BIRMINGHAM, Alabama - Birmingham abortion clinic bomber Eric Robert Rudolph's 248-page autobiography, which was removed from a bookseller's website last year after a federal judge ordered profits to go to victims, has now re-appeared free of charge on an anti-abortion website.

ArmyofGod.com, which honors those who have taken violent or deadly actions against abortion clinics or doctors, has recently posted Rudolph's autobiography "Between the Lines of Drift -The Memoirs of a Militant" on its website.

It's unclear when the link appeared but the words "New New New" are flashing beside it. "You may call(sic), the Justice Department forced Lulu.com to take this book down," the website states.

The website also provides links to individual pages of several men, including Rudolph. The website states that Rudolph provides the content for his page. ArmyofGod.com also displays images of what it purports to be late term abortions.

Here is a link to the ArmyofGod website: Warning there are disturbing images.

Rudolph is serving life sentences at a maximum security prison in Colorado for the January 1998 bombing that badly injured Emily Lyons, a nurse, at the New Woman, All Women Health Care Clinic on Birmingham's Southside. Robert Sanderson, Birmingham police officer who was moonlighting as a security guard at the clinic, was killed in the blast.

Rudolph is also serving time for earlier blasts in Atlanta, Ga., including the 1996 Olympic Park blast that killed one person.

After it was revealed Rudolph had written an autobiography from prison, Lyons' husband said that the bomber had a right to write it, but doubted anyone would want to read it.

Federal prosecutors pointed out that Rudolph's plea agreement in April 4, 2005 requires any profits to go to victims. Also, federal law bars a criminal from profiting from his or her actions.

U.S. District Court Judge Lynwood Smith granted prosecutors' motions and the U.S. Attorney's Office collected more than $200 in profits that had been set to go to Rudolph. LuLu.com shut down sales of the book after federal prosecutors stepped in.