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Georgia Assisted Suicide Law Overturned By State Supreme Court

Georgia Assisted Suicide

GREG BLUESTEIN   02/ 6/12 04:34 PM ET  AP

ATLANTA — Georgia's highest court concluded Monday that a state law restricting assisted suicides violated free speech rights, a ruling that destroyed a long-running criminal case against members of a suicide group and could reshape the state's end-of-life policy.

The Georgia Supreme Court's unanimous ruling struck down the 1994 law, which bans people from publicly advertising suicide. It was adopted by lawmakers hoping to prevent right-to-die supporters from offering their services in the state.

The ruling means that four members of the Final Exit Network who were charged in February 2009 with helping a 58-year-old cancer patient die won't have to stand trial. The group, which was once based in Georgia, was at the center of a lengthy investigation by state authorities who infiltrated its operations.

Georgia law doesn't expressly forbid assisted suicide. But the law established felony charges for anyone who "publicly advertises, offers or holds himself out as offering that he or she will intentionally and actively assist another person in the commission of suicide and commits any overt act to further that purpose."

The court's opinion found that lawmakers could have imposed a ban on all assisted suicides with no restriction of free speech, or sought to prohibit all offers to assist in suicide that were followed by the act. But lawmakers decided to do neither, said the opinion, written by Justice Hugh Thompson.

"The State has failed to provide any explanation or evidence as to why a public advertisement or offer to assist in an otherwise legal activity is sufficiently problematic to justify an intrusion on protected speech rights," the ruling said.

Prosecutors who had worked for more than a year to build the case were disappointed with the ruling.

"We knew from the very beginning there would be a constitutional challenge to the statute," said Forsyth County District Attorney Penny Penn. "We felt there was an argument to be made, made it and the Supreme Court has ruled otherwise. I regret we were not able to proceed on the merits because I think we had a compelling case."

The suicide group's members said they saw the court's decision as vindication.

"This was politically motivated and ideologically driven as opposed to being, in any way, motivated by sound legal practice," said Ted Goodwin, the group's former president and one of the four defendants. "I'm just sorry that as many people have been put through what they've been put through in what turned out to be a boondoggle."

The decision left open a route for state lawmakers to explicitly outlaw all assisted suicides, as long as the law doesn't infringe on free speech rights. Legislative leaders haven't ruled out introducing legislation that would do just that, and the Georgia Attorney General's office said it's ready to help lawmakers if they bring forward legislation in response to the ruling.

The challenge was brought by four members of the network who were arrested in February 2009 after John Celmer's death at his home. Prosecutors say group members helped Celmer use an "exit hood" connected to a helium tank to kill himself.

They were arrested after an eight-month investigation by state authorities, in which an undercover agent posing as someone seeking to commit suicide infiltrated the group.

The four pleaded not guilty to charges that they tampered with evidence, violated anti-racketeering laws and helped Celmer kill himself. Their case has been on hold while the Georgia Supreme Court considered their challenge.

The Final Exit Network members said the law only punishes those involved in assisted suicides if they speak publicly about it and does nothing to block an assisted suicide from being carried out by those who stay silent.

State attorneys said the law doesn't infringe on the free speech rights of people who support assisted suicide, but only those who take concrete steps to carry one out. They said the law was designed with the late Dr. Jack Kevorkian in mind. Kevorkian, who died last year at age 83, was a proponent of doctor-assisted suicide and sparked the national right-to-die debate.

Voters in Oregon and Washington have legalized doctor-assisted suicide, and Montana's Supreme Court determined that assisted suicide is a medical treatment. But most other states adopted laws that call for prison time for those found guilty of assisting suicides. Georgia's law carried a punishment of up to five years in prison for those found guilty of violating the law.

Opponents of assisted suicide measures said they are concerned the court's ruling could open Georgia to more assisted suicides.

"I think it will be seen as fertile ground for groups that have spearheaded assisted suicide movements," said Rita Marker, executive director of the Patients Rights Council, an advocacy group that opposes assisted suicide measures. "And from the standpoint of vulnerable patients, this is not a good thing."

___

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ATLANTA — Georgia's highest court concluded Monday that a state law restricting assisted suicides violated free speech rights, a ruling that destroyed a long-running criminal case against member...
ATLANTA — Georgia's highest court concluded Monday that a state law restricting assisted suicides violated free speech rights, a ruling that destroyed a long-running criminal case against member...
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05:55 PM on 02/19/2012
Assisted-suicide needs to be as available as abortion. If a woman has a bad day, she should be able to off herself at a doctor's office. After all, laws should not tell women what they can do with their own bodies.
03:12 AM on 02/24/2012
If you are capable of arguing like an adult and setting aside your juvenile sarcasm laced with straw men arguments, tell me why you don't think people deserve the right to assisted suicide if they are in extreme pain.
03:18 PM on 03/10/2012
Actually, I DO think people in extreme pain deserve the right to assisted suicide. Now you tell me, why should it be restricted to those in "extreme pain" or the terminally ill? "My body, my choice!" right? What business is it of the government to come between a private medical decision about your body?
12:11 AM on 02/12/2012
Regarding attempted suicides, my brother used to say, "attempted suicides should be culpable to the death penalty."
We actually know very little of the life cycle called death. Because we superimpose our conscious feelings on life and suffering, we shy from real questions of spiritual life and spiritual suffering, whether in this World or the next.
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rikrobo
01:31 AM on 02/07/2012
No matter what side of the issue you are on, it is ridiculous - nay, ignorant and assinine to equate any physical action with free speech. The judges that made this ruling obviously were so in favor of striking down the law that they had to basically make up a reason to do it. Free speech and assisting in suicide are two completely seperate issues. This country has flourished because our Constitution, laws and morays were all based on the belief in God. If you commit suicide you do not believe in God, because God has forbidden it. He creates life, no one under any circumstances has the right to end it - except in the defence of life. God does not want us to suffer, but times of stress and suffering are a test of faith and suicide is a complete failure of that test.
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PillowCaseLaw
Read -> COMPREHEND -> Post. Or quiet.
02:44 AM on 02/07/2012
I will refer you to my mini-bio here. You failed on the COMPREHEND part. The overturned law was not about actually PERFORMING the assisted suicide, but in ADVERTISING it. It made it illegal to advertise a service that was otherwise NOT ILLEGAL in Georgia.

The remainder of your argument is religious revisionist history, complete drivel, and lacking in persuasive merit, especially to those of us who do not believe in your specific opinion of the nature of the Abrahamic deity.
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kathy smelser
07:55 AM on 02/07/2012
i a nation where religious freedom has always been protected ...why are so many people wanting to take that freedom away ......i hope we never turn into a nation that is controlled by one religion over another
08:27 AM on 02/07/2012
wordy wordy wordy... is that pillow case law or polly want a cracker... prove you position reguarding "reigious revisionist history". And by the way history is His-story" Also The deity you refer to was around way before Avraham... but so was your father....
12:59 AM on 02/07/2012
No big deal. ObamaCare will be ending lives left and right for anyone over the age of 60. Just wait a couple of years until it is in full force. (Advice to those of you near or above 60, cash in all your assets, go to Vegas and have a ball, travel, whatever. When you come home you can tell your kids you had a ball and are going on welfare like the rest of the country. If you live long, stay healthy so all those young fools can pay to support you. You know, those job-seeking 99%ers.
02:59 AM on 02/07/2012
Proof, please!
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RadicalAmerica
Common sense for the common man
12:32 AM on 02/07/2012
Good. It looks like Georgia finally got it right.
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Jim Pasterczyk
Banned!
01:19 AM on 02/07/2012
And right isn't necessarily right wing.
11:16 PM on 02/06/2012
Suicides are a fact of life that has existed throughout human history. That said, in most states and during the USA's history suicide has been a criminal act in which those who attempt it and live can be arrested and placed in protective custody in a hospital psychiatrict ward. Very few people who contemplate suicide actually attempt it and those that do attempt it usually do it is such a way that there is a very high chance of them being rescued before they die - in other words, they do not really want to die. Most suicides, especially of the youth, are severe reach outs for help. The person has gotten into a spot in which he believes death is the only way out when, in fact, there are many non-lethal and legal ways to end what has so depressed the individual.

However, just like it has done for the legal buisiness, advertisements for the service will increase the number seeking this way and incourage those not seeking it to turn to it. The depressed or mentally ill person will more readily turn to suicide if the ads encourage them to seek out this, "Now Legal!" service. At some time in everyone's life there will be a moment or moments in which he believes suicide is the answer. It should never be the legally encouraged answer.
01:26 AM on 02/07/2012
That's not what this is about. This issue is about assisted suicide for people who are terminally ill, not those who have the passing thought of doing it. Most of these people are suffering and just don't want to continue to be in pain and alone.
01:30 AM on 02/07/2012
I agree!

The Primo American Fault is Meddling in Other People's, or Peoples', Affairs.

If someone has gotten so far into the hurt locker that euthansia looks good (and, there may be circumstances in which it appears rational, whatever else) then just let the guy do it himself.

It's not hard.

And if he can't do it himself, then, he obviously didn't want to do that bad, to begin with.

Exit Network sounds like another bunch of crank actvists who really have no idea of what they're getting themselves and everybody else into.

Pain is just part of life, a very personal part, and nobody has any business meddling in someone else's pesonal life to that extent.

It also begs the question as to when euthanasia is justified. When you've got 6 months to live? 3 months? Two days? (ah, heck. Just stick it out).

Are we going to categorize pain?

6 months at Pain Cat 2 is equal to 3 months at Pain Cat 4, but we did a Pain Cat1 because I'm in the will: Ridiculous!

We can't legislate that.

Take responsibility for yourself. Deal with pain, and if you just can't, don't call somebody else to deal with it, for you.

(Well, maybe if you're a socialist. I don't know.)
10:46 PM on 02/06/2012
I think a person has the right to choose the time and place of their deaths,specially if they are terminally ill. both my parents died in horrible pain, because the doctors did not want to get them hooked on opiates ,by the timethey passed all of the family were praying for a quick end
09:58 PM on 02/06/2012
Conservatives want the government out of your lives....

Until it comes to the most private and important matters, like your sexual freedoms, who you can marry, and even when you can die.

And yet they try to market themselves as the party of freedom and liberty. Laughable.
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CenaW
Did you know AOL belongs to A L E C
11:20 PM on 02/06/2012
Conflicting thoughts are normal for Republicans.
That is why they are all on Valium and Prozac.
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rikrobo
01:33 AM on 02/07/2012
Liberal is not a synonym to socialist, but liberal idiot is a redundancy.
09:32 PM on 02/06/2012
This is no one's business but your own. I do not want the government, or Rick Santorum telling me anything about my own personal decisions. How dare they.
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Marc Schiele
The Weapon of Mass Instruction
09:08 PM on 02/06/2012
What is next- killing babies in the womb?? Oooops, we have already been there, and that is ALSO an abomination in our country!!!
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AdamWest1313
Hardcore Agnostic
10:36 PM on 02/06/2012
So are you saying you want to control all aspects of someone's life? Or just the "life" parts of it?
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RadicalAmerica
Common sense for the common man
12:33 AM on 02/07/2012
Yeah but its nice and legal.
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bmitche
08:34 PM on 02/06/2012
Only in Georgia !
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AdamWest1313
Hardcore Agnostic
10:38 PM on 02/06/2012
What, that it is legal and courts would back it up?
08:27 PM on 02/06/2012
One thing leads to another a nation in decline
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
AdamWest1313
Hardcore Agnostic
10:37 PM on 02/06/2012
Assisted Suicide is legal in the Northwest and it hasn't had any serious negative implications. Can you cite any?
08:26 PM on 02/06/2012
The whole issue really devolves into pain, and how fundamentally unacceptable it is: a real dilemma, since pain is part of life as well as death, no matter how quickly it comes.

In "On Pain", however, Ernst Junger presents an entirely different perspective and he had lots of experience with it.

'Tell me your relation to pain, and I'll tell you what kind of man you are." (something like that)

It's short.
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grant06
Socialism: Humanity's best future.
07:44 PM on 02/06/2012
There are few people that I would allow to make the life and death decision for me. The state is not one of them.
08:20 PM on 02/06/2012
I agree with you completely; but in this case, the sentiment doesn't apply.
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Miles J. Zaremski
Attorney, writer and commentator
07:40 PM on 02/06/2012
Please, please get the verbiage correct: we are not talking about suicide, and therefore not talking about anyone assisting in that concept!!! Look up in the dictionary how suicide is defined and you all will understand. To emphasize this point further, ask yourself whether a soldier in war who throws his body on a grenade is intentionally wanting to commit suicide?
09:53 PM on 02/06/2012
Finally a voice of reason. Thanx.
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Catherine Girod
09:53 PM on 02/06/2012
I had the same thought.