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Wants out so he can join in the tea party fun...
Scott Roeder files petition claiming that his rights have been violated
By JUDY L. THOMAS The Kansas City Star The man who killed Wichita abortion doctor George Tiller has filed a petition complaining that his rights have been violated and asking to be released from custody. Scott Roeder, 52, of Kansas City, criticized the judge, the jail, prosecutors and his lawyers in a habeas corpus petition that he filed in Sedgwick County, Kan. A hearing is scheduled for June 4. Such a petition requires a judge to determine whether a person has been imprisoned lawfully and whether he should be freed. Roeder was convicted of first-degree murder in January and sentenced April 1 to life in prison with no chance of parole for 50 years. That case is under appeal. In the 24-page petition — seven of the pages handwritten — Roeder said that the judge’s imposition of a $20 million bond “along with a suggestion that I might enact ‘more’ violence if I make bond demonstrates heightened disregard for the presumption of my innocence.” He also said that after his arrest, the judge “made a public spectacle of me, forcing me to appear on television without the assistance of counsel or court clothes …” Roeder complained that the names and addresses of his visitors and correspondents had been made public by the jail “and that some of these have been subjected to questioning by the police power as a consequence.” In another claim, Roeder said that prosecutors had “made libelous allegations against me.” For example, he said, Sedgwick County District Attorney Nola Foulston told the judge that a reasonable person would believe that he had engaged in “alleged acts of American terrorism.” Roeder argued that he should be released because his attorneys “disparaged me in public behind my back” and deprived him of a fair trial. Roeder also complained that he wasn’t allowed to use a necessity defense, arguing that killing Tiller was justified because he was saving the lives of unborn babies. “I would have been acquitted had counsel been allowed to pursue a necessity defense,” he said. Roeder’s court-appointed attorney, Michael Brown, could not be reached for comment. His attorneys in the murder case did not respond. Georgia Cole, a spokeswoman for the Sedgwick County district attorney’s office, declined to comment. Lee Thompson, an attorney for the Tiller family, said he hadn’t seen the petition and didn’t care to. “I’m not going to waste my time,” he said. “It’s just a rehashing of arguments he’s made before.” (Maybe Sarah Palin will pray for him...) -- The Tea Party's teabaggers are just the Republican base by another name. |
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