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Assisted Suicide Legalized in
Montana
Part Two of Three By Liz
Townsend Montana, which has the
highest suicide rate in America, is now the third state where doctors can
legally kill their patients. Montana District Court Judge Dorothy McCarter
ruled December 5 that the state constitution includes the right to assisted
suicide, the Associated Press (AP) reported.
Bypassing the usual requirements of
legislative and voter approval (the route that was followed by Washington
and Oregon when their assisted suicide laws went into effect), McCarter
declared that the “Montana constitutional rights of individual privacy and
human dignity, taken together, encompass the right of a competent terminally
(ill) patient to die with dignity,” according to the AP.
McCarter added that doctors who “help”
their patients to die would not be subject to prosecution. “The patient’s
right to die with dignity includes protection of the patient’s physician
from liability under the state’s homicide statutes,” she wrote.
The case, Baxter et al. v. Montana, was
brought by Robert Baxter, 75, a patient with lymphocytic leukemia; four
physicians; and the pro-assisted suicide group Compassion & Choices
(formerly the Hemlock Society). Baxter died of natural causes that same day
McCarter announced her decision, according to the Billings Gazette.
The state attorney general’s office
strongly opposed the lawsuit, the AP reported. During an October 10 hearing,
Assistant Attorney General Jennifer Anders clearly laid out the case against
bringing assisted suicide to Montana.
According to the AP, Anders argued
that “intentionally taking a life is illegal”; “the issue of assisted
suicide falls under the responsibility of the Legislature, not the court”;
“the state has no formal evaluation process, safeguards, or regulations in
place to provide guidance or oversight for doctor-assisted suicide”; and “it
was premature to declare constitutional rights for a competent, terminally
ill patient because there is no definition for ‘competent’ or ‘terminally
ill.’” Dismissing all of the
state’s objections, McCarter ruled that the broad privacy and dignity rights
in the Montana constitution gave patients the “right” to seek lethal doses
of medication from physicians. She added that the same doctors who would be
assisting in the patients’ suicides could determine if the patient was both
mentally competent and terminally ill, the AP reported.
Attorney General Mike McGrath, who will
join the Montana Supreme Court as chief justice in January, said the state
will file an appeal, the AP reported. “It’s a major constitutional issue and
the Supreme Court should rule on it,” McGrath said.
At the same time the judge was giving
Montanans the right to kill themselves, others in the state are working
diligently to reduce the number of suicides. Montana’s suicide rate is
double the national average—22 per 100,000 people, compared to 11 per
100,000 nationwide, according to the AP.
The Montana Chapter of the National
Association of Social Workers held a conference—“Striving for Last Place:
Preventing Suicide by Instilling Hope”—in November seeking answers to the
high rate of suicide. Health care professionals pointed to a lack of mental
health services in much of the state, along with access to firearms and
alcohol.
“There is still a hesitancy for a lot
of people in Montana to seek help if they’re feeling suicidal,” Tracy
Velazquez, executive director of the Montana Mental Health Association, told
the AP. “There’s still a stigma attached to it, and, especially in rural
areas, people feel like they should just deal with things and take care of
them on their own.” Please send
your thoughts to
daveandrusko@gmail.com.
Part Three -- Abortions Drop In South
Dakota
Part One -- Two Pro-Life Wins in Louisiana
Over the Weekend
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