The site, called the Nuremberg Files, listed names and addresses of abortion providers, whom it declared guilty of crimes against humanity.
My name, along with those of other doctors, is on an Internet abortion hate list - called the "Nuremberg Files" - now found to be acceptable free speech by the appellate court's decision.
The defendants, two anti-abortion organizations and a number of individuals, also listed doctors' names and addresses on a Web site they called the Nuremberg Files.
The Web site was known as the Nuremberg Files.
"I don't take the Nuremberg Files lightly, and I don't take this issue lightly," Mr. Leahy said.
"The Nuremberg Files: Visualize Abortionists on Trial," proclaims the site on the World Wide Web.
On Wednesday, a federal appeals court in San Francisco overturned a 1999 decision against 12 people who created and operate a Web site called the Nuremberg Files.
In 1996 it revealed its "Nuremberg Files" which included dossiers on abortion providers, politicians, judges, clinic employees and other abortion rights supporters.
The Web site, known as the Nuremberg Files, is at www.christiangallery.com/atrocity.
The Nuremberg Files is a website that displays the names and locations of various doctors who perform abortions throughout the United States.