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- <text id=94TT1115>
- <title>
- Aug. 08, 1994: Crime:Avenging the Unborn
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Aug. 08, 1994 Everybody's Hip (And That's Not Cool)
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- CRIME, Page 26
- Avenging the Unborn
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A second doctor is murdered in Pensacola, and the warning is
- out: Beware the pro-life killer
- </p>
- <p>By David Van Biema--Reported by Cathy Booth and Scott Norvell/Pensacola, Dan Cray/Los
- Angeles, Bonnie Rochman/Atlanta, Sarah Tippit/Orlando and Lisa
- Towle/Fernandina Beach
- </p>
- <p> For what it may be worth, Dr. John Bayard Britton's killer did
- not penetrate his homemade bulletproof vest.
- </p>
- <p> "Doc" Britton, 69, was a man of modest means. When he replaced
- the murdered Dr. David Gunn as a circuit-riding doctor for several
- abortion clinics in northern Florida, he realized he needed
- a vest. But instead of buying, he wore one constructed of manufacturer's
- scraps. Sometimes he worried that it was too short. "If they
- get me in the liver, that's pretty tough to patch," he told
- a reporter last February. Apparently he assumed that his assailant,
- aiming from a prudent distance in hopes of a clean getaway,
- would go for the largest target, the torso.
- </p>
- <p> Britton died last Friday with his liver whole. Moments after
- he and the elderly couple acting as his volunteer guards arrived
- in the parking lot of the Ladies Clinic of Pensacola, a gunman
- ran up to the driver's side of their blue pickup truck. The
- killer was no prudent sharpshooter: he got quite close with
- a 12-gauge shotgun and blasted the faces of the two men with
- round after round of buckshot.
- </p>
- <p> Britton and escort James Barrett, 74, died instantly. Barrett's
- 68-year-old wife June suffered an arm wound. Minutes later,
- police arrested Paul Hill, a local antiabortion extremist who
- had long called for the blood of clinic personnel.
- </p>
- <p> President Clinton was on television by the end of the day, calling
- Britton's death a case of "domestic terrorism" and promising
- federal aid to the local police. Women's groups were angrily
- demanding greater protection for clinic workers and full-scale
- investigations into other extremists. Behind the public rage
- was a great deal of frustration and perhaps even some despair.
- Pro-choicers began to wonder: What good is constructing an indestructible
- garment of laws to protect a constitutional right if some extremist
- simply ignores them all and blows someone's head off?
- </p>
- <p> Many abortion-rights supporters had hoped that the 1993 murder
- of Gunn by antiabortionist Michael Griffin would be unique--and not only that but a turning point. As the apparent climax
- to a period of growing violence and obstructionism by hard-core
- clinic protesters, it became a catalyst for public disgust and
- government action. Within the next 15 months, two Supreme Court
- rulings, an act of Congress and dozens of state and local ordinances
- contributed to the impression that few places on earth could
- be much safer than an abortion clinic.
- </p>
- <p> None of which convinced Britton to remove his vest. But then
- he was never an easygoing sort. According to a profile in the
- February issue of GQ magazine, he facilitated abortions as early
- as the late 1960s, on principle. But by the 1980s, he was also
- doing them for the money: as many as 32 a day at $50 each. He
- had lost a hospital job in 1978 after clashing with his colleagues,
- and his professional reputation suffered three years later when
- he was put on two years' probation for improper prescription
- of narcotics. He could be compassionate and conscientious with
- his regular patients. Marjorie Mason, a patient who lives in
- his hometown of Fernandina Beach, Florida, praises him for seeing
- her through a difficult pregnancy: "He held my hand through
- the whole thing." Yet Britton could be brusque and abrasive
- with clients he inherited from Gunn. Nor did he believe in turning
- the other cheek: he packed a .357 Magnum and talked freely about
- his willingness to shoot abortion protesters if they trespassed
- on his property with intent to harm him.
- </p>
- <p> He meant people like Hill. A native Mississippian with three
- children, the clean-cut, ever smiling 40-year-old was an ordained
- minister and regarded as an ideal neighbor. Yet his father had
- signed a warrant against him for assault when he was 17, and
- an ex-pastor confides that two churches had expelled him in
- 1992 for preaching the idea that came to consume him: that to
- kill an abortion provider was justifiable homicide. With Gunn's
- death, however, Hill found a more receptive audience: talk-
- and news-show hosts. Appearing first on Donahue, then on Nightline
- and Sonya Live, the formerly obscure car-cleaning entrepreneur
- gained instant recognition in the protest community saying what
- several believed but few admitted: "If we can use ((deadly))
- force to defend our born children, why shouldn't we do so for
- our unborn children?" He started a single-issue group called
- Defensive Action and circulated a petition defending the "justice
- of taking all godly action necessary to defend innocent human
- life, including the use of force."
- </p>
- <p> He also became a regular protester outside the Pensacola clinic;
- with eerie prescience, GQ writer Tom Junod portrayed him as
- the most likely threat to Britton's life. Others too saw him
- as an explosion waiting to happen. Ron Fitzsimmons, director
- of the National Coalition of Abortion Providers, who first met
- him on Donahue, recalls having an edgy dialogue with Hill while
- in Pensacola to mark the anniversary of Gunn's death. "I remember
- I said, `Paul, you're not going to kill me, are you?' I asked
- him why he hadn't killed any doctors. He said, `Well, Ron, that's
- a very good question, and I've really struggled with it. But
- I feel I can make more of a contribution as a leader than a
- doer.'"
- </p>
- <p> And then, apparently, he changed his mind. Around 7 a.m. on
- Friday, the Pensacola police caught him planting a row of little
- crosses on the grounds of the Ladies Clinic and demanded that
- he remove them; he complied. At 7:30, after receiving a distress
- call about the shooting, they encountered him walking down a
- highway away from the clinic. He had more than a dozen shotgun
- shells strapped to his leg, ankle and pocket. He refused to
- tell them where the gun was, police said. (They found one on
- the clinic lawn.) But he did say, "I know one thing: there won't
- be any more babies killed today."
- </p>
- <p> In the murder's immediate aftermath, most of the major pro-life
- organizations scrambled, convincingly, to dissociate themselves
- from Hill. Echoing more mainline groups, Operation Rescue director
- Flip Benham trumpeted, "We condemn it as murder, a sin. If I'd
- been with Paul Hill this morning, I would've stepped between
- him ((and Britton))." Expressing the fears of more temperate
- antiabortionists, Benham added, "This will have devastating
- effects on the number of picketers. There's a good number of
- folks who don't want to be associated with this."
- </p>
- <p> Revulsion at Hill's act may indeed turn many Americans away
- from pro-life activism. But it may also encourage a tiny, violent
- minority, much as the Gunn murder appeared to activate Hill.
- David Trosch, a Roman Catholic priest who signed Hill's petition,
- has publicly recommended "massive killings of abortionists and
- their staffs." He said of last week's crime, "I see the action
- as a good action." There were more than 20 other signatories.
- </p>
- <p> Patricia Coleman, one of Doc Britton's five children, says,
- "My father was an independent thinker who absolutely refused
- to be swayed by politics or what other people thought. He refused
- to be bullied." Yet some of his surviving colleagues are feeling
- vulnerable. "This has taken its toll," says Ashley Phillips,
- director of the WomanCare clinic in San Diego. "I don't know
- how much more of this we're supposed to take." Following the
- killing, several members of Congress demanded that the FBI begin
- infiltrating radical antiabortionist groups as it has the Ku
- Klux Klan in the past. Harsh as that sounds, if Britton's death
- causes Phillips or other abortion providers to step down in
- fear, Griffin, Hill and others like them will have achieved
- the goal of all terrorism: to thwart the established policy
- of a nation through the pinpoint application of brutal violence.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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