Tiller was fatally shot in the side of the head on May 31, 2009, by anti-abortion extremist
Scott Roeder during worship services at the Reformation Lutheran Church in Wichita, where he was serving as an usher and handing out church bulletins. After threatening to shoot two people who initially pursued him, Roeder fled and escaped in his car. Three hours after the shooting, Roeder was arrested about away in
suburban Kansas City.
Cheryl Sullenger, at the time vice president of the anti-abortion organization
Operation Rescue West, was in prolonged communication with Roeder before he assassinated Tiller. Sullenger initially denied any contact with Roeder. After her name and cell phone number was discovered on a post-it note on the dashboard of Roeder's car, she subsequently admitted that she had informed Roeder of Tiller's scheduled court dates. On June 2, 2009, Roeder was charged with
first-degree murder and two counts of
aggravated assault in connection with the shooting, subsequently convicted in January 2010 on those charges, and sentenced on April 1, 2010, to life imprisonment without parole for 50 years, the maximum sentence available in Kansas. The no-parole term was later reduced to 25 years. Tiller's killing was largely condemned by groups and individuals on both sides of the abortion issue. US President
Barack Obama said he was "shocked and outraged" by the murder. David N. O'Steen, director of the
National Right to Life Committee, said the group "unequivocally condemns any such acts of violence regardless of motivation". and
Southern Baptist minister and radio host
Wiley Drake said, "I am glad that he is dead." After the shooting, Tiller's colleague,
Leroy Carhart of Nebraska, stated that Tiller's clinic, Women's Health Care Services, would reopen after being closed for one week to mourn his death. The following week, Tiller's family announced that the clinic would be closed permanently. The aftermath of Tiller's assassination was the subject of the 2013 documentary
After Tiller, which followed the daily lives and work of the four remaining late-term abortion providers in the United States. The George Tiller Memorial Abortion Fund was established by the
National Network of Abortion Funds. In 2019, during the successful 23–14 vote confirmation of
David Toland as Kansas Secretary of Commerce, objections were raised to his nomination because he had led the Thrive
Allen County non-profit, which had obtained $20,000 in grants from the Fund in 2015 and 2018, to help low-income pregnant women to stop smoking and to help prevent their unintended pregnancies. State Senators
Rob Olson and
Mary Pilcher-Cook, joined 12 other Republican senators, and community opponents including
Mary Kay Culp, leader of
Kansans for Life, to oppose his nomination. Trust Women Foundation, a 501(c)(3) charitable organization, purchased and re-opened the clinic that Tiller operated and continues to perform abortions and other medical services. The foundation currently operates two clinics, the aforementioned in Wichita, KS, as well as one in Oklahoma City, OK. The organization also operated a third clinic in Seattle, WA until it was closed on December 31, 2019. ==See also==