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Washington: With one bullet, a gunman ended the
life and the controversial career of abortion doctor
George Tiller, killing him as he stood in the foyer of
his church on Sunday, May 30, 2009.
The shooter, 51-year-old Johnson County man could be
charged with murder and aggravated assault in the
shooting of Tiller, who ha d been shot before by an
anti-abortion foe.
The crime has drawn condemnation and outrage from the
president and stirred strong emotions across the nation.
Tiller, 67, was shot once just after 10 a.m. Sunday as
he stood in the lobby of Reformation Lutheran Church,
7601 E. 13th St., where he was serving as an usher. The
gunman threatened to shoot two men who tried to
apprehend him.
Wichita police said that the suspect was arrested
without incident on I-35 in Johnson County about three
hours after the shooting, following a state-wide
broadcast describing the suspect and his car.
Although Wichita police would not name the suspect, the
Johnson County Sheriff's Office identified him as Scott
P. Roeder, according to the Associated Press.
Wichita police said it appeared that the suspect had
acted alone but that they are investigating whether he
had any connection to anti-abortion groups.
Police on Sunday said they expected the man to be
charged with murder and two counts of aggravated
assault.
In a news conference at Wichita City Hall, Deputy Police
Chief Tom Stolz said police will "investigate this
suspect to the Nth degree, his history, his family, his
associates, and we're just in the beginning stages of
that."
Tiller had long been a focal point of protests by
abortion opponents because his clinic, Women's Health
Care Services, 5107 E. Kellogg, is one of a few in the
country where late-term abortions are performed.
He was shot and wounded in both arms at his clinic in
1993.
Sunday's shooting stoked emotional debate on the
Internet between supporters of abortion rights and
abortion opponents. Without elaborating, Stolz said
investigators will look into the Internet comments
because the discussion could bear on public safety.
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