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- <text id=93TT1219>
- <title>
- Mar. 22, 1993: Thou Shalt Not Kill
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 44
- Thou Shalt Not Kill
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>With three pops of a handgun, two men who did not seem destined
- to co-star in a national morality play suddenly became fused
- in violence
- </p>
- <p>By PAUL GRAY--With reporting by Cathy Booth/Pensacola, J.
- Madeleine Nash/Chicago and Lisa Towle/Montgomery
- </p>
- <p> On what was to be his last morning, Dr. David Gunn, 47,
- woke up in a good mood. "He was happier than I'd seen him in a
- long time," says Paula Leonard, his girlfriend, in whose
- apartment he stayed when he came to Pensacola. He did so
- regularly, another stop on his 1,000-mile, six-day-a-week
- schedule of performing abortions at seven clinics in Florida,
- Georgia and Alabama. Gunn had reason to feel depressed: in the
- middle of an acrimonious divorce, he virtually lived out of his
- white Buick Skylark and encountered antiabortion protests and
- threats nearly everywhere he practiced. Paula remembers
- marveling at his high spirits as he set off with a limp--the
- trace of his childhood polio--last Wednesday at about 9:10.
- He drove to the Pensacola Women's Medical Services in Cordova
- Square, a suburban shopping center tending toward dress stores,
- doctors' offices, delis and weight-loss clinics.
- </p>
- <p> Michael Griffin, 31, had not awakened that morning at all--he had just come off a 12-hr. shift at the local Monsanto
- chemical plant--but he too seemed in high spirits. He arrived
- at the same complex that morning to pay a neurology bill for the
- treatment of his older daughter's headaches. "He was just
- fine," says receptionist Dee Slack, who told him that that day
- was her 34th birthday. "We joked because I had forgotten, not
- my birthday, but the date of it." Griffin then picked up a drink
- at the Circle K and walked toward the site of a planned pro-life
- demonstration in front of the clinic where David Gunn was
- expected. The night before, Griffin had called John Burt,
- regional director of Rescue America, an activist antiabortion
- group, to say he would take part.
- </p>
- <p> He never joined the people gathering in front of the
- clinic. Instead, he made his way to a small parking lot behind
- the building. After Gunn drove up, parked and walked slowly away
- from his car, Griffin shot him three times in the back with a .38-cal. pistol. He then dropped his weapon, approached a police
- officer and said, "I just shot someone, and he's laying behind
- the building." Gunn died roughly two hours later.
- </p>
- <p> With these three pops of a handgun, a new chapter ripped
- open in America's excruciating abortion saga. A complex
- conflict involving totems, taboos, theology, medicine, politics
- and judicial rulings had suddenly dropped to the level of a
- shoot-out. At the center were two hardworking fathers with firm
- convictions that they willingly put into practice. Both had
- experienced marital problems; both gave generously of their
- scarce free time to volunteer work. What separated them--what
- kept them apart until it fused them in violence--was a
- profound disagreement, a glitch in the moral geography that
- permits parallel lives not only to meet but to explode.
- </p>
- <p> Neither man seemed destined or even inclined to star in a
- national morality play. Gunn grew up in Benton (pop. 3,800),
- Kentucky, where his family was active in the Church of Christ.
- Old classmates remember him as funny, convivial, not at all
- self-pitying about the brace on his withered right leg, and
- smart. Beverly Beasley, now an insurance agent in Benton, says,
- "I remember once when we were in the fifth grade, the history
- teacher started talking about the Constitution. David stood up
- and said he could recite the Bill of Rights from memory, and he
- proceeded to do it verbatim."
- </p>
- <p> No friend can recall Gunn's wanting to be a doctor from
- childhood, but that was what he became. For a while he practiced
- obstetrics, until malpractice premiums rose so high that he was
- forced to restrict his work to gynecology. And that was when the
- folks in Benton began to lose touch with what he was doing. Last
- week the members of his family--including his parents, his
- older brother Peter, his twin sister Diane and younger sister
- Lilith--heard that he had been killed and learned for the
- first time that he had made his living performing abortions. "We
- were totally unaware," says Peter, "that he was involved in such
- a volatile issue."
- </p>
- <p> Was this reticence a matter of residual shame--retained
- from his religious childhood--or considerate tact? People who
- were close to Gunn are sure they know the answer. Says Vanessa
- Caldwell, his assistant at the Montgomery (Alabama) Women's
- Medical Clinic: "He was a very open, honest man. I think that's
- why it bothered him that his family didn't know the kind of work
- he did, exactly. He knew it would hurt them if they found out."
- </p>
- <p> But Gunn's work was no secret in the circuit he traveled--a pine-forested area radiating north, east and west from the
- Florida panhandle--and it made him both notorious and
- revered. Antiabortion groups harassed him, listing his
- itinerary, phone numbers and addresses and issuing WANTED
- posters bearing his name or photograph or both. One of them
- concluded, "To defenseless unborn babies, Gunn is heavily armed
- and very dangerous."
- </p>
- <p> The women he treated and worked with saw a different
- figure. Says Linda Taggart, director of the Ladies Center,
- another Pensacola clinic where Gunn worked: "In recent years,
- there haven't been enough doctors. But he was never too busy for
- the women. He was a very sweet, caring man, who was very much
- devoted to seeing that women kept all their rights." When he
- finished his clinic work in Pensacola, Gunn would drop in on the
- Slim Concept Weight Control center and give free counseling on
- diets and fitness. Says Paula Leonard: "All he wanted was to
- help women. He wanted women to have a choice, and he died for
- it."
- </p>
- <p> She says she and Gunn had been tailed "for months" by a
- blue van that then parked on her street when they were home.
- Two weeks before Gunn's murder, she had moved; her address had
- begun appearing in pro-life pamphlets. "I told the police this
- was going to happen," she said, shivering in the cold during a
- candlelight vigil outside the Ladies Center. "Last Friday when
- I was leaving work, that man was beating on my car window and
- wouldn't let me go. They were stalking us, the antiabortionists,
- but the police wouldn't believe me."
- </p>
- <p> The man who did the shooting seemed equally ill-suited for
- his performance. Born and raised in Pensacola, Michael Griffin
- graduated from high school and enlisted in the Navy without
- anyone thinking he was anything but well-spoken and quiet. After
- serving five years as an electrician, he returned home and later
- married Patricia Ann Presley on June 10, 1981, in Brewton,
- Alabama. (A few years earlier, David Gunn had worked in the
- local hospital there, delivering babies.) The Griffins had two
- daughters and moved back to Pensacola in 1987; he got a job as
- a chemical operator on a polymer-casting line with Monsanto in
- 1990 and at the time of his arrest was earning slightly more
- than $30,000 annually.
- </p>
- <p> In 1991 his wife filed for divorce, charging in court
- documents that her husband was "verbally and emotionally abusive
- to both our minor daughters and myself." A year later the suit
- was withdrawn, and the couple reconciled. For a time the
- Griffins kept their children out of school and educated them at
- home, although both enrolled in a private academy last
- September. Griffin had no known private or public involvement
- with Pensacola's strident antiabortion factions until a month
- or so before he murdered Gunn.
- </p>
- <p> During that time, though, he had drawn close to John Burt
- of Rescue America and Burt's wife Linda, who, with her husband,
- runs a halfway house just outside Pensacola for unwed mothers,
- called Our Father's House. Griffin volunteered to do work
- around the place, fixing a leaky faucet, repairing a doorjamb,
- installing a security system. He was gentle with the babies of
- visitors and told the Burts of his hope that his wife could have
- her tubal ligature undone so that they could have more
- children. He also, according to Linda, complained about his long
- shifts at work: "He said he'd had 12 hours of sleep in the past
- three days." That was on the Sunday preceding the fatal
- Wednesday.
- </p>
- <p> That morning he went to church with the Burts at the
- Whitfield Assembly of God in nearby Berrydale. During the
- service, Griffin offered a prayer. "He just offered his hope
- that David Gunn would meet Jesus Christ and stop killing
- babies," recalls Burt.
- </p>
- <p> It was a weekly ritual that Andy Watson and David Gunn had
- cherished for 11 years. Every Sunday, Gunn's one day off, he and
- Watson would head to Alabama's Lake Eufaula and spend anywhere
- from two to six hours in a boat, sometimes swapping stories,
- sometimes in companionable silence. Six years ago, Gunn and
- Watson entered a local bass tournament and, thanks to the eight
- bass they caught, beat a field of 333 other anglers for the
- $10,200 prize. Watson, 72, recalls with delight how he and Gunn
- "got right down on my living room floor, counted the cash and
- split it fifty-fifty." The pair was looking forward to another
- tournament, the first of the season, and had already paid the
- $100 entrance fee. It was to be last Sunday.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
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