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Opinion

Commentary: Justice prevailed in Scott Roeder case

The Wichita Eagle

April 02, 2010 02:15 PM

Good people on either side of the abortion debate should be able to agree that Scott Roeder wasn't serving God when he murdered George Tiller last May, but rather playing God.

That's why a jury swiftly convicted Roeder of first-degree murder and other charges in January, and why Sedgwick County District Judge Warren Wilbert gave him the harshest sentence available Thursday — a Hard 50, meaning 52 years before he has a chance of parole.

Because the Kansas City, Mo., man objected to Tiller's medical practice and the law's view of abortion, a Wichita church's Sunday-morning service was interrupted by an act of appalling violence and a Wichita family was robbed of a husband, father and grandfather.

Roeder, who had stalked Tiller and carefully planned how to kill him, has compounded the offense in the months since May by showing no regret or remorse — none — for his crimes. Even the defense stipulated to that Thursday, serving prosecutors' assertions that Roeder would kill again if he had the chance.

Despite Roeder's best efforts, including the self-righteous sermon he delivered before his sentencing Thursday, the killer ultimately did not succeed in making his trial all about his extremist opposition to abortion, or in turning Tiller into the defendant as well as the victim.

To read the complete editorial, visit The Wichita Eagle.

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