Posted on Friday, February 20, 2009
Filing: Abortion records sent to Virginia, where Phill
Kline now works
BY RON SYLVESTER
The Wichita Eagle
Three days after Phill Kline testified in a Sedgwick County
courtroom about the handling of abortion files, copies of those
records were mailed to the Virginia city where the former Kansas
prosecutor had taken a new job.
Lawyers for Wichita abortion provider
George Tiller said in court papers filed late Thursday that the
mailed package of documents is further evidence that Kline has no
regard for patients' privacy and further proof of alleged misconduct
in his investigation.
Kline, who now works at the Liberty
University Law School in Lynchburg, Va., did not immediately respond
to attempts to contact him.
Assistant Kansas Attorney General
Barry Disney, who is prosecuting a misdemeanor case against Tiller,
said he plans to file a response today. But Disney doesn't dispute
the main facts of Thursday's filing.
Dan Monnat,
a member of Tiller's defense team, is asking Sedgwick County
District Judge Clark Owens to dismiss the charges against Tiller,
who is set for trial next month.
Tiller's lawyers have argued that
Kline's conduct when he investigated the doctor as Kansas Attorney
General was so outrageous that the resulting charges should be
dropped.
Tiller faces 19 misdemeanor charges
related to his business relationship with a doctor who provided
second opinions on whether the health of the mother was a reason to
perform late-term abortions.
"The recent event suggests that
Kline's misconduct continues and there is still a need for the court
to discourage it by forbidding prosecutors from using evidence
acquired by Kline against Tiller," Monnat
said.
History of the case
Kline began investigating Tiller in
April 2003, months after becoming Kansas attorney general.
News that Kline had tried to subpoena
records from two Kansas abortion clinics, including Tiller's, became
public in 2005. Kline's pursuit of the records became a focus of his
failed 2006 re-election campaign.
Kline became Johnson County district
attorney a month later, after being appointed to the office vacated
by his successor as attorney general, Paul Morrison.
Morrison filed the current charges
against Tiller in June 2007. Morrison resigned six months later
because of a sex scandal. Steve Six, the current attorney general,
took over prosecution of the case.
During a hearing in Wichita in
November, Tiller's lawyers produced evidence that Kline's
investigators had taken copies of records that identified abortion
patients from the attorney general's office in Topeka to Johnson
County.
When a judge overseeing the case in
Topeka learned about it, he ordered Kline to return the files, court
records showed.
But Kline testified at another
hearing in January that he kept summaries of the records with him
and brought them to court with him in Sedgwick County.
Records in the mail
Laura
Shaneyfelt, another member of Tiller's defense team,
filed a sworn affidavit Thursday saying:
• The documents Kline brought with
him to Sedgwick County were mailed from the Johnson County District
Attorney's Office to Liberty University on Jan. 9 -- Kline's last
day as the county's prosecutor.
• The package was returned to the
Johnson County office on Feb. 13 because it was not addressed
properly.
• Current Johnson County District
Attorney Steve Howe and assistant prosecutor Chris McMullin opened
the box and found the Tiller records. They contacted Disney with the
attorney general's office.
Disney said he and an investigator
went to Overland Park to inspect the package and recommended that it
be locked in the Johnson County office. Disney then notified Monnat
about the package.
Shaneyfelt
wrote in her affidavit that Howe and McMullin said they had "a
pretty strong suspicion" that the package was mailed by a former
Kline employee who no longer worked at their office.
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