Kevorkian has second thoughts about his methods

alonzomourning23

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May 26, 2006 — Today, on his 78th birthday, Jack Kevorkian, the man known as "Dr. Death," is slowly dying in prison.

And, according to his lawyer, Kevorkian seems to have second thoughts about helping people die.

For years, Kevorkian was the center of a national debate around the highly controversial questions surrounding physician-assisted suicide or "mercy killing:" Do the terminally ill have the right to choose when and how they die? Do doctors have the ability, even an obligation, to help them die as they choose?

Now, as he sits in jail, Kevorkian may have had a change of heart — not about his dedication to the "death with dignity" movement, but on how he went about promoting it.

Specifically, his lawyer suggests, he questions the more than 100 suicides he said he assisted throughout the 1990s. One assisted suicide — the death of Lou Gehrig's disease patient Thomas Youk, which was taped and broadcast on "60 Minutes" in 1998 — earned him a prison sentence of 15 years to 20 years for second degree murder.

"He did what he did, and it brought it to public awareness [of physician-assisted suicide]," said Kevorkian's attorney, Mayer Morganroth. "He now realizes that having performed it when it was against the law, wasn't the, probably, appropriate way to go about it. … What he should have done was work towards its legalization verbally. … Pursuing that cause, and not performing it because it still was against the law."

'He Gets Depressed at Times'


Today, Kevorkian resides in Michigan's Lakeland Correctional Facility. Less than a week ago, Morganroth publicly stated that doctors had told Kevorkian he had less than a year to live.

Kevorkian suffers from Hepatitis C, which he contracted during service in Vietnam. Morganroth said Kevorkian's liver enzyme levels were three to four times above normal — a clear signal his liver was failing.

In light of his failing health, Kevorkian has requested a commutation of his sentence, a pardon that would get him released from prison. Under the conditions of his current sentence, he is not eligible for parole until June 1, 2007, but he can to apply for a commutation on medical grounds before then.


The Michigan State Department of Corrections confirmed to ABC News that it had received Kevorkian's latest request on Monday and that the parole board was currently reviewing it. Kevorkian made a separate request for a commutation of his sentence in November 2005, but it was rejected by the parole board one month later.



When asked to describe Kevorkian's physical and mental state, Morganroth said it was "not great. … He's quite ill."



"Certainly he does get depressed at times," he said.



Initially, Kevorkian appealed his 1999 conviction of second degree murder and tried to have his case heard by the U.S. Supreme Court.



"We filed in the United States Supreme Court, they refused to hear it," Morganroth said. "Instead, of course, they took the appeal for Anna Nicole Smith, which sort of made me laugh. Not that I thought it was funny, but I thought it was ludicrous."


Lawyer: Parole Board "Unfairly Biased"




Morganroth thinks the parole board is stacked against Kevorkian, unduly harsh in its handling of his case. The Michigan Department of Corrections disagrees.



"That is absolutely not true. … This is very standard procedure," spokesman Russ Marlan said. "We get 100 to 300 requests for medical commutations [annually]. Very few get out."


Marlan said that the parole board recommended the release of prisoners in dire physical condition. Its internal standard has been to recommend the release of anyone whom doctors say has less than 12 months to live.


Morganroth said Kevorkian had met that standard. However, even if the parole board decides Kevorkian should stay behind bars, Michigan Gov. Jennifer Granholm could disregard that recommendation and set him free.



"The governor could still commute a sentence, even though a parole board recommends not to," Marlan said. "But it happens very infrequently."


Granholm's spokeswoman, Liz Boyd, told ABC News that governors normally upheld parole board decisions. Granholm, Boyd said, has commuted seven sentences during her three years in office.


"In the last 30 years, every governor has followed the recommendation of the parole board," Boyd said. "The only commutations approved have been for medical."


Stands by His Position, but Wouldn't Do it Again




While Kevorkian stands firmly by the cause of physician-assisted suicide, his lawyer said he would promote the movement by speaking out or writing, not by helping out in any more suicides.



"At this point, he would never perform it again," Morganroth said. "But he certainly would work towards getting it legalized wherever possible."



In a series of national polls, a majority of Americans expressed their support for Kevorkian's release. It's unclear, however, whether an outpouring of public opinion would do anything to help Kevorkian's bid for freedom.


Kevorkian, Morganroth said, "gets petitions, letters by the carload of support. I get them, too. I just tell them forward them to the governor."

http://abcnews.go.com/US/LegalCenter/story?id=2008364&page=3
 
He's a little quicker than the tobacco industry, but lacks the legal resources they do. That's why they're on the outside, and he on the inside.
 
[quote name='mykevermin']He's a little quicker than the tobacco industry, but lacks the legal resources they do. That's why they're on the outside, and he on the inside.[/QUOTE]

Yeah, and it helps that his patients actually knew what the outcome would be. Somkers lacked that kind of honesty from the tobacco industry for decades.
 
Not sure what the similarity is between kevorkian and tobacco. I don't remember hearing any cases of smokers seeking out marlboro so they can end their life quickly.

Though kevorkian decided to defend himself. If he had kept his lawyer it likely would have ended up like the other times he was brought to trial.
 
[quote name='alonzomourning23']Not sure what the similarity is between kevorkian and tobacco. I don't remember hearing any cases of smokers seeking out marlboro so they can end their life quickly.

Though kevorkian decided to defend himself. If he had kept his lawyer it likely would have ended up like the other times he was brought to trial.[/quote]

Exactly, this is about dying with dignity. Comparing Kevorkian's ideological crusade with Big Tobacco is disgusting.

America is a country that fears and shuns sex and death. Is it any wonder that it's porn and violence fetishes are so vibrant and deeply ingrained.
 
[quote name='camoor']Exactly, this is about dying with dignity. Comparing Kevorkian's ideological crusade with Big Tobacco is disgusting.[/quote]

Oh, eat my fuck. I was merely pointing out that big tobacco is not only very legal, but VERY lucrative. Meanwhile, someone very upfront about their goals and the ethical quandary behind it is in prison. Save your fucking morality tale for when it's relevant, shitneck.

America is a country that fears and shuns sex and death. Is it any wonder that it's porn and violence fetishes are so vibrant and deeply ingrained.

You can't back that up with evidence that it's more ingrained here than anywhere else.
 
[quote name='mykevermin']
You can't back that up with evidence that it's more ingrained here than anywhere else.[/quote]

This reminds me of how disugsted I get when there's a nice old japanese porno on and then they decide to come in and rape the girl out of nowhere. Ruins the whole thing and it seems like a much more mainstream fetish there than here.
 
[quote name='alonzomourning23']This reminds me of how disugsted I get when there's a nice old japanese porno on and then they decide to come in and rape the girl out of nowhere. Ruins the whole thing and it seems like a much more mainstream fetish there than here.[/quote]

Look at how much more repressed the Japanese are... in public. Which is pretty much his point.

This is BS though. Anyone that wants to die should be fully allowed. Its their life, let them do what the fuck they want. I hate when people say only God decides who lives and dies. They say that while forcing people to live- which is the other part of that statement; LIVES or dies. By forcing people to live they're breaking the same 'rule' they accuse Kavy of.

And really, who wants to live when your organs are shutting down and you need thousands of dollars of medication every day. I don't give a fuck how much of a 'gift' life is. If you're in so much pain you spend the day unconcious from it, you should be allowed to die if you wish.

The religious zealots are the worst. You'd think if their so close to God that they'd be a little more open to getting to meet him. They either don't believe the Bible or they do believe the Bible and know they haven't listened to it.

What the fuck ... what the fuck what the fuck what the fuck!?
I just fail to understand why living in constant crippling agony is such a great alternative to death. Are people so terrified by their own deaths that they can't handle others chosing to embrace their own?

Its not like cocaine where you get hopped up outta your gourd and bake your children, or drinking and driving and running over a playground. You're not hurting anyone. You could argue you're hurting the family, but how do you think it feels to watch someone you love die a little everyday. Stretching the process like trying to drill out a cavity using just the drill bit in your fingers.

I think suicide should be available to not only the critically ill, but anyone else that wants to die. I'd love to see a sting of EMO dipshits outside a clinic.... I know alonso is going to argue that they only want to die because of a chemical imbalance and they should be given treatment. Well fuck that. The could have chosen treatment at any point. If they want to die, good, keep their stupid ass from reproducing. Why make anyone live that doesn't want to?
 
its kinda sad that he could use a person like himself right now, but there is no one out there that would do it now. I do think assisted suicide should be legal, though my only concern is non-terminally ill people might to do it to avoid being a burden on their family or they just had enough with life.
 
People that are ill should have the choice to go to sleep forever instead of living in pain if there is no cure why are we hurting those people?

Depressed emo kids could be our sons or daughters one day... but if I cant prove that im ill and in pain id have to live with it . ;)
 
Whats the problem with that? Its their live. You're not one to say how they should live it. What makes you one to say how they should end it?

[quote name='Ikohn4ever']its kinda sad that he could use a person like himself right now, but there is no one out there that would do it now. I do think assisted suicide should be legal, though my only concern is non-terminally ill people might to do it to avoid being a burden on their family or they just had enough with life.[/quote]
 
If you raise an idiot EMO fuckstick you should be killed with them.

[quote name='Skelah']People that are ill should have the choice to go to sleep forever instead of living in pain if there is no cure why are we hurting those people?

Depressed emo kids could be our sons or daughters one day... but if I cant prove that im ill and in pain id have to live with it . ;)[/quote]
 
[quote name='Kayden']If you raise an idiot EMO fuckstick you should be killed with them.[/QUOTE]


yeah same with fools who have flashing neon avatars
 
[quote name='Ikohn4ever']yeah same with fools who have flashing neon avatars[/quote]

Hey, don't even step up to Number Munchers mofo. :hot:
 
Damn; when did they move Kevorkian out of my city's prison?

Anyway, and I'm not going to bother root beer tapping into morality issues, but I've always found it interesting as humans "evolve" and crawl out of the animal kingdom (technoligically, psychologically, etc.), more and more, so does natural selection.
 
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