murdered a Pensacola doctor. (Haught, 1997)In 1997 two more nail-studded bombs struck Atlanta -- on Jan. 16 at a women's clinic, and on Feb. 21 at a gay nightclub. After the second blast, a crude, unsigned, semi-literate letter was sent to the Reuters news agency, which turned it over to the FBI.The letter said both bombs were placed by "units of the Army of God." It said anyone involved with abortion "may become victims of retribution." As for the homosexual club, it said, ungrammatically: "We will target sodomites, there organizations, and all those who push there agenda."In militia-like tones, the letter threatened both the United Nations and the U.S. government. With misspellings, it said: "We declare and will wage total war on the ungodly communist regime in New York and your legaslative-bureaucratic lackey's in Washington. It is you who are responsible and preside over the murder of children and issue the policy of ungodly preversion thats destroying our people.... Death to the New World Order. (Haught, 1997)The Federal Bureau of Investigation sent out copies of this letter (see pictures 1) in hopes that somebody would recognize the writing or the style and would turn in whoever wrote them. Eventually, Eric Robert Rudolph was convicted of the Atlanta bombings as well with the bombing in the Centennial Olympic Park in 1997. Rudolph has been put on the FBIs ten most wanted list in hopes that someone will turn him in. (see pictures 2)The police are starting to realize there may be a network of support for violence against doctors and not just a single sniper. That's why police are looking for James Kopp, a hero of the radical pro-life fringe. He was part of many demonstrations before he disappeared. He was no stranger to conflict, like all of those who take part in these protests. Police don't know whether James Kopp killed the Buffalo doctor (an abortion doctor), but they think he has information. All they have found so far is his ...