Jump to content

Randall Terry: Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 36: Line 36:
| footnotes =
| footnotes =
}}
}}
'''Randall A. Terry''' is an [[United States|American]] political and conservative religious [[activism|activist]] and musician. He founded the [[pro-life]] organization [[Operation Rescue/Operation Save America|Operation Rescue]] in 1987 and led the group for its first 10 years. He has been arrested more than 40 times for his anti-abortion activities. In 2003, he founded the [[Society for Truth and Justice]] and he conducted a program called Operation Witness. Terry was the spokesman for the Schindler family in the [[Terri Schiavo]] case. He was an unsuccessful [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] candidate for the [[Florida State Senate]], eighth district in 2006. In 2009, Randall Terry once again is on the radio as a talk show host with a program entitled "Randall Terry Live" heard on several radio stations and on the internet at [http://www.Randallterrylive.com].
'''Randall A. Terry''' is an [[United States|American]] political and conservative religious [[activism|activist]] and musician. He founded the [[pro-life]] organization [[Operation Rescue/Operation Save America|Operation Rescue]] in 1987 and led the group for its first 10 years. He has been arrested more than 40 times for his anti-abortion activities. In 2003, he founded the [[Society for Truth and Justice]] and he conducted a program called Operation Witness. Terry was the spokesman for the Schindler family in the [[Terri Schiavo]] case. He was an unsuccessful [[Republican Party (United States)|Republican]] candidate for the [[Florida State Senate]], eighth district in 2006. In 2009, Randall Terry once again is on the radio as a talk show host with a program entitled "Randall Terry Live" heard on several radio stations and on the internet at http://www.RandallTerryLive.com.


==Pro-life activist==
==Pro-life activist==

Revision as of 22:02, 17 March 2009

Randall Terry
Born
Randall A Terry

1959 (1959)
Occupation(s)Pro-life activist, author, musician
Known forFounding Operation Rescue
Political partyRepublican
Spouse(s)Cindy Dean (div. 2001)
Andrea Sue Kollmorgen
ChildrenEbony Whetstone
Jamiel Terry (adopted)
Tila Terry (adopted)
Faith Terry

Randall A. Terry is an American political and conservative religious activist and musician. He founded the pro-life organization Operation Rescue in 1987 and led the group for its first 10 years. He has been arrested more than 40 times for his anti-abortion activities. In 2003, he founded the Society for Truth and Justice and he conducted a program called Operation Witness. Terry was the spokesman for the Schindler family in the Terri Schiavo case. He was an unsuccessful Republican candidate for the Florida State Senate, eighth district in 2006. In 2009, Randall Terry once again is on the radio as a talk show host with a program entitled "Randall Terry Live" heard on several radio stations and on the internet at http://www.RandallTerryLive.com.

Pro-life activist

Shortly after founding Operation Rescue, Terry was first arrested in 1986 for chaining himself to a sink at an abortion clinic. Operation Rescue grew to become a well-known example of civil disobedience by the American conservative right, and Terry was often in the news because of his activities as the group's leader. By the mid-1990s, Operation Rescue was, in Terry's words, "the largest peaceful civil disobedience movement in American history,"[citation needed] accounting "for over 70,000 arrests from 1987 to 1994." [citation needed]

In 1990, Terry helped to organize protests outside the hospital where Nancy Cruzan was a patient, around the time that her feeding tube was removed. The group Missouri Citizens for Life also was involved in the protests, along with the Rev. Patrick Mahoney, and Terry's actual level of involvement is unclear.

In 1992, Terry, along with Robert Schenck and Harley David Belew, were arrested and sentenced to five months in prison for arranging to have a fetus in a jar delivered to then-presidential candidate Bill Clinton at the Democratic National Convention.

Lawsuit, NOW v. Scheidler

Terry was named as a co-defendant in the 1994 Supreme Court case, NOW v. Scheidler, a class action suit to compel anti-abortion leaders to compensate clinics for loss of business. Terry settled out of court with the National Organization for Women. He promptly filed bankruptcy, prompting Senator Charles Schumer to propose an amendment to a bankruptcy bill in Congress which would "specifically ... prevent abortion opponents from using the bankruptcy code to escape paying court fines." The amendment was not included in the final bill.

On February 28, 2006, the Supreme Court voted 8-0 for Scheidler, against NOW. [1]

Controversy in his personal affairs

In 2000, Terry divorced his wife of 19 years and married Andrea Kollmorgen, with whom he has had three children.

Both of Terry's adopted daughters became pregnant outside of marriage; one later converted to Islam. [2]

In 2004, Terry's son Jamiel, adopted at age eight, came out of the closet and wrote an article for Out Magazine[3]. Terry responded by disowning him.

In 2005, Terry joined the Catholic Church [4]

Political involvement

In 1993, Terry advocated hatred and intolerance as tools in achieving a Christian theocracy in the United States. He was quoted in the Fort Wayne Indiana News-Sentinel on August 16, 1993:

"I want you to just let a wave of intolerance wash over you. I want you to let a wave of hatred wash over you. Yes, hate is good.... Our goal is a Christian nation. We have a Biblical duty, we are called by God, to conquer this country. We don't want equal time. We don't want pluralism."

In 1998, Terry ran an unsuccessful campaign for Congress in New York as a member of the New York State Right to Life Party.

After the U.S. Supreme Court issued its 2003 ruling in Lawrence v. Texas, which struck down a Texas law against sodomy, Terry advocated for the impeachment of the six justices who voted to strike down the state law. [citation needed]

In June 2005, Terry announced plans to run in the primary against Florida Republican state senator James E. King[5], citing King's work in attempting to block legislation which would have kept Schiavo alive. On September 5 2006, Terry was defeated in the primary, with King receiving over 2/3 of the votes cast.

Terri Schiavo case

In 2003, Terry became the spokesman for Terri Schiavo's parents and was in the news as "Terri's Law" was passed in Florida. He continued as the Schindler's spokesman as the struggle rose to the level of national crisis and Schiavo's death in March 2005. [1]

Bibliography

  • Accessory To Murder: The Enemies, Allies, And Accomplices To The Death of Our Culture (1990) ISBN 0-943497-78-7
  • Why Does A Nice Guy Like Me... ...Keep Getting Thrown In Jail?: How theological escapism and cultural retreatism in the Church have led to America's demise. (1993) ISBN 1-56384-052-9
  • The Sword: The Blessing Of Righteous Government And The Overthrow Of Tyrants (1995) ISBN 1-887690-00-X

Discography

  • I Believe in You
  • Dark Sunglasses Day
  1. ^ Susman, Tina (2005-04-03). "Crusading once again: A series of setbacks forced Randall Terry out of the public eye, but the 'family values' champion has returned". Newsday. Retrieved 2007-11-03. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)

Older articles

Sites mentioning NOW settlement

Supreme Court rulings in RICO case

2003 (Terri's Law)

2004 (Jamiel comes out)

2005

March (Schiavo crisis and death)

April