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George David Exoo was a free man Friday for the first time in four months.

U.S. District Magistrate Judge Clarke VanDervort denied a request by the U.S. Attorney’s Office to extradite the former Beckley Unitarian minister to Ireland for his alleged role five years ago in assisting the suicide of a woman there.

Exoo, 65, broke into tears of joy, along with his followers who were in attendance, and a collective gasp went up from the room as the decision was announced. VanDervort ordered Exoo immediately released for the first time since his June 25 arrest by federal authorities. One woman slumped against the wall following the hearing, shoulders heaving with sobs of relief.

“I really didn’t know what was going to happen,” Exoo said. “I have a parish in Lewisburg, and I intend to preach there Sunday.”

VanDervort also denied a motion by prosecutors to reopen the case based on testimony they claimed to possess from one of Exoo’s fellow inmates and the potentially incriminating remarks he had allegedly overheard from the embattled former minister.

As he explained his decision, VanDervort outlined what could only be described as scales of justice that were perfectly balanced. In researching the various laws of the 50 states in this country to determine whether a preponderance of them spoke to the issue of assisted suicide, VanDervort came to a perplexing conclusion — 25 such laws are analogous to those of Ireland and 25 are not.

“Very few states have defined those terms,” he noted, referring to such legal terms as “aiding,” “abetting” and “causing” a suicide.

“While Mr. Exoo’s conduct may be viewed as wrong, it is generally not recognized as criminal in the United States.”

What happened to the pioneering right-to-die group

When Gerald Larue and Derek Humphry entered the Los Angeles Press Club on 12 August 1980 to announce to the world the formation of the Hemlock Society, there were many doubters that it could last.

After all, it was the only organization in America currently saying that assisted suicide for the dying should be seen as moral and made legal. Powerful New York groups such as ‘Concern for Dying’ and ‘Society for the Right to Die’ concerned themselves only with advance directives (Living Wills and such) and one of their leaders, hearing of the advent of Hemlock, opined that ‘America was not ready for voluntary euthanasia and assisted suicide.’

They made no secret of their fear that Hemlock’s arrival would dilute the amount of fund raising that ‘choice’ organizations could do.

Also, President Reagan was just taking over the presidency with a right-wing agenda, and Jerry Falwell was in full song with his Moral Majority.

America had, it seemed, lurched to the far right, with liberals pushed aside.

“They’ll eat you alive,” said one journalist to Derek Humphry

“No,” he replied. “Ours is a long-term struggle;

Hemlock will still be around when Reagan and Falwell are gone.”

Hemlock’s shock appearance on the scene was on the evening news and in next day’s newspapers internationally.

“Are you going to be in the Yellow Pages,” a radio host asked sarcastically.

“Of course.”

When Hemlock was announced it had one member. Within a year it had a paid membership of several thousand, and records show membership was 12,927 in the far off days of 1984.

Looking back, twenty-seven years later, what did Hemlock achieve?

Gaining the wide societal acceptance of the principles of lawful, medical, voluntary euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide was Hemlock’s principal achievement. Before Hemlock’s books and public relations campaigns, the subject was pretty much taboo.

And Dr Jack Kevorkian first appeared ten years after Hemlock had opened up the controversial euthanasia field for public debate and action.

By 1992 Hemlock had 46,000+ members, had staged national and international conferences, and published five books, among them the international bestseller, ‘Final Exit’. It was at that high point that Derek Humphry chose to leave, not wanting to be a managerial executive. He resumed his career as a journalist and author yet continued frequently to speak publicly on Hemlock’s behalf.

Hemlock’s biggest achievements have been in supplying the majority of the brainpower, labor, and finance for the six state initiative voting campaigns trying to legalize doctor-hastened death. Narrow defeats in Washington state (1991) and California (1992) were followed by two victories in Oregon (1994 and 1997), a heavy defeat in Michigan in 1998, and then a narrow defeat in Maine (2000). Hemlock and its supporters provided the bulk of the seed money, and the essential mailing lists of national supporters needed for these expensive campaigns.

In Oregon, Hemlock got the ball rolling in l986 which eventually led to the passing by voter initiative of the Oregon Death With Dignity Act, l994. It spread the message across the state, placed a Bill in front of the legislature (which failed but drew considerable attention), freely loaned its mailing list, and pumped in campaign money so far the tax laws would allow.

Then the directors of Hemlock decided in 2003 to change the name of the organization. The change of title, firstly to End-of-Life Choices and then to the more euphemistic Compassion and Choices, pleased some supporters, annoyed and confused others. Worst of all, the group’s huge and catchy name recognition and underlying philosophical meaning (Hemlock=Socrates=rational suicide) was lost. Membership numbers fell drastically.

Numerous of the original Hemlock hardcore people were offended at these name and style changes and immediately started a new organization, the Final Exit Network. Derek Humphry gave them permissionto use the title of his famous book for the organization.

The Network set its mission solely to help suffering people, avoiding politics, legislation, and courts. It applauded those who worked for law reform but considered that, as further legislation was many years away, what was immediately required was ‘at the bedside’ guidance by trained volunteers, as practiced in Switzerland by Dignitas.

Although the original Hemlock Society USA (1980-2003) has disappeared into the arms of Compassion and Choices, there are still three independent Hemlock groups: Hemlock of Illinois, Hemlock Society of Florida, and the Hemlock Society of San Diego. Hemlock of Illinois is affiliated to the Final Exit Network.

Fuller info at  www.finalexit.org    www.finalexitnetwork.org     www.assistedsuicide.org

ERGO Bookstore at   www.finalexit.org/ergo-store

The judge in the extradition hearing concerning the Rev. George David Exoo will give his decision this coming Friday. October 26, 2007

The hearing will be at the federal building in Charleston, West Virginia.

If the judge rules against Mr Exoo, he will be deported to Ireland to face criminal charges in Dublin alleging that he assisted in the suicide of Rosemary Toole in January 2002. He does not deny that he was present when Ms. Toole took her life but was there in his role as a pastor and counselor.

He has been in prison custody awaiting this ruling since 17 August 2007.

Following the loss of her father earlier this year, Sharon Osbourne has made her own end-of-life plans, reports MSNBC.com.

She and husband Ozzy have decided to choose their own ends should a mentally degenerative disease afflict either of them.

”I saw my father suffer from the day he came back into my life in 2002 to the day he died in July,” she said. “There’s no way I could go through what he did or put my kids through that.”

Considering it the ”final gift of love to our kids,” the couple have already contacted their lawyers to see to it that their wishes are respected.

“Ozzy and I have absolutely come to the same decision. We believe 100 percent in euthanasia so have drawn up plans to go to the assisted suicide flat in Switzerland if we ever have an illness that affects our brains. If Ozzy or I ever got Alzheimer’s, that’s it — we’d be off. We gathered the kids around the kitchen table, told them our wishes, and they’ve all agreed to go with it.”

The Associated Press reported:

Assisted suicide research criticized: professor replies

By William McCall, The Associated Press, October 1, 2007

PORTLAND – Doctor-assisted suicide in Oregon and The Netherlands does not result in more deaths among certain groups of terminally ill patients such as the poor or senior citizens, according to a controversial new study.

The study, led by University of Utah bioethicist Margaret Battin, analyzed nearly a decade of data from Oregon – the only state with an assisted suicide law – and 20 years in The Netherlands.

The results contradict claims by opponents that allowing doctors to help terminally ill patients end their lives would result in a higher number of deaths among certain groups.

Critics, however, dismissed the study because Battin failed to disclose she is a member of the advisory board of the Death With Dignity National Center in Portland.

The nonprofit defends the Oregon law and coordinates support for legalizing assisted suicide in other states.

“This is a study that, at best, can be referred to as propaganda,” wrote Alex Schadenberg, head of the Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, on the www.lifenews.com Web site.

The study, to be published in the October issue of the Journal of Medical Ethics, looked at 10 groups identified as vulnerable. They included senior citizens, the poor, women, minorities, the uninsured, children, the chronically ill, the less educated, AIDS patients and psychiatric patients.

Researchers found that in both Oregon and The Netherlands, the average age of patients who died with a doctor’s assistance was 70 years old. Eighty percent of the patients suffered from cancer.

Only AIDS patients appeared to request assisted suicide at higher rates than the general population, according to researchers.

This higher rate among AIDS patients, however, was for homosexual men in The Netherlands from 1985 to 1995, before more effective drugs became available to control the disease, the study said.

While Battin admitted she should have disclosed her board role, she pointed out that her views on assisted suicide are well-known from her books, articles and public appearances.

She defended the study saying it draws only on the numbers and demographic data supplied by the state of Oregon and studies in The Netherlands. Three doctors and a public health researcher were co-authors, she said.

“All the of the data involved are publicly available,” Battin said.

“It’s not as if we hid cases or misinterpreted data. This is data anybody can inspect.”

Peg Sandeen, executive director of the Death With Dignity center, defended Battin, saying she has a minimal role on the advisory board.

Besides criticizing Battin for not disclosing her background, Schadenberg said the study itself is flawed because it did not take into account that the Oregon data relied on reports by doctors who write prescriptions at the request of their patients for a fatal overdose.

“It is unlikely that a person prescribing assisted suicide would self-report information that may be considered outside the law,” Schadenberg said. Continue Reading »

September 27, 2007

Dublin radio station 98FM wrote a new page in the history of Irish broadcasting. At 8:00 p.m., hosts Paul Connolly and Allison O’Reilly interviewed Derek Humphry, a distinguished journalist, founder of The Hemlock Society, and an international spokesman for the right-to-die movement. This episode of the call-in talk show, “The Inbox,” was the first major radio program ever devoted to the topic of assisted suicide in Ireland.

This subject became Irish front-page news in 2002, when a Harvard-trained American clergyman, the Reverend George David Exoo, traveled to Ireland. He went to provide compassionate companionship and pray with Rosemary Toole as she took her own life in a Donnybrook townhouse near Dublin. Toole was suffering from Cushing’s Syndrome, an extremely painful disease, and years of profound depression. The Irish government demanded that the U.S. extradite Exoo for “assisting a suicide,” which is a felony in Ireland, but not under U.S. federal law. On June 25, 2007, Exoo was arrested and is being held in jail until a U.S. judge determines whether or not the U.S.-Irish extradition treaty applies to Exoo’s case.

Dr. Peter Saunders, a spokesman for Care, Not Killing, a British anti-euthanasia group, was the other invited guest on the program. Of the numerous listeners who called in or sent a text message to voice their opinions, all of them supported Humphry, whose wife had asked him to obtain lethal drugs for her when she was in her last painful days, dying of terminal cancer. The full text of the radio program may be found at www.compassionate-chaplaincy.com

For immediate release. For further information, contact Richard N. Côté, Media Representative for The Reverend George David Exoo
dickcote@earthlink.net / (843) 881-6080


Editors Note: During the radio program Derek Humphry also spoke about Jean’s Way, the memoir of the death of his first wife. (Jean’s Way available in paperback and eBook at http://www.finalexit.org/ergo-store

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YouTube Preview Image

Detailed illustrated advice on how to bring terminal suffering to a peaceful, nonviolent end. This video produced by journalist and author Derek Humphry, is a great companion to his book ‘Final Exit.’ Humphry, who founded the original Hemlock Society, provided the direction and spoken voice in this video adaptation of his famous ‘how-to’ book which was the #1 New York Times nonfiction bestseller in 1991. This guidance is for the possible use by a terminally or hopelessly ill competent adult who wishes to avoid further unrelieved pain and distress.

Final Exit on DVD Video Chapters:
Part 1 – Jean’s Way
Part 2 – What Kind of Death?
Part 3 – Ask a Doctor Discreetly
Part 4 – Morphine: A Patient’s Best Friend
Part 5 – What Makes a Graceful Ending?
Part 6 – Plastic Bag & Helium Methods
Part 7 – Last Bits of Advice

Available in DVD & VHS at the ERGO Store
http://www.finalexit.org/ergo-store
$20 + shipping • 46 min • NTSC • English • 2006
Directed, written & narrated by Derek Humphry

For complete info about Final Exit on DVD see:
http://www.finalexit.org/ergo-store/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=197

VHS info here:
http://www.finalexit.org/ergo-store/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=198

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Final Exit, Digital Edition 2007 (eBook PDF)
The Practicalities of Self-Deliverance and Assisted Suicide for the Dying

by Derek Humphry, founder of the Hemlock Society

Revised 3rd edition in digital format, Updated July 2007
eBook PDF • 1MB • 214 pages
ISBN 0-3853365-3-5 Price: $32.00

Brand NEW Digital Version of Final Exit, updated July 2007. Revised version of the 3rd edition paperback with critical updates and data. Download the eBook PDF via Google Checkout, PayPal or major credit card. No shipping charges.

Description:

The most famous textbook in euthanasia and assisted suicide. Includes unique step-by-step language for the competent adult who is terminally or hopelessly ill to bring their life to a peaceful, non-violent end if they wish. This can be achieved without Dr. Kevorkian or any doctor. Drug dosages and helium gas techniques are described and illustrated.

See what this eBook is all about by viewing this sample PDF containing extract pages, table of contents and author bio from ‘Final Exit, Digital Edition 2007’

Much the same methods are used by Dignitas in Switzerland, and the right to die groups in Holland and Belgium.

‘Final Exit’ also outlines the legal complications connected with dying, death, hastened death, euthanasia laws, suicide, Living Wills and Advance Directives. The family aspect is discussed and the advisability of a ‘suicide note’ (with sample) is addressed. The problems with life insurance are defined.

Appendices references include: glossary of terms connected with dying; alternative euphemistic terms for assisted dying and death; International and US right-to-die law including the Oregon Death With Dignity Act; etc.

This 2007 digital edition of ‘Final Exit’ is much changed from the earlier editions, which date from 1991 when it was, to the surprise of many, the Number One bestseller on the New York Times nonfiction list. For instance, the first and second editions did not contain the helium gas technique now used by hundreds of people for their own euthanasia. The new edition also includes new drug dosages plus updated guidance on plastic bag and other techniques.

This new digital edition of ‘Final Exit’ contains a clearly laid out, and easy to use Living Will and Durable Power of Attorney for Health Care, which I strongly advise you to print and complete. The tragic lessons of Terri Schiavo’s fourteen long years trapped in a persistent vegetative state, and the ugly fight over her fate, must not be lost on us.

In April of 2007, the national newspaper USA TODAY selected ‘Final Exit’ as one of the 25 most memorable books published in the last quarter century. The papers’ editors and critics said: “The topic of assisted suicide exploded in controversy in the 90’s, thanks to the Michigan pathologist Jack Kevorkian and his suicide machine, and this how-to manual [Final Exit] from an English journalist who helped his cancer-stricken first wife kill herself.”

If you are asking the question ‘what is assisted suicide?’ or ‘what is euthanasia and assisted death?’ then this exit book provides the clearest answers. There is, as yet, no simple ‘peaceful pill’ for self euthanasia, and law reform is lagging behind public opinion, so until then ‘Final Exit’ is the solution.

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There are hopes for new promising PAS (Physician Assisted Suicide) developments in Germany.

Dr. Roger Kusch, a former Senator in the Council of the City of Hamburg, Germany, with responsibilities for the Judiciary, announced last week that he has developed a new method of offering PAS help to terminally and chronically ill patients.

The procedures he proposes to carry out would not only be perfectly legal ones in Germany but would also obviate the necessity for PAS candidates to travel to Switzerland to obtain help under the protection of the laws existing in that country. Continue Reading »

I hear on good authority that the first steps towards having a citizens’ initiative vote in the state of WASHINGTON in November 2008 (at the time of the general and presidential election) have been taken towards a law permitting physician-assisted suicide for the dying.

Concerned groups have just created a PAC called: “It’s My Decision Committee.” It is in the throes of hiring campaign staff and renting an office, but have yet to make an official announcement. Continue Reading »

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