Roundup: A Roeder Roundup
The trial of Dr. Tiller's murderer is getting underway, and we catch you up with the latest developments. Plus, women bring home the bacon...
Just because we are still in the midst of jury selection doesn’t mean that there aren’t developments in the Scott Roeder case. Roeder, who is on trial for the murder of Kansas doctor George Tiller, has been filling the media with his attempt to defend his actions as justifiable homicide.
However, it’s the judge in the case who is making the most recent news.
[State District Judge Warren] Wilbert, a Republican who earned his bachelor’s and law degrees from Washburn University in Topeka, was appointed to the bench in 1995 and faced no opposition the first three times he stood election. The most recent race was a different story: Wilbert won re-election in 2008 by a mere 471 votes out of nearly 166,000 cast.
Kansans for Life’s political action committee endorsed Wilbert in that race, though it did not contribute to his campaign directly. The mainstream anti-abortion group does not espouse violence, and its political arm focuses on lobbying the state Legislature.
Finance records show that Wilbert paid the group $75 in September 2008 to have his name listed in an ad in its quarterly newsletter, a 6-by-11-inch booklet of 24 pages that included articles such as "Update on Tiller charges" and "Planned Parenthood – a Snake in the Grass!" The judge also spent more than $16,000 on radio spots on seven stations.
The ad in the newsletter took up most of the bottom of page 16. It said: "The Kansans for Life PAC urges you to vote for, work for and pray for the following pro-life candidates."
Anti-abortion advocates, however, point to the judge’s past rulings against Operation Rescue, as well as his refusal to allow Roeader to use the "necessity defense" as signs that Wilbert will not let his feelings on abortion weigh on his handling of the case. According to Lifesite News:
…Wilbert’s judicial record does not appear to paint a picture of a “pro-life” activist judge. According to the Associated Press, in 2005 he dismissed a public records lawsuit filed by Cheryl Sullenger, a policy advisor for the pro-life group Operation Rescue, in which she sought copies of 911 tapes for ambulance runs from Tiller’s abortion facility.
Similarly, Wilbert has more than once denied Roeder’s request to use the so-called "necessity defense," which would argue that Roeder’s action was not a crime because it saved the lives of preborn babies.
The judge has also indicated that he wishes to keep the moral issue of abortion out of the case, as far as possible.
The issue of whether the judge’s potential biases could open the door for a trial that is less about Roeder’s actions and more about abortion itself is a valid concern. Should Roeder be convicted of a lesser charge with as little as a 5-year sentence, some predict that violence against pro-choice doctors and advocates could greatly increase.
Roeder claims he was justified in murdering Dr. Tiller because he believed the slaying would save unborn children. It doesn’t matter if he’s successful in that claim or not. Merely by allowing the voluntary manslaughter argument, I fear that the judge has given a green light to every nut case with a cause.
The majority of women and men in this country are pro-choice. Few people are against sane efforts like more birth control to make abortion less prevalent. Abortion is not pleasant. I’ve never spoken with a woman who wouldn’t have preferred not to have one. But providers, clinics, women who have abortions, people who fund research and advocacy, and those who write and speak favorably about the right to the procedure all support keeping it safe, legal, and available to preserve women’s lives. What’s to stop abortion protesters now from gunning down any of these people if they can get off with a light sentence and forever be seen as martyrs? Isn’t that what all terrorists wish for?
The potential upheaval that an upheld justifiable homicide defense could create could result in violence not just for pro-choice advocates but, possibly rebound onto anti-abortion activists as well if taken to extremes, as writer Jeff Schweitzer does.
With hunting season now open, I could kill anybody I choose on the belief that my act of homicide would save the lives of future targets of my victim’s murderous ways. I make this ridiculous assertion because "defense of another person" is generally accepted as legal justification for killing a person in situations that would otherwise have been murder.
….
Judge Wilbert said that the jury should consider "…Mr. Roeder’s beliefs, and how he came to form those beliefs." So if I kill an insurance executive, I just have to argue why I believe my actions to be justified, and how I came to those beliefs. More to the point, I can go out and murder any "pro-life" activist on the premise that I am saving the lives of all doctors who perform abortions!
And all of this while we are still in jury selection. Just imagine what the actual trial will bring.
Mini Roundup: More wives are becoming the household breadwinners. So when are legislators going to trust us enough to make our own health care choices?
January 19, 2010
Chile’s
Bachelet Gives Green Light To Reproductive Health Legislation Santiago Times
In
NY, race for Senate seat is a Democratic identity crisis Washington Post
Jennifer
O’Neill, Dr. Alveda King, and 45 Others Harmed by Abortion to Testify … Christian News Wire
A
New Treatment to Help Women Avoid Hysterectomy Wall Street Journal
January 18, 2010
Public
agencies not all about abstinence The News-Press
Whose
should faith rule in the ER, yours or the medical staff? USA Today
MA-Sen:
Emergency Contraception
Claims Daily
Kos
Activist
Diary 2: National Anti-choice groups create Susan B Anthony ‘museum’ … Firedoglake
Coakley,
Schmoakley, You’re Not Our Heroes Anymore Huffington Post
Pro-life
task force presents proposals Observer Online
Obama
Speech for Pro-Abortion Candidate Coakley Disrupted by Pro-Life
Heckler LifeNews.com
Pro-Life
Advocates Demonstate at Planned Parenthood’s Newest, Biggest Facility FOXNews
Pro-Life
News: Stupak, Virginia, Texas, Mississippi, New Mexico, Alaska, Abortion LifeNews.com
Texas
Gov. Perry, Sen. Hutchison Discuss Abortion Rights In Gubernatorial Race … Medical News Today
Russia
should cut abortions to
boost population: minister AFP
Lawmakers
Still Trying to Create Abortion Funding Compromise in Health Care
Bill LifeNews.com
January 17, 2010
Tim
Tebow Set To Appear In Super Bowl Commercial CBS 4
Marchers
protest abortion St. Augustine Record
Reader’s
view: Republicans manipulate voters with abortion issue Duluth News Tribune
Lt.
Gov. Bryant leads anti-abortion effort Jackson Clarion Ledger
Abortion
Funding Divides Views in US Angus Reid Global Monitor
Driehaus
stands firm on abortion
fight Cincinnati.com
Area
residents rally against abortion Dubuque Telegraph Herald
Santorum:
Brown campaign ‘confused’ on abortion, health care Politico
Anti-abortion
group director: Policy change question comes from supporters KCAU
Roeder
case stirs global reactions Kansas City Star
Lawmakers
prepare to spar over abortion Washington Times
Misconceptions
Blamed For Drop In Adoptions WOWT
In
her own words Los
Angeles Times
Judge
bows out of pro-life
case OneNewsNow
Santorum:
Brown campaign ‘confused’ on abortion, health care Politico
Abortion
rights protested at LI rally Newsday
One-child
families to receive privileges Bangladesh News 24 hours
January 16, 2010
Coakley’s
abortion
remarks spur flap Boston
Herald
Abortion is
divisive in reform of healthcare Ventura County Star
Anti-abortion
rally in downtown Dallas hopes to draw 10000 Dallas Morning News
Abortion
chicanery Louisville
Courier-Journal
Anti-abortion
activities slated for anniversary of Roe v. Wade News-Leader.com
Anti-abortion
protests live on outside Madison Surgery Center Wisconsin State Journal
Anti-abortion
activists rally in downtown Dallas; crowd appears to fall short … Dallas Morning News
Mother
loses baby after being given ‘abortion‘ drug to induce labour Telegraph.co.uk
Planned
Parenthood Advocates of New York: Does Ford Know What It Means to Be
Pro-Choice? ReadMedia
The
Onion: Law requires women to name baby, paint nursery before Feministing
Harold
Ford, Jr. On Why He’s Pro-Choice
Nashville Post
Many
clergy support reproductive care Albany Times Union
Nun
Need Apply — By: Kathryn Jean Lopez
National Review Online
An
opposing view: Christine Smith Wisconsin State Journal
Pro-life
leader: We’ll resist GOP ‘coup’ Lincoln Journal Star
ObamaCare
Goes Global, Hillary Clinton Announces
The New American
January 15, 2010
Fox
Nation, Hoft falsely claim Coakley said "Catholics" shouldn’t work
"in emergency rooms” Media
Matters for America
The
Pill May Decrease Bone Density Palm Beach Post
Canada
high court declines to hear anti-abortion activist’s tax appeal JURIST
Kansas
judge in abortion
case comes under scrutiny Washington Post
Publication
Gives Obama Low Grade on Promoting Abortion, Pro-Lifers Say Higher LifeNews.com
Insanity
defense to be used in protester slaying Washington Post
Senate’s
stealth approach to abortion funding Washington Examiner
Clinton
Promises Global Push for Abortion Rights … National Review
New Abortion
Requirements Include Painting Nursery, Buying Toys Jezebel
The Pro-Choice
Paradox Crosswalk.com
Catholic
bishops too powerful? Washington Post
Eleanor
Clift: Pro-Choice
Pelosi Is ‘Unshaken… In Her Catholic Faith’ NewsBusters
State
Department mulls options for Haiti adoptions
Atlanta Journal Constitution
Painful
limbo for parents adopting Haitian kids msnbc.com
Martha
Coakley Attacks Pro-Life Catholics: "Don’t Work in an
Emergency Room" LifeNews.com
The
Population Implosion: Part I of the Pro-Life Manifesto NewsBlaze
Pro-Life
Advocates Urge March for Life Attendance to Lobby Abortion-Health Care LifeNews.com
House,
Senate Close to Deal on Final Health Care Bill, Passing it a Question LifeNews.com
Pro-Life
Avatars Head to Washington in First-Ever Virtual March for Life LifeNews.com
Canadian
Ambassador to the Vatican Appreciates Pope’s Pro-Life Take Lifesite
Planned
Parenthood Raising Funds to Push Birth Control, Contraception in Haiti LifeNews.com
Medicaid
to pay for birth control? Salt Lake Tribune