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A perception that Pouillon was being turned into a martyr irritated many in Owosso. No one publicly defended the drive-by shooting, but letters in the local newspaper described Pouillon as belligerent and a "nut case" who brought children to tears with his signs. "We had to admire his persistence but did not admire his modus operandi," The Argus-Press said in an editorial five days after the killings. "His sign, often accompanied by his shouting at passers-by, gave his cause, indeed his town of Owosso as well, a bad name." Judy Jackson, 64, of Owosso, said she wouldn't be comfortable on a jury. "I don't agree with someone taking someone's life," Jackson said. "But I don't miss the man on the corner or his foul mouth. He would chase you, call you names. He was evil. His pictures were so gross." A barber, Jim Corrin, 63, once asked Pouillon, a regular customer, why he didn't display two pictures of happy children on his sign instead of just one accompanied by an aborted fetus. "He said, `I want to show people the truth,'" Corrin recalled. "I had no problem with his message. He was just overboard with it. He knew how to push buttons on people, but Jim didn't deserve to be executed on the sidewalk."
[Associated
Press;
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