Posted on Tuesday, March 17,2009
Tiller jury taking shape
Defense attorneys hint at their strategy while questioning
potential jurors.
BY ROXANA HEGEMAN
Associated Press
Potential jurors in the trial of George Tiller
were told Monday to set aside their personal views about abortion,
and at least one was dismissed after she said she couldn't.
"This trial is not a debate about abortion,"
Assistant Attorney General Barry Disney told prospective jurors as
jury selection began in Sedgwick County District Court. "It is not
about whether abortion is right or wrong.... This trial is about
whether the defendant has violated the law."
Tiller, one of the nation's few late-term abortion
providers, is charged with 19 misdemeanors alleging he failed to
obtain a second opinion for late-term abortions from an independent
physician, as required by Kansas law. If convicted, he could face a
year in jail or a fine of $2,500 for each misdemeanor charge.
Defense attorney Dan
Monnat hinted at the defense strategy while questioning
the potential jurors by saying Tiller has never been "knowingly or
intentionally" financially affiliated with the doctor who provided
second opinions.
Tiller's defense attorneys say he is innocent and
have called his prosecution a "hyper-technical political trial."
They have said they will appeal if he is convicted.
Tiller and his clinic have been a target of
abortion opponents for decades. His clinic was bombed in 1985, and
an abortion opponent shot him in both arms in 1993.
Wichita also was the site of the 45-day "Summer of
Mercy" event staged by Operation Rescue in 1991. Those mass
demonstrations and clinic blockades led to more than 2,600 arrests.
Abortion opponents plan prayer vigils during the
trial. Several prayed outside the courthouse Monday. Abortion-rights
supporters also plan demonstrations.
Disney told prospective jurors that prosecutors
and defense attorneys agree that Tiller performed the 19 late-term
abortions and that he was required to obtain a second, independent
opinion. Jurors need only decide whether Ann Kristin Neuhaus, the
doctor who provided Tiller with second opinions, had a financial or
legal relationship with him, Disney said.
Neuhaus, who has been granted immunity from
prosecution, could testify.
One potential juror was dismissed after she said
she was biased against Tiller and would find it hard to let go of
her anti-abortion views.
Another was let go after he insisted he didn't
"want to be a part of it," saying he has seen too much about the
case in the media. A third man was dismissed because he did not
understand English well.
Jury selection continues today and Wednesday.
|