Wednesday, November 12, 2008
Klein to testify in Tiller caseBY RON
SYLVESTER
The Wichita Eagle
Phill Kline will face questioning next week by
lawyers representing the Wichita abortion doctor he pursued for
years as the state's top prosecutor.
Kline, the former Kansas attorney general and
current Johnson County district attorney, is on the witness list to
be called by lawyers for George Tiller in a motion to dismiss
misdemeanor charges related to how Tiller performed late-term
abortions.
Both Kline and his successor, Paul Morrison, are
scheduled to be called in a hearing expected to last most of next
week before Sedgwick County District Judge Clark Owens.
Tiller is one of the few doctors in the nation who
perform late-term abortions. His lawyers say Kline abused his power
while investigating Tiller's Wichita Women's Health Care Services
clinic.
Kline began investigating Tiller's clinic and a
Planned Parenthood facility in Johnson County in 2003, launching a
legal battle over the privacy of medical records and abortion rights
before the Kansas Supreme Court and in district courtrooms in Topeka
and Wichita.
"They're going to subpoena me to try and make this
about me," Kline said in an interview with The Eagle in September,
after Tiller's lawyers filed their motion to dismiss the case.
Tiller's lawyers said that Kline continued to
wield his influence over the case, even after leaving office, by
pressuring his successor, Morrison.
Lawyer Dan Monnat
has said in a pleading that Kline pressured Morrison through
knowledge of an extramarital affair that later led to Morrison's
resignation.
Morrison filed 19 misdemeanor charges related to
Tiller's business relationship with a doctor who provided second
opinions on whether the health of the mother was a reason to give
them late-term abortions.
State law requires independent medical assessments
for abortions where a fetus may be able to survive outside the womb.
Stephen Six, the current attorney general, is
arguing that while he doesn't endorse Kline's tactics, that
shouldn't negate the current charges against Tiller.
Kline said Six's willingness to pursue the case
confirms he was right.
"Every single record shows criminal conduct,"
Kline said in the September interview. "Every one. We were right."
Also on the witness list next week:
• Shawnee County District Judge Richard Anderson,
who presided over secret hearings by Kline, which led to the
subpoena of abortion records from the Wichita and Johnson County
clinics. Anderson is attempting to quash the subpoena and has
requested a protective order to limit his public testimony.
• Special investigator Thomas Williams, who worked
for Kline when he served as attorney general.
• Assistant attorneys general Eric Rucker and
Steve Maxwell, who led Kline's investigation of the abortion
clinics.
• Assistant Attorney General Jared Reed, who had
been assigned by Six to pursue the charges against Tiller.
Six has now assigned Assistant Attorney General
Barry Disney, a former Sedgwick County assistant district attorney,
to assume responsibilities as lead prosecutor on the case.
|