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In the years following Roe v. Wade, the 1973 case that brought the issue of legalizing abortion before the Supreme Court, anti-abortion terrorism has plagued abortion providers throughout the United States. The FBI considers militant anti-abortionists, like radical animal rights and environmentalist groups, to be “special interest” or “single-issue” terrorists, whose adherents use violence to achieve one end.

Anti-abortion direct action in the United States dates to 1975, when six women in Rockville, Maryland, were arrested for the first clinic sit-in. Although violent incidents were relatively rare in the mid-1970s, the level of violence rose quickly. In February 1977, an activist entered the Concern Women's Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio, and set fire to its interior after throwing flammable liquid in the receptionist's face. Two years later, Peter Burkin, then 21 years old, stormed into a Hempstead, New York, clinic with a two-foot flaming torch, threatening to “cleanse the soul” of the abortion provider, Dr. Bill Baird. (Baird was then known for his 1972 Supreme Court case that legalized the sale of contraceptives to unmarried couples.)

Early Organizations

By 1980, two of the most significant direct-action anti-abortion groups had been founded. Paul and Judie Brown, of Stafford, Virginia, started the American Life League (ALL) in 1979. A year later, Joseph Scheidler, widely considered to be the father of anti-abortion direct action, created the Pro-Life Action League (PLAL) in Chicago. The Browns and Scheidler were part of the National Right to Life Committee (NRLC), the largest anti-abortion group in the United States. Scheidler had been the executive director of the Illinois chapter of the NRLC from 1973 until he was dismissed in 1978 because of his radical tactics. Similarly, the Browns formed ALL to raise the level of direct action in their protests.

Bolstered by the conservative political climate of the 1980s, ALL and PLAL chapters, and other like-minded groups, sprung up around the country. Clinic violence and anti-abortion picketing were regular features on the news by the early 1980s. In January 1982, the Hope Clinic for Women in Granite City, Illinois, was gutted by fire. Four months later, the anti-abortion activist Don Benny Anderson set fire to two clinics in Florida. That August, Anderson and Matthew and Wayne Moore, who are brothers, kidnapped Dr. Hector Zevallos, of the Hope Clinic for Women, and held him, along with his wife, for eight days. During that time, Zevallos was ordered to make an anti-abortion tape to be sent to President Ronald Reagan in support of anti-Roe legislation. The kidnapping was the first of its kind and it was the debut action of the Army of God, a group that, by the end of the 1990s, would become one of the most feared in the country.

While clinic staffs were terrorized by the threat of more kidnappings, anti-abortion activists continued to disrupt clinics in increasingly creative ways. Activists cut the hoses to abortion equipment in Toledo, Ohio, placed nails in parking lots in Ft. Lauderdale, Florida, called in bomb scares in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and successfully firebombed clinics in Washington, Maryland, and Florida. In 1984, activists twice bombed The Ladies Center, one of two abortion clinics in Pensacola, Florida, as part of a well-coordinated attack that included two private physician's offices. Despite the escalating violence, in December 1984, FBI Director William H. Webster claimed that clinic bombings did not conform to the federal definition of terrorism and were therefore not a federal priority.

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