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<text id=93TT1219>
<title>
Mar. 22, 1993: Thou Shalt Not Kill
</title>
<history>
TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
Mar. 22, 1993 Can Animals Think
</history>
<article>
<source>Time Magazine</source>
<hdr>
CRIME, Page 44
Thou Shalt Not Kill
</hdr>
<body>
<p>With three pops of a handgun, two men who did not seem destined
to co-star in a national morality play suddenly became fused
in violence
</p>
<p>By PAUL GRAY--With reporting by Cathy Booth/Pensacola, J.
Madeleine Nash/Chicago and Lisa Towle/Montgomery
</p>
<p> On what was to be his last morning, Dr. David Gunn, 47,
woke up in a good mood. "He was happier than I'd seen him in a
long time," says Paula Leonard, his girlfriend, in whose
apartment he stayed when he came to Pensacola. He did so
regularly, another stop on his 1,000-mile, six-day-a-week
schedule of performing abortions at seven clinics in Florida,
Georgia and Alabama. Gunn had reason to feel depressed: in the
middle of an acrimonious divorce, he virtually lived out of his
white Buick Skylark and encountered antiabortion protests and
threats nearly everywhere he practiced. Paula remembers
marveling at his high spirits as he set off with a limp--the
trace of his childhood polio--last Wednesday at about 9:10.
He drove to the Pensacola Women's Medical Services in Cordova
Square, a suburban shopping center tending toward dress stores,
doctors' offices, delis and weight-loss clinics.
</p>
<p> Michael Griffin, 31, had not awakened that morning at all--he had just come off a 12-hr. shift at the local Monsanto
chemical plant--but he too seemed in high spirits. He arrived
at the same complex that morning to pay a neurology bill for the
treatment of his older daughter's headaches. "He was just
fine," says receptionist Dee Slack, who told him that that day
was her 34th birthday. "We joked because I had forgotten, not
my birthday, but the date of it." Griffin then picked up a drink
at the Circle K and walked toward the site of a planned pro-life
demonstration in front of the clinic where David Gunn was
expected. The night before, Griffin had called John Burt,
regional director of Rescue America, an activist antiabortion
group, to say he would take part.
</p>
<p> He never joined the people gathering in front of the
clinic. Instead, he made his way to a small parking lot behind
the building. After Gunn drove up, parked and walked slowly away
from his car, Griffin shot him three times in the back with a .38-cal. pistol. He then dropped his weapon, approached a police
officer and said, "I just shot someone, and he's laying behind
the building." Gunn died roughly two hours later.
</p>
<p> With these three pops of a handgun, a new chapter ripped
open in America's excruciating abortion saga. A complex
conflict involving totems, taboos, theology, medicine, politics
and judicial rulings had suddenly dropped to the level of a
shoot-out. At the center were two hardworking fathers with firm
convictions that they willingly put into practice. Both had
experienced marital problems; both gave generously of their
scarce free time to volunteer work. What separated them--what
kept them apart until it fused them in violence--was a
profound disagreement, a glitch in the moral geography that
permits parallel lives not only to meet but to explode.
</p>
<p> Neither man seemed destined or even inclined to star in a
national morality play. Gunn grew up in Benton (pop. 3,800),
Kentucky, where his family was active in the Church of Christ.
Old classmates remember him as funny, convivial, not at all
self-pitying about the brace on his withered right leg, and
smart. Beverly Beasley, now an insurance agent in Benton, says,
"I remember once when we were in the fifth grade, the history
teacher started talking about the Constitution. David stood up
and said he could recite the Bill of Rights from memory, and he
proceeded to do it verbatim."
</p>
<p> No friend can recall Gunn's wanting to be a doctor from
childhood, but that was what he became. For a while he practiced
obstetrics, until malpractice premiums rose so high that he was
forced to restrict his work to gynecology. And that was when the
folks in Benton began to lose touch with what he was doing. Last
week the members of his family--including his parents, his
older brother Peter, his twin sister Diane and younger sister
Lilith--heard that he had been killed and learned for the
first time that he had made his living performing abortions. "We
were totally unaware," says Peter, "that he was involved in such
a volatile issue."
</p>
<p> Was this reticence a matter of residual shame--retained
from his religious childhood--or considerate tact? People who
were close to Gunn are sure they know the answer. Says Vanessa
Caldwell, his assistant at the Montgomery (Alabama) Women's
Medical Clinic: "He was a very open, honest man. I think that's
why it bothered him that his family didn't know the kind of work
he did, exactly. He knew it would hurt them if they found out."
</p>
<p> But Gunn's work was no secret in the circuit he traveled--a pine-forested area radiating north, east and west from the
Florida panhandle--and it made him both notorious and
revered. Antiabortion groups harassed him, listing his
itinerary, phone numbers and addresses and issuing WANTED
posters bearing his name or photograph or both. One of them
concluded, "To defenseless unborn babies, Gunn is heavily armed
and very dangerous."
</p>
<p> The women he treated and worked with saw a different
figure. Says Linda Taggart, director of the Ladies Center,
another Pensacola clinic where Gunn worked: "In recent years,
there haven't been enough doctors. But he was never too busy for
the women. He was a very sweet, caring man, who was very much
devoted to seeing that women kept all their rights." When he
finished his clinic work in Pensacola, Gunn would drop in on the
Slim Concept Weight Control center and give free counseling on
diets and fitness. Says Paula Leonard: "All he wanted was to
help women. He wanted women to have a choice, and he died for
it."
</p>
<p> She says she and Gunn had been tailed "for months" by a
blue van that then parked on her street when they were home.
Two weeks before Gunn's murder, she had moved; her address had
begun appearing in pro-life pamphlets. "I told the police this
was going to happen," she said, shivering in the cold during a
candlelight vigil outside the Ladies Center. "Last Friday when
I was leaving work, that man was beating on my car window and
wouldn't let me go. They were stalking us, the antiabortionists,
but the police wouldn't believe me."
</p>
<p> The man who did the shooting seemed equally ill-suited for
his performance. Born and raised in Pensacola, Michael Griffin
graduated from high school and enlisted in the Navy without
anyone thinking he was anything but well-spoken and quiet. After
serving five years as an electrician, he returned home and later
married Patricia Ann Presley on June 10, 1981, in Brewton,
Alabama. (A few years earlier, David Gunn had worked in the
local hospital there, delivering babies.) The Griffins had two
daughters and moved back to Pensacola in 1987; he got a job as
a chemical operator on a polymer-casting line with Monsanto in
1990 and at the time of his arrest was earning slightly more
than $30,000 annually.
</p>
<p> In 1991 his wife filed for divorce, charging in court
documents that her husband was "verbally and emotionally abusive
to both our minor daughters and myself." A year later the suit
was withdrawn, and the couple reconciled. For a time the
Griffins kept their children out of school and educated them at
home, although both enrolled in a private academy last
September. Griffin had no known private or public involvement
with Pensacola's strident antiabortion factions until a month
or so before he murdered Gunn.
</p>
<p> During that time, though, he had drawn close to John Burt
of Rescue America and Burt's wife Linda, who, with her husband,
runs a halfway house just outside Pensacola for unwed mothers,
called Our Father's House. Griffin volunteered to do work
around the place, fixing a leaky faucet, repairing a doorjamb,
installing a security system. He was gentle with the babies of
visitors and told the Burts of his hope that his wife could have
her tubal ligature undone so that they could have more
children. He also, according to Linda, complained about his long
shifts at work: "He said he'd had 12 hours of sleep in the past
three days." That was on the Sunday preceding the fatal
Wednesday.
</p>
<p> That morning he went to church with the Burts at the
Whitfield Assembly of God in nearby Berrydale. During the
service, Griffin offered a prayer. "He just offered his hope
that David Gunn would meet Jesus Christ and stop killing
babies," recalls Burt.
</p>
<p> It was a weekly ritual that Andy Watson and David Gunn had
cherished for 11 years. Every Sunday, Gunn's one day off, he and
Watson would head to Alabama's Lake Eufaula and spend anywhere
from two to six hours in a boat, sometimes swapping stories,
sometimes in companionable silence. Six years ago, Gunn and
Watson entered a local bass tournament and, thanks to the eight
bass they caught, beat a field of 333 other anglers for the
$10,200 prize. Watson, 72, recalls with delight how he and Gunn
"got right down on my living room floor, counted the cash and
split it fifty-fifty." The pair was looking forward to another
tournament, the first of the season, and had already paid the
$100 entrance fee. It was to be last Sunday.
</p>
</body>
</article>
</text>