I met Paul Hill about a week after Doctor David Gunn was killed in Pensacola, Florida. We were about to take the stage of The Donohue Show and we were munching vegetables in the “green room.” I introduced myself, not knowing who he was, but we didn’t have time to talk. Minutes later, he was telling a national television audience that it was “justifiable homicide” to kill a doctor who performed abortions. Three other pro-choice spokespeople were on the stage with us and I sat next to Paul.
When he started talking, I thought the audience was going to lynch him. No one had ever heard this kind of talk. More interestingly, it was coming from a pleasant looking man with a sheepish grin, not your typical rabble-rousing, screaming zealot. He seemed like an Iowa farm boy who had gotten lost in the Big Apple. During the commercial breaks, I chatted with him a bit as I was always interested in knowing how “the other side” thinks.
Over the next few months, I would see Paul at various pro-life demonstrations. As a staff person for the National Coalition of Abortion Providers, I would go to the events to lend support to the clinics that we represented. If I saw Paul outside, I would simply walk through the hundreds of protestors and go up to him, shake his hand, ask how the kids were. If we had time, we would sit and chat about his views. He would ask me lots of questions about how abortions were performed and the women who sought them.
At one point, at a demonstration in Birmingham, Alabama, I asked him if he thought it was okay to kill a doctor, then why hadn’t he done it himself? “You know, Pat, that’s a good question and a lot of people ask me the same thing,” he said. “But I feel I can do more as a leader of this movement than a doer.” He then told me how many of his colleagues in the pro-life movement had been harassing him about his theory, almost calling his bluff. Indeed, during the same rally, a leader of the anti-abortion group, Operation Rescue, asked me if I would give him any “intelligence” on Hill because they were concerned that he might kill a doctor. Talk about a bizarre situation.
In March, 1994, NCAP held an open air rally at the site of Doctor Gunn’s murder to commemorate the one year anniversary of that horrible event. About 100 abortion doctors and staff attended the ceremony. Paul Hill was the only protestor there. There were a few security guards circulating around, but they really didn’t offer much protection to us. Throughout the ceremony, Hill just walked around the edge of the group with a large sign, but he was very quiet.
Later that year, Paul Hill killed Doctor Britton in Pensacola. I never thought he could pull the trigger, but I was wrong. He was quickly convicted and sentenced to die.
A few months later, filled with some liquid courage, I called Paul at his jail. It was just a spur of the moment thing. The receptionist told me he couldn’t accept calls, so I left a message. The next morning, I was at my desk in the office when the phone rang and our receptionist buzzed me. “Pat, it’s Paul Hill.” I almost lost my lunch.
“Hello, Paul.”
“Hello, Pat, how are you?”
“Well, I guess I’m better than you, Paul.” I hesitated, then decided to just jump in. “Paul, why the hell did you kill Doctor Britton? What did you think you would accomplish?”
“Well, Pat, I thought it was time to send a signal to others to take up the cause.” I felt like I was having an out of body experience, talking to a guy on death row.
“Okay, Paul, but here’s what I don’t understand. When we had our open air event in Pensacola and you were walking around, there were about 100 abortion providers there with no protection, we were all sitting ducks. Why didn’t you just wipe us all out at that point?”
“Well, Pat, don’t think I didn’t think about it but, honestly, I ultimately decided that I didn’t want to disrupt your event. You always were respectful of my opinions, so….”
I didn’t hear the rest of what he said. My mind just could not register his words. Then, I ultimately heard him invite me to his execution. My head started spinning again, but through my haze I told him that I didn’t support capital punishment so I had to decline his invitation. A few months later, Paul Hill left this world, leaving his wife and two children behind.

June 2, 2010 at 12:50 pm
As i always do, i read the entire post in order to be able to comment. I was in tears at the end!
Honestly as i always say i am on a fence when talking about abortion, it is a very difficult decision for a woman to have, not for all of them, but i believe that for those who really have no option or think not to have an option, it might be a decision made out of despair.
But does the pro-life people really needs to come to this extreme???
Let’s have a moment and think about it, a fetus, that will never know what is to be a person, doesn’t have feeling or either feel pain (before 12 weeks as the scientists says) is “killed” which is not really the case, but let’s use the pro life words, so a pro-life person (ignorant) kills a doctor who does practice abortion, this doctor most likely has family, wife and kids and maybe sometimes even grandkids, so this doctor is killed, the killer (like Paul Hill) goes to prison on the death roll, living behind wife and kids…
2 families destroyed for people who really didn’t have to die…
The doctor didn’t enter medical school hoping to become a abortion doctor who will enter history because was killed by a insane pro-life guy and on the other hand Paul Hill (or any other) who had his troubles when a teenager as most of them has it, got his way back, become a priest and later a fool!
So my question is, what is the matter with all this people??? YEAH i understand that pro-lifers do not like the doctors who practice abortion or whatever, but to KILL!!!!!! COME ON……. 2 families that the kids will grow without their father for nothing!!!!
The doctor who practices abortion do not goes door to door to request a woman to get pregnant and to come to his clinic to have an abortion, they would survive very well with the money they get for only practicing OB/GYN, believe me i worked with doctors before…. If pro-lifers wants to make them selfs to be heard, OK go ahead and make protests… Yell to the world you do not agree with abortion but killing is a bit too much don’t you think!?
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June 2, 2010 at 2:56 pm
Thanks, Sonia, as always. In many ways, I really believe Paul Hill was “pressured” into finally killing a doctor. He came out of nowhere, the pro-life leaders did not know who he was until he was on The Donohue Show. Then, after that show, he was everywhere. Then, he started his own organization so he started competing with his colleagues for money and attention. Then they started to call his bluff, push him about his theory about how it’s okay to kill a doctor. The last time I spoke to him, I asked about his wife and kids and he said “they will be taken care of.”
Who knows what was in his mind, what finally compelled him to kill Doctor Britton in the face? And he didn’t run, he just slowly walked away from the scene, knowing he would be caught right away. Maybe his life was miserable and this was his “escape?”
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June 2, 2010 at 5:47 pm
Pat, your post is absolutely magnificent.
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June 2, 2010 at 6:21 pm
What a guy! He chose aborticentrism over care for his own children, just like Gianna Baretta Molina, the Catholic Church’s patron saint of aborticentrism.
There are those who say he will come again. . .
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June 3, 2010 at 8:44 am
thanks for the kind words, John. And, yes, CG, he chose the cause over his kids. But who the hell knows what was going on inside his head? He might have been absolutely miserable with his life and felt this was the easy way out. In restrospect, however, I do remember him asking about my kids and, when I would ask him about his family,he wouldn’t say much.
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June 3, 2010 at 10:19 am
Aborticentrism explains how he needed to be a hero, but rather than invest scant energy into making something of himself and really helping humans, he utilized what little talent he had in trying to organize others to do his bidding–doesn’t Michael Griffin blame Hill for his fix?– and when that failed he went the 4-cent route– a bullet.
Hill’s case shows just to what extreme so-called “pro-lifers” go in their dysfunctional approach to their fear of death.
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June 5, 2010 at 8:12 am
Abortion is a legal procedure.
If one does not beleive in Abortion, then they vote with their ballot,
they should note “vote” Away Abortion with their gun.
Your story is incredible.
Do anti abortion people still think it is OK to break the law and murder a doctor who performs abortion?
Are there anti abortion people commenting on your blog that think it is OK to murder an Abortion Doctor.
The murderer in your above story said that his family will be taken care of. Did he make any arrangements to take care of the family of the abortion doctor he murdered?
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June 5, 2010 at 2:12 pm
I dont think you can take a broad brush and say that anti-abortion people think it’s okay to kill a doctor, as Todd’s question implies. I have found that the vast majority of pro-life people are well intentioned. Where I start to lose some respect for them is when they decide to harasss, stalk, threaten workers at the clinics (who are also well intentioned). These folks can be so kind and compassionate when it comes to the baby in utero, but can be so viscious when it comes to real live people. It just does not seem to be the Christian thing to do as far as I’m concerned.
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June 6, 2010 at 10:17 am
Abortion Doctors being murdered by all anti abortion people was not a meant meaning as you mention above.
Although there is a fringe that do beleive this as your posts explain about their abortion beleif system.
We have freedom of Speach, however even the original framers of law recognized that has some constraints as well.
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June 5, 2010 at 6:03 pm
The “vast majority of [so-called] pro-life people” might be well-intentioned, Pat, but the ghastly disconnect between their profession of devotion to the fetus, their fantastical descriptions of it, their disregard for the born human child and their fear and hatred of abortion does subject them all to one “broad-brush” characterization– that they are acting out in an illogical response to an inner compulsion. In other words, they all focus on abortion because of some other fear they have that they dare not acknowledge, but nevertheless are compelled to oppose.
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June 6, 2010 at 9:09 am
Not sure if I totally agree, CG, with your suggestion that they “disregard” the born human child. I know where you’re going with it, that they don’t adopt, etc., but I believe John Dunkle has a child or two. I’d like to think he has not “dis-regarded” them….
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June 6, 2010 at 1:16 pm
Pat’s right, absolutely. As I tell the pregnant ladies approaching the mill, “If you’ll let her live for six short months, you’ll fall in love.” It happened to me five times — three times it was a “him.”
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June 6, 2010 at 3:42 pm
Oh, they don’t disregard their own offspring any more than other parents, Pat– I am sure if John Dunkle has children, he has displayed the usual amount of concern for their welfare.
But how many of those five other children has he helped to do homework?
The so-called “pro-lifer’s” situation is win-win. If any of John Dunkle’s five claimed victories do well in life, he gets the credit, but if they wind up on Skid Row, it was part of God’s inscrutable plan. In either case, all he had to do to earn points in the “pro-life” game was to exert some pretty basic public relations skills.
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June 6, 2010 at 5:45 pm
Abortion will always remain legal
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June 6, 2010 at 7:51 pm
Only for those who are rich enough to afford it under any circumstances, Reandra. You probably weren’t around in the bad old days before Roe v. Wade. That was when there were exclusively female flights to Europe for women who sought an abortion, and when senators from the Midwest could afford to arrange an abortion in Ashland, PA for their girl friend. . .
Right now the Oklahoma legislature is doing what it can to make it illegal again. Don’t let your guard down.
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June 7, 2010 at 3:37 pm
I agree with CG, Reandra, we cannot let our guard down. At this point, the votes on the Supreme court in favor of legal abortion are 6-4 in favor, but it’s a tenuous vote. The Court will clearly continue to cut back on access to abortion in the coming years.
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June 7, 2010 at 3:56 pm
John, re comment #11, the problem is that not every parent “falls in love” with their kid, as you know. And you’ve got FIVEj’verboelm is
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June 7, 2010 at 3:57 pm
oops, i was about to say….”and you’ve got FIVE’ kids??” Holy cow!
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June 7, 2010 at 4:54 pm
Pat, I believe John is referring to the number of women he deflected from having an abortion, not the number of his own children.
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June 7, 2010 at 6:18 pm
No, I am referring to my biological children. Yeah, Pat, I had five, and I should have had seven. My firstborn, my pride and joy, my great love, has eight, six girls.
I might have deflected one, in forty years of trying, but even so, that’s a life worth living. No?
And you’re right, not every parent falls in love. But our rights shouldn’t depend on how others feel about us. Otherwise, I’d a been dead a long time ago.
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June 8, 2010 at 7:29 am
Thanks, John. This might be a little personal but how do your kids react to your anti-abortion activity? Bill Baird, one of the pioneers of the birth control movement, recently told me that all of his kids are pro-life!!!
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