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Kan. Court Blocks Abortion Grand Jury

posted by akornfeld | 2:25pm Tuesday February 5, 2008

Associated Press
Topeka, Kan. – The Kansas Supreme Court on Tuesday temporarily blocked a grand jury from obtaining patient records from a physician who is one of the nation’s few late-term abortion providers.
The grand jury is investigating whether Dr. George Tiller has broken Kansas laws restricting abortion, as many abortion opponents allege. The grand jury subpoenaed the medical files of about 2,000 women, including some who decided against having abortions.
Abortion opponents forced Sedgwick County to convene the grand jury by submitting petitions, the second such citizen investigation since 2006 of Tiller, who has long been at the center of the nation’s abortion battle. His clinic was bombed in 1985, and eight years later a woman shot him in both arms.
Tiller’s attorneys asked the Supreme Court to quash the grand jury’s subpoenas, and the court agreed to block their enforcement until it considers the issue.
Chief Justice Kay McFarland said Tiller’s challenge raised “significant issues” about patients’ privacy and a grand jury’s power to subpoena records.
The Sedgwick County prosecutor presenting evidence to the grand jury had objected to the attempts to block the subpoenas, noting that the grand jury’s term is limited, but McFarland said the grand jury’s term can be extended.
The court set a Feb. 11 deadline for the county’s chief judge and the retired judge presiding over the grand jury to file objections to the court’s action. Those judges then have until Feb. 25 to file a response to Tiller’s legal challenge.
Mary Kay Culp, executive director of Kansans for Life, the state’s largest anti-abortion group, called the high court’s decision “extremely disappointing.”
“There is no way to determine if the reasons for these late abortions were done within the narrow legal criteria without looking at the records themselves,” she said. “His lawyers say they are worried about women’s privacy. They are worried about protecting Dr. Tiller.”
Tiller’s attorneys, Dan Monnat and Lee Thompson, did not immediately return calls seeking comment Tuesday.
The grand jury is seeking records of all women who visited Tiller’s clinic between July 2003 and last month and were at least 22 weeks pregnant at the time. The grand jury also subpoenaed information about current and former employees and referring physicians.
The edited patient records would not have the women’s names, but they would have patient identification numbers. Tiller’s attorneys claimed in court last week that in an earlier investigation, former Attorney General Phill Kline was able to track down patients’ names using the identifying numbers on patients’ files.
A spokesman for Kline, who is now Johnson County district attorney, denied that any patients had ever been identified.
Kline eventually filed 30 misdemeanor charges against Tiller before leaving office last year, only to see the case dismissed for jurisdictional reasons.
(This version CORRECTS Corrects that court’s deadlines both apply to officials in charge of county grand jury, not to Tiller’s lawyers.)
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



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Comments read comments(6)
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nnmns

posted February 5, 2008 at 4:56 pm


Well this is some good news. Grand juries and anyone else have no business going on a fishing expedition through a bunch of peoples’ health files.
If you looked hard enough at anyone’s activities you could find something to charge them with. But to enable a grand jury empaneled to find anything they can to charge Tiller to look through his and his patients’ files at will for anything they can find is surely illegal; if not it should be or none of us is safe.



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nnmns

posted February 5, 2008 at 6:28 pm


The good thing about an abortion is, it’s over really quickly. Well that’s not the only good thing. Also the embryo or fetus never feels fear of death, it’s an entity no one has formed an attachment to except perhaps the mother to be who decided it needs to be aborted. No one except that mother has put any investment into it. So while we can certainly wish it hadn’t been necessary we can comfortably accept the mother’s (or family’s) decision that the abortion was necessary.
But Donny since you are so anti-abortion can I assume you are in favor of real sex education and availability of birth control so fewer abortions will be needed?
You do realize, don’t you, that before Roe v. Wade there were a lot of abortions but many more were done by unqualified hacks or in unsafe conditions or by the woman herself with a coat hanger? Even if you illegalized abortion it would not go away, it would just get more dangerous. And soon the bloodshed would cause people to legalize it again.



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pagansister

posted February 5, 2008 at 10:02 pm


There is no reason for personal/private records of the women who were patients of this doctor to be invaded by a bunch of “pro-lifers”. Good for the judge. No group should have the power to force a grand jury…because they don’t like someone.
As nnmns brought up so well, just because someone wants Roe V Wade overturned doesn’t mean abortions would not continue. They would be done by hacks, in back alleys causing the deaths of the women. Or just as pleasant a thought, some women would literally put a metal coat hanger up to try an dislodge the zygote or embryo. So Donny would that make you happy?



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PurpleKU77

posted February 5, 2008 at 10:24 pm


You call Dr Tiller a “ghoul.” I live in Wichita, and I know him personally. He is a kind, caring person who is damn near single handedly standing up to the religious fascists in this country, saying that the Constitution, not the bible, rules America.



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pagansister

posted February 5, 2008 at 10:42 pm


PurpleKU77:
I lived in Wichita for a few years as a child (and that was the early ’50′s). I’m sure I’d not recognize it now. One of my sisters was born there.
It’s good to have a personal friend of Dr. Tiller speak on this blog. He is brave to continue doing what he feels is right, and not letting the ultra-conservative religious people tell women what they can and cannot do with their own bodies.



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Henrietta22

posted February 6, 2008 at 11:54 am


Dr. Tiller must be a very brave man and one the United States can be proud of. We should all be ashamed that our society enables people like the woman who shot him in both arms in 1985. Her intent was clear she wanted to take his ability to operate away from him forever. Did she go to prison? Hopefully a new administration in America will stop this maddness by religious extremists once and for all.



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