons and bombings." Moreover, he claims
- that RICO was never intended to apply to political protest in
- the first place.
- </p>
- <p> He speaks with some authority: 23 years ago, as chief counsel
- of the Senate judiciary subcommittee on criminal laws, he was
- RICO's main architect. Blakey now claims that because of Senator
- Edward Kennedy's worries about Richard Nixon's repressive tendencies,
- he sat down in Washington's Monocle restaurant and altered the
- bill's language to avoid its application to antiwar demonstrators.
- And the Justices may be inclined to honor that exception. Rehnquist
- took pains in his opinion to assure that the free-speech issue
- remained open. And Justice David Souter's concurrence invited
- a challenge, noting that in some contexts, activities alleged
- as crimes under RICO "may turn out to be fully protected First
- Amendment activity."
- </p>
- <p> For an indication of how the other Justices might see that issue,
- both sides are looking to Madsen v. Women's Health Organization,
- a case scheduled for oral argument this April that features
- a free-speech challenge to a Florida clinic buffer-zone law.
- National Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League's Kate
- Michelman acknowledges that she is worried that Madsen might
- "set us back a little."
- </p>
- <p> That foreboding suggests that she understands NOW v. Scheidler
- for what it most likely is: no affirmation of choice or even
- a recognition of the dangers surrounding clinics, but a narrow
- continuation of the court's existing hands-off policy on RICO's
- breadth. When the racketeering law collides with not only the
- First Amendment but also the court's six-Justice bloc that favors
- permitting abortion restriction, the legal Doberman may turn
- out to be a Chihuahua.
- </p>
- <p> That will not leave the pro-choicers defenseless, however. At
- a recent meeting with abortion-rights leaders concerned about
- clinic violence, Attorney General Janet Reno gave out her private
- phone number. Both houses of Congress have approved Freedom
- of Access to Clinic Entrances bills, whose reconciled version
- should become law within months; similar statutes are already
- on the books in 11 states.
- </p>
- <p> If this dog won't bite, another will.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-