Details have begun to trickle out about what may have driven the suspect, Robert Lewis Dear, 57, to go on a rampage with a high-powered rifle at the Planned Parenthood clinic in Colorado Springs, Colorado, killing three people.
The clinic performs abortions -- a highly emotive and divisive practice in America.
NBC News, citing two law enforcement officials, reported Saturday that, when questioned after his arrest, Dear mentioned "no more baby parts" in reference to Planned Parenthood.
But when asked if he thought Planned Parenthood was targeted, Suthers said: "It certainly appears that way." He declined to comment on the alleged "baby parts" remark.
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The president and chief executive of Planned Parenthood Rocky Mountains, Vicki Cowart, also said her organization seems to have been targeted by Dear.
"It does appear that it does -- it was targeted at us, from what we've heard," Cowart told the same ABC current affairs program.
"I mean so many issues now, there are bloggers and, you know, talk shows where they really focus on trying to get people to that point of boiling over. Just intense anger," the governor told CNN.
He said his information was that the two civilians killed were a man and a woman.
Planned Parenthood -- a major provider of women's health services that receives funding from the government -- offers preventive checkups, contraceptives and abortions.
Critics, many of whom seek to outlaw abortion in the United States, have falsely accused Planned Parenthood of selling fetal organs and body parts for profit, and encouraging women to have abortions in order to expand such operations.