By 1990 Operation Rescue was down to a core of “professional rescuers” living off of free food and lodging provided by other anti-abortion activists. After
President Bill Clinton signed the
Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act into law in 1994, blockading clinics became prohibitively expensive, and civil suits could be filed against harassers. and culminated in a rally that filled
Cessna Stadium, featuring
televangelist / politician
Pat Robertson. While the protest lasted the summer, the impact on Wichita and Kansas politics continues. Despite the large numbers of arrests, Operation Rescue founder Randall Terry was quoted as saying "The Wichita Police handled the Operation Rescue event better than almost any police department in history." As a result, Wichita Police Chief Rick Stone received the
United States Department of Justice Marshal's Service "Law Enforcement Officer of the Year Award" for his "outstanding professionalism and law enforcement leadership".
1992 Spring of Life ORN made an attempt at a similar success in 1992 when
Buffalo mayor
Jimmy Griffin invited ORN for the so-called "Spring of Life." The event became ORN's biggest public relations coup, when thousands of out-of-area protestors on both sides of the argument descended on Buffalo and
Amherst. The crisis and financial hardship that the city endured because of the incidents was believed to have brought down the Griffin administration later that year.
1993 Leadership change Keith Tucci departed as director of Operation Rescue National in late 1993 turning the organization over to Rev.
Flip Benham in
Dallas, Texas and the work of Operation Rescue International over to Pat McEwen based in
Melbourne, Florida. Benham soon began using the name Operation Rescue/Operation Save America, while McEwen changed the name of her organization to Life Coalition International. Both LCI and OSA remain active.
Name dispute and name change In 1999, Operation Rescue West changed hands when Jeff White stepped down from his position as its director and transferred his leadership of it to Troy Newman. Newman moved ORW from California to Kansas, and dropped the word
West from the group's name, simply renaming the organization Operation Rescue. After a dispute over the use of the name Operation Rescue broke out between Flip Benham and Troy Newman, and after Benham was named in a lawsuit, Flip Benham changed the name of his
North Carolina group Operation Rescue National to
Operation Save America. The former Operation Rescue West retained the name of Operation Rescue. The Kansas group is also referred to as Operation Rescue Kansas (ORK). In 2006, after the
Internal Revenue Service completed an investigation of the nonprofit for
electioneering which it launched in 2004, Operation Rescue West's
tax exemption status was revoked. The group reopened under the name Operation Rescue. ==References==