BY RON SYLVESTER
The Wichita Eagle
Sebelius statement on the Tiller case
Foulston's statement
Audio: Tiller's lawyer talks about the charges
A misdemeanor case against Wichita-based abortion provider George Tiller was dropped today at the request of Sedgwick County District Attorney Nola Foulston, who said Kansas Attorney General Phill Kline overstepped his bounds.
Judge Paul Clark granted Foulston's request to drop 30 charges filed Thursday by Kline, a vocal abortion opponent.
Foulston said that although the attorney general is the chief law enforcement officer in the state, he cannot pursue charges in a particular county without being invited by the local prosecutor to do so, or been given authority by the governor.
"The statutes and case law are clear," Foulston said in a statement released by her office this afternoon.
Foulston said she'd received no word from Gov. Kathleen Sebelius allowing Kline to file charges in Sedgwick County District Court. Foulston said she'd not given him permission.
"The district attorney has not invited or requested, consented or acquiesced, or failed to object to the filing of the complaint," Foulston's office. "The district attorney does in fact object to any such filing by the Attorney General as he lacks the legal authority to file such complaint in this jurisdiction."
Sebelius didn't give Kline authority to file the charges, said Nicole Corcoran, the governor's spokeswoman.
"I can tell you with absolute certainty the governorner did not," Corcoran said.
"This is a basic rule governing the office of the Attorney General, and it's rather surpirsing he doesn't know that," she said.
This morning's Tiller's lawyers said they expected the charges to be dropped at some point and sharply critized Kline for his actions.
"The filing of criminal charges by Phill Kline is the last gasp of a defeated and discredited politician," Lee Thompson said this morning at his law office in Wichita. "Rather than exercising his duty as a prosecutor to see that justice is done, he has chosen to engage in a malicious and spiteful prosecution on the eve of Christmas."
Tiller found a summons to appear in court on the door of his home this morning.
Allegations included that Tiller has not properly reported information to the Kansas Department of Health and Environment.
"We also intend to explore any and all means of holding Kline personally responsible for his malicious actions," Dan Monnat, who also represents Tiller.
Officials in Kline's office have not returned calls and e-mails from The Eagle seeking comment. Kline is expected to hold a press conference in Topeka this afternoon.
Kline has less than three weeks as attorney general. He was defeated in the Nov. 7 general election by Paul Morrison, the Johnson County district attorney who switched parties to take him on as a Democrat. Abortion was the biggest issue in Kline's campaign. After Jan. 8, Kline will replace Morrison as Johnson County district attorney.
Over the years, Kline has investigated whether Tiller and other abortion providers have performed illegal late-term abortions and have failed to report suspected child abuse as required by law. Tiller's clinic is the site of daily protests. He has also be the target of violence: His clinic was bombed in 1985 and he was shot by a protester in 1993.
A few weeks ago -- after a two-year legal battle -- Kline obtained the records of 90 patients from Tiller's clinic and from a clinic in Overland Park operated by Planned Parenthood of Kansas and Mid-Missouri.
http://www.kansas.com/mld/kansas/16300030.htm