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- <text id=93TT1249>
- <title>
- Mar. 22, 1993: One Doctor Down, How Many More?
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 46
- One Doctor Down, How Many More?
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>Prey to harassment, arson and now murder, abortion clinics are
- easy targets for militants
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD LACAY--With reporting by Deborah Fowler/Houston,
- Julie Johnson/Washington and Elaine Lafferty/Los Angeles
- </p>
- <p> When she heard last week that a doctor had been gunned
- down outside an abortion clinic in Florida, B.J. Isaacson-Jones
- was shaken--but not surprised. At the St. Louis, Missouri,
- clinic where she is president, staff members always vary their
- routes home from work. Mail is opened only by employees trained
- by a bomb and arson squad to detect suspicious envelopes or
- packages. "Those of us providing abortion services feel very
- vulnerable," she says. Even more so since December 1991, when
- a man in a ski mask opened fire with a sawed-off shotgun at a
- clinic in Springfield, Missouri. Two people were wounded,
- including the clinic's office manager, who is now paralyzed. The
- gunman, who walked calmly away from the scene, has not been
- apprehended.
- </p>
- <p> In the eyes of abortion-rights activists, the killing of
- Dr. David Gunn is simply the culmination of years of violence,
- vandalism and harassment against clinics all around the country.
- Far from denouncing his murder as the work of a lone extremist,
- some of the more militant antiabortion groups warned that more
- violence was likely to follow. "What do you expect when the
- government and the President do all they can to crush peaceful,
- nonviolent protests?" asks the Rev. Joseph Foreman of
- Missionaries to the Preborn, based in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. "We
- will not be outraged over the one death and not the other 4,000
- precious human beings that were killed today by abortion," he
- says. Randall Terry, founder of Operation Rescue, said he
- regretted the act but noted that, after all, Dr. Gunn was a
- murderer of babies.
- </p>
- <p> The rising violence may reflect in part the sense of
- stalemate among antiabortion groups. Now that the Supreme Court
- has stopped short of overturning Roe v. Wade and a pro-choice
- Administration rules Washington, clinic operators fear that
- frustrated pro-life militants will become even more aggressive
- and threatening. According to the National Abortion Federation,
- a Washington-based advocacy group, in 1992 alone there were 116
- cases of clinic vandalism, 12 reported incidents of arson, 9
- cases of attempted arson, 5 burglaries and a bombing.
- </p>
- <p> This year is not shaping up any better. In Corpus Christi,
- Texas, last month, arsonists burned from one of the city's
- abortion clinics, along with four neighboring businesses in the
- same building. A new tactic is to spray the interior of clinics
- with butyric acid, a chemical that ruins carpets and
- furnishings and leaves behind a revolting stench. During one
- night last week, five San Diego clinics were made a stinking
- mess. "It smells like rancid meat and a sewer together. It's
- awful," says Ashley Phillips, whose WomanCare Clinic was one of
- those attacked.
- </p>
- <p> Property damage, bad as it is, is not what frightens
- clinic workers the most. Doctors, their staffs and families find
- themselves stalked, harassed and threatened over the phone.
- After he was confronted several years ago by a man who
- threatened to cut off his fingers, Dr. Buck Williams, the only
- doctor who provides abortions in South Dakota, got a licensed .38 revolver. He jokes grimly about it now: "I figured if I had
- only one finger left, I could use it to pull the trigger." After
- he learned about the Pensacola killing, Williams upgraded his
- weapon to a .45.
- </p>
- <p> Even the children of clinic workers are targets. Lisa
- Merritt is a counselor at a clinic in Melbourne, Florida. She
- says that last month her 13-year-old son Justin was approached
- by a woman and a teenage girl who told him they were thinking
- of moving into the apartment complex where he and his mother
- live. A day later, the girl phoned to ask Justin to join her at
- a Burger King. The girl picked him up in a car driven by a woman
- in her 30s whom she identified as a friend.
- </p>
- <p> At the restaurant, the pair suddenly produced a Bible and
- asked Justin if he was aware that both he and his mother were
- going to burn in hell. According to Merritt, they identified
- themselves as members of the antiabortion group Operation Rescue
- and asked the boy whether he had names of patients at his
- mother's clinic. Justin refused to answer, and bolted for home.
- "We're all tight as guitar strings around here," Merritt says.
- "I can't believe they came after my son."
- </p>
- <p> Pro-life organizations were divided last week about how to
- respond to Gunn's killing. Even groups that have supported
- clinic blockades issued unequivocal condemnations. "To shoot and
- kill a human being in the name of saving human life is
- grotesque," said the Rev. Richard D. Land, who heads the
- Christian Life Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention.
- But more militant outfits played rhetorical games, dancing
- around the crime. Don Treshman, national director of
- Houston-based Rescue America--which had mounted protests at
- Gunn's home--called the doctor's death "unfortunate." Then he
- added, with a logic long familiar among extortionists: "This
- will have a chilling effect on this business."
- </p>
- <p> The murder in Pensacola has already led to the resignation
- of two doctors at the clinic in Melbourne. Antiabortion groups
- had featured them on wanted posters similar to those that Gunn
- had appeared on before his death. Clinics elsewhere are finding
- themselves compelled to take expensive precautions against
- attack. The Houston chapter of Planned Parenthood is spending
- $100,000 on security devices for its new headquarters. Last week
- their clinic in Kansas City, Kansas, hired an armed guard.
- </p>
- <p> After Gunn's murder, representatives from three
- abortion-rights groups held a joint press conference with two
- Democratic Congressmen to call for an FBI probe of the
- antiabortion movement. Congress is expected to speed up action
- on a bill that would make it a federal crime, punishable by up
- to three years in prison, to blockade an abortion clinic. At a
- meeting with the President on Thursday, members of the
- Congressional Caucus for Women's Issues urged him to support
- legislation that would strengthen federal antistalking laws. The
- President, says Colorado Democrat Patricia Schroeder, "was fully
- in agreement that this was a real crisis."
- </p>
- <p> A federal law protecting clinics could give stronger
- authority to the FBI and other agencies to investigate attacks.
- The record of state law-enforcement efforts so far has been
- mixed. In the 28 cases of arson and fire bombings against
- clinics from 1990 to 1992, only one suspect has been arrested.
- Earlier this month, representatives of the Feminist Majority
- Foundation met with Florida attorney general Robert Butterworth.
- Katherine Spillar, national coordinator for the foundation, says
- he refused their request to seek a state court injunction that
- would keep protesters away from clinics.
- </p>
- <p> "We've been warning them for weeks that something like
- this was going to happen, but they just won't listen," Spillar
- complains. "They say it's a local law-enforcement issue. We know
- that's not true. We've had cooperation from the offices of the
- attorneys general of Texas and New York when these kinds of
- things started."
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, clinics are bracing themselves for another
- season of assaults. Melbourne is now the site of a 12-week
- training camp, organized by Operation Rescue, where about 25 men
- are learning tactics for blockades. Pro-choice activists who
- are monitoring the group contend that the men are also being
- instructed in how to stalk and harass. The convergence of
- pro-life forces has placed great strain on the area's sole
- abortion clinic, where about 30 protesters have been picketing
- for the past month. Merritt, the clinic counselor whose son was
- harassed, says when the murder of the doctor was announced to
- the protesters, they took up a chant: "One down! How many more?"
- That same question is now on the minds of many others.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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