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351 lines
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Plaintext
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_________________________________________________________________
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W I N N I N G B Y C I R C U M N A V I G A T I O N:
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Milwaukee's clinic defenders find legal recourse
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on a detour around the District Attorney
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Copyright 1993, 1994 by Muriel Hogan
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_________________________________________________________________
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As the Milwaukee Clinic Protection Coalition (MCPC) steeled itself
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for a second Wisconsin winter on the street, members celebrated
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the anniversary of the permanent injunction signed December 10,
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1992 by Circuit Court Judge Jeffrey Wagner. The injunction
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limits certain kinds of protest activity outside Milwaukee's
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abortion clinics. Clinic escorts and defenders, dreading their
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winter vigil, are nonetheless cheered by indications that the
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fundamentalist Christian onslaught is diminishing at last.
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Once-huge crowds of "Antis" have dwindled to a handful on
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weekdays and 20 or 30 on Saturdays. At some clinics, there've
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been no protesters at all, a condition the defenders call "NFA."
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Away from the clinics, protest leaders can't recruit more that a
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few hundred people to come to their public events. By contrast,
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LifeChain, an annual pro-life demonstration in Milwaukee,
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attracted 8,000 people last fall. The Milwaukee Journal quoted
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one LifeChain participant who preferred to express his opinion
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"without threatening anyone, without breaking any laws."
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* Signs of decline
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Programming on the Christian broadcast station WVCY also reflects
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the cooldown. At the height of Milwaukee's 1992 summer protests,
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WVCY-FM aired two hours a day of live reports and exhortations,
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while WVCY-TV showed 30 minutes a night of clinic protest
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footage, often followed by an hour-long call-in show on the
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subject. In 1993, most abortion-related programs were nostalgic
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reruns of the Antis' 1992 glory days.
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WVCY's anti-abortion radio show, "Building the Foundations" has
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cut back from 30 minutes to 15, inspiring its MCPC listeners to
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call it "The Quarter-Hour of Power." Other WVCY shows have
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switched to safer topics: school prayer, satanism in popular
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music, and the dangers of troll dolls. Today, WVCY often ignores
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news about abortion protesters who are facing fines and jail
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terms under the permanent injunction.
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* Attendance down, violence up
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MCPC started in April, 1992, when anti-abortion activists
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announced their eight-week "Short-Term Mission to the Pre-Born."
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That summer, the Missionaries to the Preborn, Operation Rescue,
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and Youth for America (YOFAM) orchestrated large demonstrations
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and blockades. Missionary founders Rev. Joseph Foreman and Rev.
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Matthew Trewhella stated their intention to close every abortion
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clinic in Milwaukee. The Short-Term Mission resulted in over
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1,000 arrests and $1 million in law enforcement costs.
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By contrast, 1993's summer protests were much smaller, with
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police costs of $112,000. But the Milwaukee Fire Department
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reported costs of $48,000 for the butyric acid attack on one
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clinic in August, and $99,000 for two September "car rescues" in
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which Antis chained themselves into junked automobiles to block
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clinic doors. Figures are unavailable for protest-related court
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costs and for the amount of protesters' unpaid fines.
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As the Antis' desperation has increased, so has their violence.
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Since Dr. David Gunn's assassination last March, Milwaukee's
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doctors have been the target of home blockades, stalking, and
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death threats. One clinic has had bullets fired through its
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windows four times in 1993.
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* How the defenders attack
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On the street, MCPC's strategy is purely defensive, protecting
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patients and holding clinic doors to prevent blockades.
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Defenders practice the discipline of keeping their hands in their
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pockets and avoiding verbal exchanges with the Antis. But in
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court, the hands come out of the pockets. Using the permanent
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injunction, the Coalition has launched a full-tilt legal
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offensive against the Antis.
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The injunction orders protesters to stay 25 feet away from each
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clinic and ten feet from each patient. Protesters must not
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impede patients, touch them, photograph them, or record their
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license plates. (See box.) If an Anti repeatedly breaks these
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rules, MCPC serves them with the injunction and starts collecting
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evidence of their violations.
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* The legal lioness
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Attorney Joan Clark, one of MCPC's co-coordinators, has led the
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legal attacks like a mama lion: watchful, tenacious, and coolly
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aggressive. A self-described "housewife and mom," she plots
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strategies with other pro-choice attorneys including her husband
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Bill Guis, MCPC board members Katy Doyle and Katie Walsh, and
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Walsh's husband Steve Glenn. No doubt, the presence of so many
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female lawyers has inspired gland-shrivelling FemiNazi paranoia
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in many Antis.
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Interviewed last week, Clark said MCPC began its legal work even
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before the Short-Term Mission. "By the time the first big crowds
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hit the streets," she said, "the Coalition had been successful in
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getting a preliminary injunction into place."
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"That spring," Clark said, "Katie Walsh and Chris Korsmo (of
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NARAL) convinced the Powers That Be that there was going to be
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serious, serious trouble. And with no injunction, there'd be no
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mechanism to handle it."
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The December permanent injunction, almost identical to the
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preliminary, solidified what Clark calls the "completely
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separate, parallel system of justice" that protects Milwaukee's
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five abortion clinics.
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But even after the preliminary injunction was signed, its
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benefits were hard to see and difficult to enforce. "It didn't
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do us much tangible good until this year. But two significant
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things happened. First, fully half of the named defendents
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disappeared. In that respect, the injunction started helping
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right away. And second, it gave us a great morale boost."
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* A detour around what?
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But why was this roundabout route necessary? "You get an
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injunction because there isn't an enforceable law on the books
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that will that will prevent certain things from taking place,"
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Clark explained. "There's a hole and you need to fill it up."
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"We needed this injunction," she said, "because the Milwaukee
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District Attorney, E. Michael McCann, is anti-choice and would
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not charge people who were arrested day after day. The only way
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to stop this activity was to set up a completely separate system
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of justice," she said.
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"People don't realize that the Missionaries had already been
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doing this for three years, long before the Short-Term Mission."
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Clark said. "Every single day at Summit, when a patient would
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approach, two people blocked the door. You call the cops, get
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the paddy, spend an hour getting rid of them. The woman would
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get in. And then when the next patient came -- two more people
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would sit down."
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Clark said police officers have told her that "until the
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Coalition started, the DA wouldn't talk to police or clinic
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owners about anything, not even battery. Dr. Paul Seamars was
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physically restrained by one Anti while another took his picture,
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and the DA wouldn't do anything. It's a very, very, very
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dishonest policy."
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"Anywhere else," said Clark, "if you receive ten municipal
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disorderly conduct tickets for the same activity within a
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relatively short period of time, you'll be charged with a crime,
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because these muni tickets are not deterring you."
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"If we had had a District Attorney who'd do his job, the
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Missionaries wouldn't be here. Except for two weeks in Buffalo
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and four weeks in Wichita, we have the most chronic, terrible
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problem in the country," she said.
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* Have you been served?
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You'll frequently find Clark in court, sitting at the prosecution
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table with counsel from the City Attorney or State Attorney
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General. "I'm there unofficially as an evidence gatherer. I'm
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more conversant with the facts than the city attorney, because
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usually I was there when the incident happened," Clark said. "A
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second function we serve is to tell the city when the people
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they're looking for show up at clinics."
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Clark also serves injunctions for MCPC and keeps track of
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which Antis have been served. She described her informal rule:
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"We serve people whose names we know who violate the injunction.
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Because down the road, if they do something bad, we want to be
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able to bring a motion against them."
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She's very sensitive to the free speech issues the injunction
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raises. "If you violate the injunction, the question is whether
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you're acting in concert with a named defendant, and / or whether
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we care," she said.
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"Take the Concrete Christian," she said, referring to a protester
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who always stands motionless and silent. "He violates the
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injunction every day, but I couldn't care less. I consider that
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First Amendment activity, and I would never go after him," Clark
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said. Although we might get a judge to say this guy is acting in
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concert, it would be dishonest, because he's not."
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Clark urges people to come observe how "sidewalk counselling"
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works. "Watch for half an hour," she said. "You'll see: it's
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not someone expressing a view. It's very aggressive, very
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physical -- and it's designed to scare the hell out of somebody
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who's seeking medical attention."
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* Crime and punishment
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So far, MCPC's biggest catch is Brian Longworth, convicted in
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November of criminal contempt and sentenced to two years for
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twice blockading clinic doors. Longworth first attracted MCPC's
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attention by leading "kiddie-hits," blockades that result in
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dozens of arrests of children as young as eight years old.
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"Longworth is definitely the worst," said Clark. "Longworth is
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big because he's the leader of Youth for America, he felt he was
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untouchable, and his name was not on the injunction."
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Clark stressed the importance of prosecuting defendants whose
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names are not on the injunction: "The Antis tell everybody the
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injunction's just a piece of paper. If your name isn't on there,
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it doesn't apply to you. But this Longworth thing hit everybody
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right in the face. All of a sudden, they can't deny it any
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more," she said.
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Another un-named defendant, Rev. Joseph Foreman, was found in civil
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contempt November 29. Foreman's a national figure among anti-
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abortion activists, a former field operations director for
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Operation Rescue. Since moving to Milwaukee in 1992, he's become
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the most prominent leader on the local scene. Oddly, neither
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WVCY nor the Missionaries to the Preborn has mentioned Foreman's
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conviction.
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At his trial, Foreman complained that he felt singled out for
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selective prosecution, and urged the city to first pursue
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defendants who were named on the injunction. Joan Clark
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dismissed Foreman's assertion, saying, "Joe knows why he's being
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picked. A prosecutor with limited resources will go after the
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people who are the most troublesome."
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Altogether, six Antis have been found in criminal contempt and 27
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in civil contempt. More than half of these people have come to
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Milwaukee from other states to participate in protests here.
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A person found in civil contempt must forfeit $500, or swear to
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obey the injunction, or serve 20 days. For a second violation,
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penalties double. A third violation can become criminal
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contempt, carrying $5,000 or a year in jail. The Milwaukee City
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Attorney's office and the State Attorney General are continuing
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to bring contempt motions against Antis who violate the
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injunction.
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* Approaching the endgame
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The permanent injunction, like many legal matters, has taken
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effect with an almost geological slowness over the past year.
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Now Clark and the Coalition can sense its increasing speed and
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effectiveness. "This is absolutely going to mop up the problem,"
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she said. "Things will pop up now and again, but most Antis will
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drop out after their first convictions. They're desperate! Why
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are they talking about Waco, Texas all the time, and Halloween?
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They can't even talk about this issue on the radio any more!"
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At the clinics, defenders feel that the remaining protesters have
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become more frantic. As their legal woes multiply, previously
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mild-mannered Antis have spun out of control. In recent weeks,
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police have arrested middle-aged Christian homeowners for
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kicking, slapping, and spitting at clinic defenders and escorts.
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With spring, MCPC hopes that the Freedom of Access to Clinic
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Entrances (FACE) bill will solve the Anti problem for clinics
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nationwide. FACE has passed both houses of Congress, but must
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clear a conference committee before President Clinton can sign
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it. Among hard-core protesters, a common practice is to blockade
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in one city until the penalties become too severe, then move to
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another city. Brian Longworth, for example, collected 16
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convictions in Georgia and California before he came to
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Wisconsin. The new federal law will stop these itinerant
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protestors much more effectively.
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FACE may make the local issue moot, but the pro-choice community
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won't forget how their District Attorney made Milwaukee taxpayers
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underwrite his personal religious beliefs. And dollars don't
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cover the damage to patients' privacy and peace of mind. One
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clinic escort said, "I wish I'd counted the tears. Every time
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the Antis make a woman cry, I think of how the DA should make
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reparations for all those tears."
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Clark said that one defender, Mike Salick, has found the perfect
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analogy for MCPC's long struggle. "It's like a town in the Old
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West," she said, "where the bad guys are preying on the
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townspeople. And for some reason, the sheriff won't do anything.
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Finally the townspeople say 'OK, we've had enough!' And they
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rise up and they drive the bad guys out of town. That's just
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what we've done!"
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_________________________________________________________________
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* Clip and save!
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How to Exercise Your First Amendment Rights
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Without Getting Arrested:
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A Handy Wallet Card for the Pro-Life Activist
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1. Do not come any closer than 25 feet to any abortion clinic's
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doorway, parking lot, or driveway.
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2. Do not come any closer than 10 feet to any person entering or
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leaving the clinic.
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3. Do not physically abuse, grab, touch, push, shove, or crowd
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any person entering or leaving the clinic.
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4. Do not photograph any person entering or leaving the clinic,
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and do not record their car's license number.
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5. Clinic defenders focus their legal offensive on certain kinds
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of protesters, those who:
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- Blockade clinic entrances.
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- Threaten or scare patients, doctors, or clinic staff.
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- Make physical contact with patients or defenders.
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- Lose their tempers, or are verbally abusive.
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You can speak, pray, sing, hold a sign, and counsel anyone who
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voluntarily approaches you. People who follow these guidelines
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have nothing to worry about.
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_________________________________________________________________
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This article has appeared in:
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The Shepherd Express, Milwaukee, WI, December, 1993.
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The Sojourner, Boston, MA, January, 1994, in a condensed version.
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Off Our Backs, Washington, DC, February, 1994.
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_________________________________________________________________
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Copyright 1993, 1994 by Muriel Hogan
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Anyone may duplicate or distribute this article on BBSs, nets,
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and echos. No one may reproduce this article in hardcopy for
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sale or free distribution without my prior written permission.
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For print permission, please contact me via Fido netmail.
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_________________________________________________________________
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