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  • Planned Parenthood Abortion Center Closes Instead of Following New Law

    Monday was the first day that Planned Parenthood, which operates the only abortion business in South Dakota, had to comply with a new state law telling women the truth about abortion. Rather than tell women abortion kills children and has numerous risks, Planned Parenthood closed its doors.

    07/ 22/08
  • Planned Parenthood Needs More Scrutiny

    Last year, Planned Parenthood performed more than 250,000 abortions, which account for about 1 in 5 of our country's total. Of all abortions, those performed for black women accounted for about a third of the procedures. It's also worth noting that a majority of Planned Parenthood's clinics are in minority neighborhoods.

    07/ 15/08
  • Black pro-lifers to ask NAACP to oppose taxpayer funding for Planned Parenthood

    Day Gardner: Planned Parenthood has basically bought off Barack Obama

    07/ 15/08
  • Black Pro-Lifers Demand Parties Refuse Planned Parenthood Funding

    Democratic and Republican candidates must reject donations from Planned Parenthood this election year, and Congress should end all federal funding for the abortion provider, according to black pro-life leaders who held two press conferences last week in Washington, D.C., at Democratic and Republican Party Committee headquarters.

    07/ 03/08
  • Your Tax Money at Work Funding Abortions

    For the last few decades, evangelicals repeatedly have mobilized and demonstrated to oppose the operation of abortion clinics. Over the years, many have believed that being anti-abortion had become a litmus test for their support of politicians and policies, which vie for evangelical votes.

    07/ 03/08
  • Inconvenient Truth for MSM: Black Ministers March Against Planned Parenthood

    Exit poll after exit poll in election after election shows the Democratic Party is staunchly supported by an overwhelming majority of African-American voters, many of whom are much more socially conservative on issues like abortion than their party leadership.

    07/ 03/08
  • Candidates warned against Planned Parenthood money

    Corporation's willingness to accept race-based contributions cited

    07/ 02/08
  • From our friends at KFL

    Press release from Kansas for Life

    06/ 27/08
  • Planned Parenthood: A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing?

    During the last few years, everyone in the nation has come to understand that things are not always the way they appear with individuals or organizations. While all of us struggle to live up to our ideals, some groups live permanently in the land of personal or professional compromise.

    06/ 23/08
  • The Greening of Planned Parenthood

    Don’t look now, but as the business Planned Parenthood is in (unrestricted abortion) becomes less popular, the abortion leader aims to distract.

    06/ 23/08
  • Extending the Brand: PP Hits Suburbia

    Abortion Provider Goes Upscale; Aid For Poor Questioned

    06/ 23/08
  • Planned Parenthood Timeline

    1916: Margaret Sanger opens America's first birth control clinic, in Brooklyn, N.Y., at a time when contraceptive information and materials are illegal on grounds of obscenity. Today's Planned Parenthood traces its roots to that clinic.

    06/ 23/08
  • Planned Parenthood to Benefit from New War Funding Bill

    Planned Parenthood, the nation’s leading provider of surgical abortions, could save millions of dollars on abortion related drugs if a new war funding bill passes through the House this year, according to pro-life groups.

    06/ 17/08
  • Tiller trial postposed....again

    Many of us expected this delay, delay, delay, until these misdemeanor charges will be allowed to go away. This was the entire plan when AG Morrison threw out all of the serious charges that meant something which were brought forth with probable cause.

    06/ 17/08
  • PLANNED PARENTHOOD TIMELINE OF KANSAS CASE

    This is a great timeline to help follow what has happened in the Kansas legal case involving Planned Parenthood.

    06/ 03/08

By

 Here is what is not being reported from the Supreme Court's findings:

1)  AP reported Morrioson' claims that the records were "scattered" when Morrison took office.  The release of Judge King's report shows this to be a lie in that Morrison knew where they were all of the time.


2)  PP has always claimed (as has Morrison) that Phill Kline did not have permission to have the records in Johnson County. Judge King's report and Judge Anderson's order show that to be a lie.


3)  PLanned Parenthood and Morrison consistently claimed that Phill Kline was trying to identify the patients.  Judge King's report shows that to be a lie.


4)  PLanned Parenthood and Paul Morrison claimed that women's names would be released.  Judge King's report shows the records had all names removed and absolutely no identities could be discerned.  So Judge King's report shows that to be a lie. He also indicates that Phill Kline was in total HIPPAA privacy guideline compliance in protecting the privacy of all patient records in his possession.


5)  Planned Parenthood constantly claims that nothing in the records shows any problems.  However, Judge Anderson has testified that there were problems. An independent handwriting expert has confirmed this.  


6) Law enforcement shares information all of the time.  Ask DA and County Attorney offices if they share the fruits of a subpoena with other law enforcement and witnesses. They will tell you that the answer is "yes".


7)  Also, all of this truly exposes Morrison's "clearance" letter which was sent to Planned Parenthood.  Paul Morrison used his office of Attorney General from day one to retrieve evidence of criminal wrongdoing and return that evidence to those who put him in office as a campaign payback.  Isn't this "obstruction of justice"?
  

Lawsuits question Kline's handling of documents

TOPEKA | An investigator said he kept edited records from abortion clinics in a Rubbermaid container in his dining room for several weeks. Others, according to testimony, stored them briefly in cars and homes and copied them at a Kinko's in downtown Topeka.

How prosecutor Phill Kline and his employees handled patient records is a major issue in a legal dispute before the Kansas Supreme Court. A Planned Parenthood clinic is trying to force Kline to return patient files that could be a key part of his criminal case accusing the clinic of performing illegal abortions and falsifying documents.

The clinic, Comprehensive Health, of Overland Park, has the support of Attorney General Steve Six, whose office called Kline's handling of documents "appalling" in a court filing. The clinic also wants the Supreme Court to consider citing Kline for contempt.

Kline, once the attorney general and now the Johnson County district attorney, argues the records were handled safely, that patient privacy never was at risk and that Planned Parenthood wants to keep him from prosecuting its Overland Park clinic.

As district attorney, Kline filed 107 charges against the clinic, alleging it performed illegal abortions and falsified documents.

Almost all details about the dispute remained secret for 11 months because the Supreme Court had kept separate lawsuits filed by Planned Parenthood and the attorney general's office under seal. On Friday, the court unsealed them, making hundreds of pages of documents public.

"I am pleased that, finally, the truth is coming out regarding the nature and extent of Mr. Kline's activities," said Pedro Irigonegaray, a Topeka attorney representing Planned Parenthood.

Abortion opponents said the newly released documents showed that since Kline left the attorney general's office, his successors have not been aggressive in pursuing abortion providers and has even protected them.

And Kline said a key point is that a district judge who once supervised his investigation of Planned Parenthood gave him permission to transfer records to Johnson County before he took over there in January 2007. He said such sharing of information is routine in law enforcement.

"This was harassment," he said of Planned Parenthood's lawsuit. "It's a criminal defendant suing a prosecutor personally."

Planned Parenthood filed a lawsuit against Kline in June 2007 and asked the Supreme Court to place it under seal, a request the justices honored. The attorney general's office filed its own case two months later, also under seal, naming the judge who'd once supervised Kline as the defendant.

It's highly unusual for the Supreme Court to seal a case, and its doing so spawned a legislative bill to make it more difficult. Later, both Kline and the clinic said the cases didn't need to remain sealed.

The court scheduled arguments from attorneys in Planned Parenthood's lawsuit for June 12. It told lawyers involved in the attorney general's case to file written arguments by May 22 on whether it should be dismissed.

"Our goal has always been to protect women's private medical records," said Six spokeswoman Ashley Anstaett.

But Kline spokesman Brian Burgess noted that the Supreme Court said it did only "minor" editing to protect patient privacy before unsealing the cases. He said the records at issued contained "no IDs."

"How long will they be allowed to get away with that before you guys in the media start challenging this nonsense?" Burgess said in an e-mail to The Associated Press.

Kline, an anti-abortion Republican, began investigating Planned Parenthood's clinic and another operated in Wichita by Dr. George Tiller in 2003, months after he became attorney general.

His attempt to obtain information during a court-supervised investigation from about 90 patients' files led to a lengthy legal battle. Eventually, the Supreme Court spelled out how those records would be handled, and Kline eventually was able to review copies edited to remove patient identifications.

Kline lost his 2006 re-election race to an abortion rights supporter, but Johnson County Republicans picked him to fill a vacancy in the county prosecutor's job.

Kline didn't pursue a criminal case against Planned Parenthood's clinic as attorney general but, three days before leaving that office, he forwarded edited records from 29 Planned Parenthood patients' files to the Johnson County district attorney's office.

Planned Parenthood contends Kline couldn't do that because he had a duty to give up control of the records when he left the attorney general's office. It said he disregarded "clear requirements" spelled out by the Supreme Court and should be punished with a contempt citation.

Shawnee County District Judge Richard Anderson, who'd supervised Kline's investigation as attorney general, declined to do so or order the return of the records. He said during one closed April 2007 hearing that before Kline left the state office, he'd given him permission to forward records "to any other prosecutor" who might work with Kline.

Kline not only forwarded Planned Parenthood records to Johnson County, but edited versions of records from Tiller's clinic as well.

When Planned Parenthood and the new attorney general asked the Supreme Court to intervene, the handling of patient records became a big issue. The high court eventually appointed a special master to gather evidence.

That evidence included testimony of Kline deputies, who acknowledged moving copies of records to their cars to transport them and briefly store them, and keeping them briefly at their homes and, in one case, a garage.

Investigator Jared Reed, who followed Kline from the attorney general's office to a job in Johnson County, said he stored some records in a Rubbermaid container in his apartment dining room from early January to mid-February 2007.

According to a transcript, he said during a Dec. 3 hearing, "Looking back at it, it kind of strays from the normalcy of, you know, chain of custody of evidence."

The special master's report also said testimony indicated that, in the final hours before Kline's successor was sworn in, a top aide decided to have documents obtained from Tiller's clinic copied so they could be brought to Johnson County.

Reed and another investigator went to the nearest Kinko's. Three employees were present but didn't participate and, according to the report, "No one was able to look at the records."

"It does not appear that any of the attorneys involved with the investigation at the attorney general's office saw a need, whether legally required or not, to handle the transfer of investigative materials to the Johnson County district attorney in a manner that stood up the highest scrutiny," the report said. "Surely such scrutiny should have been expected."

But the report said as the incoming district attorney, Kline initially was denied access to a locked storage area. An employee considered the office "wide open" and wanted to assess security, considering Reed's apartment safer for storage.

Finally, the report considered — and mostly dismissed — allegations from Planned Parenthood that Kline or someone working for him as attorney general leaked medical records to Fox television's Bill O'Reilly before the 2006 election.

Kline appeared on "The O'Reilly Factor" just four days before Kansans voted, where O'Reilly said he'd seen abortion records from Kansas and criticized Tiller. The special master said the claim that documents were leaked rests on "suspicion and assumptions that are not supported by facts."