American Woman Charged with Assisting in
Suicide
Part Two of TwoBy Liz
Townsend
In New
Zealand, authorities have filed charges
against an American woman who admitted in a
BBC documentary that she assisted in a
suicide there. Susan Wilson of North
Carolina now denies she did anything except
sit next to the deathbed of Audrey Wallis in
2007, according to the New Zealand Herald.
Wilson
is accused of providing a lethal drug to
Wallis and receiving $12,000 in
compensation. However, Wilson cannot be
forced to face the charges since assisted
suicide is not included in the extradition
treaty between the United States and New
Zealand, the Herald reported. “The warrant
will remain active should the defendant
choose to return to New Zealand at any stage
in the future,” Detective Sergeant Scott
Armstrong told the newspaper.
Wallis’s death was initially thought to be
an overdose, since she “was not terminally
ill at the time she committed suicide—but
was addicted to painkillers and suffering
mental health problems,” according to the
Herald. But the BBC broadcast a documentary
in 2008 that included statements from Wilson
describing her trip to New Zealand to assist
in Wallis’s suicide.
Ironically, euthanasia activist Lesley
Martin filed the complaint that led to the
charges against Wilson. Dignity NZ, Martin’s
organization, is seeking legalized assisted
suicide, while the notorious Philip
Nitschke’s group Exit International flouts
current law and publicizes ways people can
kill themselves. Nitschke has been speaking
in Susan Wilson’s defense and communicating
statements from her, the New Zealand Press
Association (NZPA) reported.
Martin’s complaint was based on the
documentary and on statements from Wallis’s
friend Annette Houghton. “Three weeks before
Audrey died she withdrew $12,000 from her
bank account,” Martin told the Herald. “So
once Annette and I spoke we worked out that
it was highly likely Wilson had assisted
Audrey to die and needed further
investigation.”
After
the charges were filed, Wilson sent an
e-mail to Nitschke denying her involvement
in the suicide. She said Wallis asked her
for details on how to kill herself. “Susan
provided that information, sat with her when
she ended her life using helium to cause
anoxia, and received compensation for air
fares and accommodation to visit NZ
totalling $2000.” Nitschke said in a
statement, according to NZPA.
Be
sure to check out
www.nationalrighttolifenews.org.
Part One |