All a diversion
Family/Pro-life
Kansas ethics panel recommends Planned Parenthood prosecutor Phill Kline lose his law license, continuing effort to discredit criminal charges against the abortion giant
Former Kansas attorney general Phill Kline, now a visiting professor of law at Liberty University, is not surprised that a three-member state ethics panel recommended two weeks ago that his Kansas law license be suspended indefinitely. He spent six years investigating Planned Parenthood and late-term abortionist George Tiller but a hostile legal establishment stonewalled his every move and then charged him with misconduct ("Vengeance on the prairie," May 21).
The panel members "were doing what they were appointed to do," he told me. "What does surprise me is that they were so willing to ignore law and fact."
The report from the Board of Discipline of Attorneys said Kline repeatedly deceived officials in the course of his investigation and even tried to mislead the ethics panel itself. The Kansas Supreme Court will now decide whether to suspend Kline's law license. The court, which appointed the panelists and the prosecutor, has publicly criticized Kline in past judgments. Critics say it also twice deliberately stalled prosecutions of Kansas abortionists until Kline had lost office.
Kline denies doing anything wrong: "I upheld the integrity of my profession and the law, and I'd do it again." Two earlier probes found he had violated no ethical rules.
Kline's law license in Kansas is currently inactive and he does not plan to return to the state to practice law. Still, if his Kansas license is suspended, he said, it will be very difficult to be licensed in other states. "It'll have a dramatic impact on my life," he said. He can be contacted here.
The panel, he said, is an attempt to discredit the 107 criminal charges he filed in 2007 that Planned Parenthood manufactured client records and broke various abortion laws. Those charges are still pending; an Oct. 24 trial is set for a Johnson County, Kan., courtroom.
At stake, potentially, is Planned Parenthood's $290 million in federal funding, which government regulations suggest should be stripped if the organization is convicted of a crime. "It's all a diversion," Kline said. "[The ethics hearing] was the only way to get out the story that the abortion clinics were doing nothing illegal."