Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

» Abortion clinic threats:

Vandalism also rises after undercover videos

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Threats and violence directed at U.S. abortion clinics rise sharply in 2015, according to the National Abortion Federation.

New York — Threats and violence directed at U.S. abortion clinics increased sharply in 2015, according to the National Abortion Federation, which attributed the surge to the release of undercover videos intended to discredit Planned Parenthood.

“In my more than 20 years with NAF, I have not seen such an escalation of hate speech, threats and calls to action against abortion providers,” said Vicki Saporta, the federation’s CEO.

According to the federation, death threats targeting abortion providers increased from one in 2014 to 94 in 2015, while incidents of vandalism at clinics rose from 12 to 67.

The most violent occurred in November, when a gunman opened fire at a Planned Parenthood abortion clinic in Colorado Springs, Colo., killing three people and wounding nine. The man accused in the attack, Robert Dear, has described himself as a “warrior for the babies.”

Saporta said the level of threats and violence rose sharply after an antiaborti­on group called the Center for Medical Progress began releasing secretly recorded videos in July alleging that Planned Parenthood sold fetal tissue to researcher­s for a profit in violation of federal law. Planned Parenthood denied wrongdoing, and investigat­ions by several congressio­nal panels and states have produced no evidence that it acted illegally.

The increase in threats “correlates to the release of inflammato­ry videos aimed at demonizing providers,” Saporta said.

On Tuesday, agents from the California attorney general’s office searched the apartment of David Daleiden, the anti-abortion activist whose controvers­ial hidden camera videos last summer accused Planned Parenthood­doctorsofs­ellingfeta­ltissue.

The search was announced by Daleiden’s Center for Medical Progress, which posted a protest on its Facebook page. The organizati­on said officers seized video files from Daleiden’s apartment as well as personal informatio­n. In the post, Daleiden said his “First Amendment work product” was taken, a reference to his claim that he and his work are protected as an “undercover journalist.”

The abortion federation — alarmed by the heightened hostility — has for the first time hired an outside security firm to track online threats. Saporta said the firm began its work in mid-November and in a six-week span identified more than 25,000 incidents of hate speech and threats.

The federation report cited an online post by a man urging abortion opponents to set fire to abortion clinics. Within three months of the post, clinics and health centers in Washington state, Louisiana, California, Illinois andNewHamp­shireweret­argetedby arson or vandalism, the report said.

Saporta said the federation has stepped up its efforts to help clinics tighten their security — sending out experts who conduct security assessment­s and train clinic staff on how to deal with threats. “How you hire employees, how you admit patients into waiting rooms — there is so much involved in making sure clinics have the best protocols,” Saporta said.

For some clinics, she said, security upgrades have been a financial burden. “When you get into sophistica­ted security cameras and bulletproo­f glass, the costs can be quite high,” she said.

The Los Angeles Times contribute­d to this report.

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