by Cathy Ramey
All of the facts relating to the deed of one Paul Jennings Hill
are generally known. On July 27, after over eighteen months of
prayer, picketing, and pleading outside of the Pensacola Ladies
Center abortion facility, Hill visited his local gun shop.
Bruce Maddin may not have remembered Paul Hill personally, but he
remembers the 12 gauge Mosberg pump-action shotgun he sold him. With
hunting season little more than two months away, the sale of a
weapon intended for taking down big game was not unexpected. Almost
incidentally the gun was designated by the manufacturer with a name
of its own. Paul Hill filled out the required ATF form-4473 and left
Mike's Gun Shop with The Defender in hand.
Moving on to the Milton Gun Shop, Hill bought ammunition, 12
gauge 2 3/4" buckshot shells, each projectile estimated to hold
approximately 12-20 explosive pellets. On the same day, a Wednesday,
he signed in at a shooting range and practiced hitting a mark. On
Thursday he was back. And on Friday, July 29, 1994, according to
several eye-witnesses, Paul Hill turned the gun on its intended
target.
Britton
It was rumored that, despite the fact that it was an abortionist
beneath the sod, the grass was grown in full over David Gunn's grave
before a replacement was found nearly five months after he was
buried. John Britton, a Fernandina, Florida resident, was known as
the unsavory abortionist who stepped into Gunn's boots after he was
slain in March of 1993.
Britton was featured in a GQ magazine article after his
installment as abortionist extraordinaire [willing to take up where another had been
gunned down] and boasted
about his commitment to the practice of pulling babies apart through
the devise of a suction machine. He had been caught doing abortions
before its legalization in 1973, was dismissed and barred from
seeing patients at one hospital and then another, and repeatedly
disciplined for the illegal abuse of prescription drugs.
In short, even after over twenty years of Supreme Court protected
abortion, John Britton was nowhere near being anything like a
professional physician. He was, as one commentator put it, "the
off-scouring" of the medical community.
His passion for unburdening women of their "unwanted"
children, he intimated, ran so deep that it would be accomplished
over the dead body of any demonstrator who tried to stop him. He
posed for the camera in a home-made bullet-proof vest.
Barrett & Barrett
After a restless life of romancing with first one man and then
another, June Barrett, a retired nurse, married the retired Air
Force Lt. Col. James Barrett. Her daughter approved of the change in
her mother's life and told her, "You finally got one I can
love."
In June of 1992 the Barretts moved to Pensacola and settled in to
change the small retirement town, if not the world, together.
James and June Barrett were retired [ 74 and 68 years of age
respectively] and unleashed to address
what June refers to as their mutual "social concerns."
Both husband and wife were members of the Unitarian Universalist
Church, organizers of a Parents of Lesbians and Gays group,
interested in educating the public about AIDS, and involved in other
endeavors like "counseling."
On the last Friday of each month the Barretts were engaged as
volunteers in assuring that abortions were committed without a hitch
at the Ladies Center. As such, they arrived at Pensacola's lone
small airport at 7:00 a.m. After picking up John Britton, they would
proceed to the abortion facility and deliver their human cargo
sometime before 7:30.
It was at seven thirty a.m. precisely that the first baby was
scheduled to die.
In the same GQ article that had featured John Britton, James
Barrett had been characterized as more than a mere escort. He kept a
gun handy and was ready to use it.
The deed
According to Mark Holmes, he was called to the Ladies Center at
6:45 a.m. on the morning of July 29. He was on duty as a Pensacola
police officer that day though on others, still wearing his official
police uniform, he worked as a paid security guard for the facility.
Sworn to "protect and serve," Holmes helped to assure that
abortions were committed without any undue influence by protesters.
On this particular Friday, he testified that he found Paul Hill
planting white crosses in the grass [public property] just outside the Ladies Center facility.
Hill was ordered to remove the small display, and according to
Holmes, "he obeyed" without the usual admonition to the
officer that he was an accomplice to the murder of baby boys and
girls.
Holmes left the area but would be called back before having time
to do more than have a cup of coffee and cruise the broad strip of
roadway fronting the abortuary.
At approximately 7:20 a.m. the Nissan pick-up used by the
Barretts for transporting Britton pulled into the driveway of the
facility. James Barrett veered to the left in order to bring the
vehicle's passenger side up alongside the front door. From there, it
was routine for Britton to swiftly enter the building that resembles
an older and run down home. He would check in with the staff and
begin his "days work."
As usual, June Barrett, riding in the extra cab on a jump seat
facing the driver, noted that Paul Hill was present. But unlike
other Fridays he was without one of his out-sized protest signs.
Instead, June Barrett had the impression that Hill was holding a
stick.
"I saw him holding something," she testified before a
packed courtroom. "I didn't know what it was, but he looked
like he was pretending to shoot us."
Only a fraction of a second later she yelled to her companions in
the truck, "My God, he is shooting us!" At the same time,
three shots were heard, one immediately following another.
Her husband sought to exit the vehicle and was killed instantly.
In the space of about 30 seconds, Hill reloaded and pumped out
four more shots, spraying the area around the truck with more than
90 shotgun pellets; some piercing the truck, some shattering the
window, and several lodging in the body of and killing abortionist
John Britton who was unsuccessfully looking for James Barrett's gun.
Prosecution
The case against Paul Hill, with eight eye-witnesses, would be,
according to Prosecutor James Murray, "airtight." Officer
Mark Holmes and others who responded to the scene watched as Paul
Hill walked away after discarding the shotgun. His hands were held
up in the air, palms open, fingers splayed, in an apparent effort to
assure others that the threat was over. The Defender had done its
work.
Pressed down to the ground and cuffed by police, Hill made what
was considered to be his own confession and declaration of the
event, "No babies will be killed at this clinic today."
Paul Hill was officially in custody and on his way through the
American Justice System, a system that recognizes a right to kill on
some occasions.
Justifiable homicide
All through proceedings that followed his arrest Paul Hill
remained silent for the media but firm in his presentation before
the judge. The defense he wanted [the only possible reason that a rational man
would fire into an occupied vehicle in front of witnesses in the
bright light of a hot July morning] was one that is recognized in all 50 of the
United States. Paul Hill believed no other remedy was available;
that it was necessary to render harm to an abortionist in order to
save the lives of innocent human beings about to be killed that very
day.
According to testimony, abortionist Britton's left arm was nearly
severed by the blast of Hill's shotgun. Justification for rendering
a man and his arm inoperative would only make sense when viewed
alongside information about the thousands of smaller arm, legs,
heads, torsos, and lives that Britton had severed.
Prosecutor Murray drew out the last 30 seconds of John Barrett's
life, painting a picture of a man trapped in an enclosed area, whose
end was imminent; a man who was helpless to defend himself and
change the course of events.
Hill asked that the court give him opportunity to share with the
jury about the final moments in the lives of yet-to-be-birthed
children. His defense, if allowed would talk about the final 30
seconds of those aborted, seen on ultrasound, drawing back into the
womb in a futile attempt to avoid a powerful, tearing suction tube
or the small curved end of a deadly sharp curette.
The court said "No" and then repeated herself again and
again through the representation of Circuit Court Judge Frank Bell.
Hill could offer another defense; insanity, black rage, too much
sugar, the Twinkie
defense, Urban-Survival syndrome, parental abuse, etc., but he could
not argue a defense that implied an effort to save real children. To
offer such a defense would threaten nearly twenty-two years of life
under Roe v. Wade.
Contrary to the perception held by most Americans, that a man is
entitled to explain why he has done a deed, Paul Hill was told he
could not discuss abortion and her victims before a jury of his
peers.
With no option to speak "the truth, the whole truth, and
nothing but the truth" before the court, Paul Hill rejected
other defenses. Britton was not killed in order to uphold an
international treaty against genocide. His accomplice, James Barrett
did not die because Hill was the receptacle of multiple
personalities, etc., etc. Britton and Barrett died only because
there was no other way that Hill believed he could prevent the
deaths of a number of completely innocent people.
Defending himself
Another issue that tortured the American system of jurisprudence
was that Paul Hill was unwilling to tolerate the second-rate
representation available to him through the public defender's
office. In the entire office there was not one lawyer who would
violate his symbiotic relationship with the Bench to argue
convincingly for the only defense Hill had. In the absence of such
counsel, Hill could only opt to be his own attorney.
As the date for trial was advancing upon him, Paul Hill took
every opportunity to tell the court that he was in need of competent
counsel. Such counsel, he contended, was available to him in the
persons of two Kentucky lawyers who stood ready to champion a
defense if allowed to do so by the court. Vincent Heuser and Michael
Hirsh had traveled to Pensacola in the hope that a last minute
change of heart might cause Judge Bell to relent and allow Hill
legal representation of his own choosing.
Hirsh's interest in the trial was especially compelling. In 1992,
even before the first shooting of an abortionist, he began final
work on a Law thesis aimed at providing a defense for just such a
user-of-force like Paul Hill. His theoretical motion revolved around
arguing for a defense of justifiable homicide for a fictional client
who had protected unborn children in a manner that ended the life of
an abortionist. The particular state in which the case was argued,
and therefore, the laws that were cited to apply, was the state of
Florida.
Judge Bell was aware of Hirsh's research, but denied the petition
to allow Heuser and Hirsh to enter as counsel of record. In his
estimation, it was necessary to assure that Paul Hill had
representation familiar with laws in the state of Florida, he said,
choosing to ignore Hirsh's exploration into the very issue at bar
and Hill's preference.
The Jury
For Hill and others who watched the trial of Michael Griffin
(charged with killing the first abortionist, David Gunn) the
selection of jurors would prove to be unexceptional. But for curious
American spectators, the process was an enigma.
A "jury of his peers," it might be assumed in Paul
Hill's case, would include others like him; church-goers, believers
in biblical truths. Instead the questions posed to the prospective
pool were aimed at eliminating any with religious convictions.
"Do you attend church regularly?" they were asked, and
"Are you involved in church activities other than church
services?"
Jurors were quizzed about Sunday School and proclamations from
the clergy. Without exception, those chosen by the prosecution were
in agreement. They could disregard any concerns they felt over
abortion and any moral leading that might have come their way via a
pastor or his pulpit.
In an appeal every bit as sincere as apologies given by those of
his trade who were tried at Nuremberg for enforcing and upholding
immoral laws, Murray advised them, "This is what goes to the
heart of our society, that we agree that we will obey the laws of
the land."
He hammered home his point by asking the jurors to nod if they
could agree "that failure to follow the law (of Roe v.
Wade)...that a miscarriage of justice would occur?" All heads
moved up and down.
Paul Hill, unable to proceed with a defense of his choosing;
denied legal counsel of his choice; and shackled with a jury pledged
to follow the law of Roe, right or wrong, sat silent throughout the
three hours it took to seat six men, six women, and two alternates
who would judge his case.
Paul Hill sat silent too while the now-seated jury was instructed
by the prosecutor during his opening argument that they "must
follow the law" without reservation, and later when Judge Bell
instructed them that "even if you don't like the laws that must
be applied, you must follow them."
The jury [last bastion
between a corrupt law or government and a vulnerable defendant] watched through opening
arguments, 37 state witnesses, and Murray's closing statement,
apparently without a clue, never comprehending that they held it in
their power to reverse the law and find Paul Hill blameless of a
crime because of his attempt to save other innocent lives.
After only three days of trial, on Wednesday afternoon, the jury
returned with a verdict. Paul Jennings Hill was found by them to be
guilty of two counts of killing in the first degree, one count of
attempted killing, and one count of firing into an occupied vehicle.
The vote was 12-0, with every juror upholding their pledge to affirm
the law without reservation.
Penalty recommendation phase
Thursday, November 3, all parties to the trial were once more
present in the courtroom of Judge Frank Bell. Again, before the jury
was brought in to take their seats, Paul Hill reiterated his request
for a defense and counsel of his choosing.
Again the judge said "No."
Having found the defendant guilty in only 45 minutes of
deliberation the day before, jurors were now to give a judgment as
to sentencing. The only options available in the state of Florida
are "life in prison without possibility of parole" and
death in the electric chair.
One by one the jurors hear short pronouncements from Judge Bell,
Prosecutor Murray, and members of the Barrett family.
Abortionist Britton was not represented with either family or
friends to attest to his character and the loss that he is to the
community, but Barrett was extolled as a man whose values were being
instilled into his grandchildren. "I'm not sure I can be what
he was," his son Bruce told the court.
Mrs. June Barrett lamented that she will never be able to attend
activities at the Retired Officers Association. "I can't come
back without my dancing partner," she tells the audience.
In a recess apart from the jury, and before closing statements
regarding sentencing, Murray offers a final complaint to the court.
It is his concern that the jury will be swayed unduly by Paul Hill's
appearance.
Throughout the long hours in the courtroom Hill has been
consistently patient, passive, polite. Murray is fearful that the
jury might read into the defendant's pristine behavior that there
were unspoken mitigating circumstances and be unable to bring back
the hoped for death penalty. But Judge Bell declines any unusual
instruction for the jury on this issue.
Only moments later the jury is returned for closing statements in
the penalty phase of Paul Hill's prosecution, and Murray reiterates
the obligation that he has met in proving that the deed was done by
the accused. He outlines the elements which must be necessarily
present in order to bring back a recommendation for the death
penalty.
Hill's actions, he contends despite the fact that he has
effectively prevented Hill from offering just such a defense, had
"no pretense of moral justification."
And then Murray, a member of the Presbyterian Church like Paul
Hill, exhorts those sitting in judgment to hand his brother-believer
over to the sentence of death.
Hill speaks at last
In a move that surprised the court, after attending his trial as
a silent witness, Paul Hill rose to address the jury.
"You have a responsibility to protect your neighbor's life
and to use force if necessary to do so" he matter-of-factly
informed them. "In an effort to suppress this truth, you may
mix my blood with the blood of the unborn and those who have fought
to defend the oppressed. However, truth and righteousness will
prevail."
"May God help you to protect the unborn as you would want to
be protected."
Hill took his seat and watched as jurors walked in uncomfortable
silence into the jury room.
"Unless a kernel of wheat..."
Throughout the hours of argument, only one concern delayed the
proceedings in the jury room. "If Paul Hill was sentenced to
'life in prison,'" the jurors wondered, "would that mean
he would be eligible for parole?"
The judge and the American justice system took one last
opportunity in the trial setting to assure the jury would opt for
the death penalty.
Understanding that the jury was wanting to assure themselves that
this shooter of abortion providers, this protector of unborn
children would never be able to walk free, the judge refused to
explain Florida law any further.
The message was sent in to the jury that they would need to come
to a decision based upon the information at hand. They were never
instructed that "life" meant never being eligible for
parole. Presumably then, to assure that the abortion-minded would be
forever free of Paul Hill, the jury returned after four hours with a
12-0 proposal that Paul J. Hill should die.
On November 30, at 1:00 p.m. central time it is expected that
Judge Frank Bell will pronounce sentence upon Hill, giving great
weight to the recommendation of the jury.