The disciplinary panel has given the prosecutor extra time to make his case, but has significantly cut the amount of time Kline has to make his defense.
“[Kline] will have at most a day and a half of defense,” Jill Stanek told LifeSiteNews.com this morning, while the prosecutors have had seven days to make their case.
Kline blamed the obstruction of state officials during the Kathleen Sebelius administration for stonewalling his criminal investigation into child rape.
Kline faces charges of unethical conduct for allegedly obtaining hotel records and matching them to state medical reports in an effort to identify George Tiller’s adult patients.
Former George Tiller legal counsel Dan Monnat may have violated state ethics in obtaining sensitive information that they later used against Phill Kline.