Alex Schadenberg
Executive Director, Euthanasia Prevention Coalition.
“There are certain folks who outright object to the idea of it on moral, religious or other grounds,” Stafstrom said by phone Wednesday. “The other thing, and what’s important for the judiciary committee, is, as drafted, the bill seemed to have unintended legal consequences.”
The state’s division of criminal justice said in testimony that the bill “effectively mandates the falsification of death certificates under certain circumstances,” by allowing the signer of a death certificate to list the qualified patient’s underlying terminal illness as the cause of death as opposed to the medication used to end his or her life.
That would pose a problem for the criminal justice system, the division said, when faced with cases involving a potential murder prosecution if the cause of death is not accurately reported on a death certificate.
Under the bill, a person would be guilty of murder if he or she willfully altered or forged a request for aid in dying or coerced someone to complete such a request.
But those actions don’t cause death, rather they potentially offer evidence of intent to kill, thus removing the “causation requirement” that is essential to any murder charge, the criminal justice division said, recommending that section be deleted.
“Given the legal uncertainty and the folks who just outright object to the concept all together, the votes were clearly not there to move the bill out of committee,” Stafstrom said.
Stephen Mendelsohn |
The same problem with falsifying death certificates exists with every assisted suicide bill or law.
Most state representatives vote for or against assisted suicide based on the theory of assisted suicide, but at least in Connecticut some elected representative read the bill and killed the bill based on the dangerous language in the bill.
Sadly, the most dangerous assisted suicide legislation recently passed into law in New Mexico.
How wonderful that you have people in government who still have integrity and would see the big loop hole in this bill and the evil it could do in society.A friend of mine was struggling not wanting to live a month ago but today she was able to come to grips with her life and she has exchanged her torment for peace I can say even joy.I am so thankful that someone did not offer assisted suicide to her but we all gathered around her and encouraged her and prayed over her and today she has realize that her life is worth living and that she has great value to those who love her and to God.
ReplyDeleteI don’t know how we came to a society where we consider murder as an answer for those who are weak or ill let’s all do our best let’s value one another let’s love those who are ill physically or mentally but let’s refuse to murder them and call it assisted suicide .We can do better than this this is evil beyond evil this is not an answer to a problem it is creating a problem bigger than mankind .Love does not kill how can we ever justify such an act. already there have been people whose lives have ended by someone giving them poison and the victim is dead and the one who did the act is saying oh no it was assisted suicide .No human race can walk this slippery slope without going backwards .It is my prayer that you will never pass this bill or anything that kills or destroys life.We all have a higher calling than to murder and pretend that it is okay it will never be okay .We can do better we were created in the image of God we can do better so much better. Blessings Marlyen Torrie