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- <text id=93TT2016>
- <title>
- July 19, 1993: In Your Town, In Your Face
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- July 19, 1993 Whose Little Girl Is This?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ABORTION, Page 29
- In Your Town, In Your Face
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>A radical pro-life group launches a summer assault, but its
- tactics draw fire
- </p>
- <p>By DAVID VAN BIEMA--With reporting by Marc Hequet/St. Paul, Julie Johnson/Washington,
- Janice C. Simpson/New York and Sarah Tippit/Orlando
- </p>
- <p> In Melbourne, Florida, the first sign of coming events was
- modest. On a lot across from the Aware Woman Center for Choice,
- which performs abortions, two portable toilets sprouted. They
- were put there by Operation Rescue, the militant pro-life organization
- that had bought the property in part to demonstrate near the
- clinic without violating a court-ordered buffer zone. Soon,
- locals knew, video cameras would appear--toted by nearly every
- actor in the coming passion play: pro-lifers and pro-choicers
- taping each other, police taping both and TV-news teams taping
- everybody. "There's probably more money spent on camera equipment
- than anything else," joked Melbourne police captain Gary Allgeyer.
- Then he turned serious: "We seem to be in the middle of it.
- And it's a very uncomfortable position to be in."
- </p>
- <p> Starting last Friday, much of America was in the middle of it
- as Operation Rescue kicked off a 10-day marathon titled "Cities
- of Refuge." The campaign featured speeches, rallies and pickets
- in seven urban areas: Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota; Cleveland,
- Ohio; Philadelphia; Dallas-Fort Worth; San Jose, California;
- Jackson, Mississippi; and the area around Melbourne. Among its
- goals, explained spokeswoman Wendy Wright, is to ensure that
- "anyone in the continental United States ((is)) within a day's
- drive of a rescue." To pro-choicers, the implication is chilling:
- the transformation of abortion-clinic picketing from an activity
- for incensed locals and traveling zealots into a sort of vacation
- experience--one that could turn every major city into a potential
- Melbourne.
- </p>
- <p> Founded by Randall Terry in 1987, Operation Rescue sprang to
- prominence with a 46-day clinic blockade in 1991 that nearly
- paralyzed Wichita, Kansas. This year the organization has intensified
- its harder-edged tactics aimed at clinic employees: wanted posters
- of doctors, picket lines around their homes, and harassment
- of their children and neighbors. After one such target, physician
- David Gunn, was shot to death in March by a man connected with
- an unrelated but similar organization, "the pro-life movement
- was on the ropes a little bit," admits Operation Rescue's national
- spokesman, Patrick Mahoney. Nonetheless, Rescue continued a
- Melbourne "boot camp" that tutored recruits in everything from
- sidewalk "counseling" to surveillance. Graduates are now aiding
- the Refuge campaign in their hometowns, as Terry and other leaders
- jet from city to city, exhorting the troops. "We must strive
- to build a Christian democratic republic that is founded on
- the Ten Commandments," he says in a preview. "The only alternative
- is a pagan nation with rampant murder, rape, drug abuse, gang
- warfare, etcetera."
- </p>
- <p> Meanwhile, the opposition has been honing its defenses. The
- Fund for the Feminist Majority has assembled 4,000 volunteers
- for counterdemonstrations. In Philadelphia a local coalition
- says it can field 500 at once to defend local clinics. Sympathetic
- restaurants have offered to fuel them with free snacks. The
- St. Paul police force, which one lawman describes as "massively"
- prepared, surrounded a clinic with an 8-ft.-high chain-link
- fence, while the cops in a Cleveland suburb made do with barrels,
- sandbags and 40 officers.
- </p>
- <p> The defenders also found legal weapons. Although a federal clinic-access
- bill is still in committee in the House and awaits floor action
- in the Senate, most of the sites have recourse to local laws,
- like those in Minnesota against blocking a clinic entrance and
- "stalking" doctors and nurses, or San Jose's 8-ft. legal privacy
- "bubble" around clinic clients. Local officials have been heard
- from. Declared Philadelphia Mayor Edward Rendell: "I want to
- say clearly and unequivocally to Operation Rescue that lawlessness
- will not be permitted in this city."
- </p>
- <p> Rescue will be under tight scrutiny because pro-life radicals
- stand accused of neglecting their quest's spiritual side and
- turning to bravado and brutality. In Milwaukee, not a Refuge
- city, one of the newer forms of protest is "speed-bumping"--throwing oneself under the cars of patients headed for clinics.
- Local doctors have received death threats in person, and bullets
- were fired through a clinic window last week. Declares pro-choicer
- Joan Clark: "The blockaders are not from here. They're all from
- somewhere else, and they're paid by the missionaries. They're
- thugs, and they travel."
- </p>
- <p> Increasingly, those who once made common cause with Terry and
- his group have been alienated. Bill Price, head of Texans United
- for Life, is boycotting the current Dallas campaign, citing
- incidents including a case in which a Rescue member allegedly
- made a bomb threat to a Dallas clinic from a phone in New Jersey.
- "These are the tactics of the Mafia," says Price. Earlier this
- year, Twin Cities Catholic Archbishop John Roach urged militant
- antiabortion groups to avoid his area. "I do not find Operation
- Rescue to be a positive element in the pro-life movement," he
- said, "and I just wish they'd stay wherever they are." Operation
- Rescue ignored his plea. This week the group's challenge will
- be to regain the confidence of its less radical fellow believers.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
-
-