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On Friday, July 27, The Reverend George David Exoo was moved to the South Central Regional Jail in Charleston, West Virginia. The Republic of Ireland is seeking to have Reverend Exoo extradited for providing compassionate care and spiritual comfort while witnessing the January 25, 2002 suicide of Rosemary Toole in Dublin, Ireland.

Exoo is a Harvard Divinity School-educated minister. From 1977 to 1987, he served as pastor of the Unitarian Church of Charleston, SC, and later served several other Unitarian congregations in the U.S.

Exoo has stated publicly that he has attended at least one hundred such events in his capacity as a “suicide chaplain” and “final exit guide.” Continue Reading »

THE GOLD STANDARD BOOK FOR CHOICES IN DYING IS NOW AVAILABLE TO VIEW ON YOUR COMPUTER

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 eBook PDF format
Updated July 2007
eBook PDF • 1MB • 214 pages
ISBN 0-3853365-3-5

As of today you can download ‘Final Exit, Digital Edition’ — an updated 2007 version of ‘Final Exit, 3rd edition’ paperback — directly to your computer in eBook PDF format. Open, read and print via Adobe Acrobat Reader. Save to your desktop and laptop and/or output to your printer.

Thus far ERGO has been offering only the very popular Addendum in download (PDF) digital version. Now, after considerable editing and technical work, the entire book is available for downloading.

To view sample pages from the updated ‘Final Exit, Digital Edition 2007’, including eBook table of contents, visit http:://www.finalexit.org/final-exit-digital-edition-sample.pdf

Purchase and download full eBook PDF from
http://www.finalexit.org/ergo-store/index.php?main_page=product_info&products_id=201

This 2007 digital edition does not (unfortunately!) contain brilliant new methods of self-deliverance or assisted suicide for the terminally ill. But it does contain updated data, improved drug dosages in the light of experience, refinements to the helium hood technique, and more accurate information on the new organizations.

All the information in the popular ‘Addendum to Final Exit’ is contained in the new digital version.

The Appendix on the ‘Living Will’ and ‘Durable Power of Attorney’ has been re-formatted from the paperback book version to be clearly understood and presented page-by-page to fit your printer.

The 3rd edition of the Final Exit paperback book, with its Addendum, remains available from ERGO or bookstores.

While the ‘Final Exit, Digital Edition 2007’ eBook PDF is available only in English at present, ‘Final Exit’ has been translated into these eleven languages for sale in commercial bookstores worldwide: Spanish, French, German, Italian, Dutch, Danish, Portuguese, Japanese, Mandarin Chinese, Korean, Polish. Also in Braille.

Note: Adobe/Acrobat Reader or another PDF reader program is required to view and print the ‘Final Exit’ eBook. Adobe Reader is free software from www.adobe.com. With Adobe Reader, you can easily navigate eBook bookmarks pointing to specific chapters and appendixes, and search on keywords for particular subjects.

Visit ERGO Bookstore for this and other books and videos by Derek Humphry.

The Reverend George David Exoo, of Beckley, West Virginia, USA, is the first person ever arrested, jailed, and awaiting an extradition hearing for providing compassionate care and prayer while an Irish woman committed suicide in Dublin in 2002. His extradition court hearing is on August 17.

The Rev. George David Exoo
Prisoner # 5:07-MC-00059
Southern Regional Jail
1200 Airport Rd.
Beaver, WV 25813 USA

Note: if writing to the Reverend Exoo at the above address, enclose nothing but the letter itself in an envelope. Send no stamps, pictures, clippings, pamphlets, books, or other materials or the envelope will be returned. He cannot be contacted by email. Emailed letters sent to dickcote@earthlink.net
will be printed out on paper and promptly forwarded to him via postal mail.

Books by Derek Humphry on euthanasia and assisted suicide have appeared around the world over the last 30 years:-

‘Final Exit’ has been published throughout the English-speaking world, also in Braille, and translated into these languages: 1. Spanish. 2. French. 3. German. 4. Italian. 5. Dutch. 6. Danish. 7. Portuguese. 8. Japanese. 9. Mandarin Chinese. 10. Korean. 11. Polish.

‘Jean’s Way’ has been published in these translations: 1. Japanese. 2. Norwegian. 3. German. 4. French. 5. Turkish. 6. Spanish. 7. Polish. Also as the theatrical drama ‘Is This The Day?’

‘The Right to Die: Understanding Euthanasia’ has been published in these translations: 1. German. 2. Spanish.

The Good Euthanasia Guide – Italian.

Derek Humphry founded the Hemlock Society USA in l980 (now defunct) and is currently president of the Euthanasia Research & Guidance Organization (ERGO) based in Oregon, USA.
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On June 25, 2007, The Reverend George David Exoo, an ordained American minister and euthanasia activist, was arrested and jailed by U.S. authorities. He will face charges made against him by the Republic of Ireland for his compassionate presence at the suicide of Ms. Rosemary Toole, 48, in Dublin, Ireland.

The extradition hearing is scheduled for August 17, 2007 in Charleston, West Virginia, USA. If the extradition is successful, it will be the first time in history that anyone has been extradited for their presence at a suicide.

The George Exoo public information web page, www.compassionate-chaplaincy.com

ERGO has received a letter dated 4 July 2007 from George David Exoo, who is in prison in the Southern Regional Jail, in Beaver, West Virginia, awaiting an extradition hearing sometime in August. The Irish police wish to have him tried for assisting the suicide of a Dublin woman in 2002.

George, aged 64, a gay man, was arrested by the FBI on 25 June. He does not deny that he was in the presence of Rosemary Toole when she committed suicide, but firmly denies that he helped her. She had attempted suicide several times before.

Ireland’s Suicide Act of l993 makes it a felony to aid, abet or counsel a suicide. The penalty is imprisonment for up to 14 years.

To extradite a person, the alleged crime has to be a defined felony in BOTH countries.
It so happens that the state of West Virginia (WV) does not have in its criminal code the offence of assisting a suicide. Ireland does. The FBI and Irish Police claim that a preponderance of American states regard assisted suicide as a felony. This point is likely to be the main argument at next month’s extradition hearing.

George Exoo explains in a handwritten letter from the cell where he is in protective custody: “The legal issue here has nothing to do with what I did, or did not do [in Dublin]. Rather, it’s all jurisprudential, there being no federal law [in the US] against assisting, and no WV law outlawing it.

“There is a third place to turn: law in the preponderance of the states. Extradition requires dual criminality. A preponderance of the states will have to have the same law as Ireland. I think this will be difficult to show as, at least prima facie, the laws all appear to be different.

“My lawyer sought to get release without bond on the basis that success was improbable.
He showed that in three cases where the standard was used, the courts deferred not to preponderance but to the states.

“The Judge thought the better of this, saying at this stage Ireland deserved the widest, most liberal interpretation of the preponderance standard.

“So here I languish. Jail is not an experience I would commend for anyone. Save for a few exceptions, the guards show me no civility, no matter much I offer courtesy to them; and the inmates, largely black men aged 18-22, made me their scapegoat that I have opted to be put in protective custody.

“Sexual threats increased, leading up to my being pummeled with paperback novels. One struck me in the left eye, and had it not been for my glasses I would now surely be blind in that eye. One also threatened shanking.* So now I am in lockdown 22 hours per day…I share a space 10 ft by 14 with two others. At least there is a toilet and a semblance of air conditioning.”

His address, for letters only, is:

George D Exoo Prisoner # 5:07-MC-00059
Southern Regional Jail
Beaver, WV 25813
USA

ERGO
footnotes: ‘Shanking’ is prison slang for stabbing with a jail constructed knife.

More can be read about George Exoo, his background and his work, at this web site:-
www.compassionate-chaplaincy.com
________________________________________________________

The Final Exit Network affiliate in Illinois has changed its name back to ‘Hemlock of Illinois,’ which was its original founding name in l985. Based in Chicago, it remains affiliated to the Network.

The reason for the change given by its board members is that the group would have more members and be more visible with the name ‘Hemlock.’

A spokesperson said: “Our membership dropped because they did not like the change–thought it meaningless, and believed that, whereas Hemlock was known by a large number of people who were not necessarily members, but supported the goals and mission. Names like Compassion and Choices, and End of Life Choices were meaningless and had no resonance with the wider population.”

Last year the old Hemlock group in San Diego, California, reverted to the name chosen when it incorporated in l990 — ‘Hemlock Society of San Diego.’ Today it is not affiliated with any other organization.

At the same time, the group in Florida resumed the name ‘Hemlock Society of Florida, Inc.’ and it, too, proclaimed its independence from any other group. It was originally ‘Suncoast Hemlock’ founded in l987.

When the Hemlock Society USA (founded and so named in l980) was merged with End-of-Life Choices in 2003, both names were dropped and the national organization was then named ‘Compassion and Choices,’ with offices in Denver, Colorado, and Portland, Oregon. Many of the chapters called themselves ‘Compassion and Choices of So-and-So’ or ‘End-of-Life Choices of So-and-So’ but now some are having second thoughts and say their memberships are clamoring to have the old Hemlock name back again.

Compassion and Choices has threatened legal action again the California and Florida groups, saying that the name ‘Hemlock’ was trade-marked in l997 and no other right-to-die group can use it.

The groups are pushing back, saying that they were incorporated with the name long before the merger, and that the name was dropped because the national leadership frequently publicly stated its dislike of the name. It hampered their political connections, it was argued, by being connected to a poison and the intellectual dissident Socrates.

It is argued by those who want to keep the name that ‘hemlock’ is a famous name in history (Socrates etc), is a rampant poisonous waterweed, and a prolific American tree. Can you truly commandeer such a famous noun?

Maybe behind it all is money? Many veteran Hemlockers have bequeathed money to “The Hemlock Society” or ‘Hemlock’ and this may be how their wills still read. For years the right-to-die groups have urged their members to be very specific in naming exactly who they want to benefit from their estate.

—- Derek Humphry 12 July 2007
President, Euthanasia Research & Guidance Organization (ERGO)

The Register-Herald in Beckley, West Virginia, reported 30 June 07:-

Ex-minister remains jailed

By Matthew Hill, Register-Herald Reporter

— A former Beckley Unitarian minister was ordered Friday to remain incarcerated at Southern Regional Jail until a hearing to determine whether he will be extradited to Ireland — where he is wanted for allegedly assisting a woman there with her suicide five years ago — takes place.

U.S. District Magistrate Judge Clarke VanDervort added the caveat that he wants to expedite the process as much as possible between Friday’s detention hearing and an extradition hearing for George Exoo, 64. Although a firm date was not scheduled for the extradition hearing due to conflicting schedules among the judge and attorneys for both sides, the first week of August was mentioned as a distinct possibility.

“I would like to make a final decision and get to final proceedings as soon as possible. I would like to regard time as of the essence,” VanDervort declared.

While it was too late to alter the ruling, he acknowledged and expressed verbal appreciation for a handful of Exoo supporters who appeared ready and willing to offer property and/or money as bond for Exoo. Exoo, wearing an orange SRJ jumpsuit and ankle-cuffs, smiled and waved to them during the hearing.

VanDervort ended up ruling on the side of what he termed a liberal construction of the extradition treaty that has existed between the United States and Ireland since 1983.

“In view of the requirement that the court liberally construe the treaty, the court will take the road of whatever supports the process for proceeding. There are three levels, and the circumstances in this case require considering the third point,” he said, referring to whether a majority of states around the country have laws criminalizing assisted suicide. According to Assistant U.S. Attorney Philip Wright’s research, they do.

Charleston lawyer Edward Weis, Exoo’s federal public defender, had tried to make the argument that federal law must explicitly outlaw the activity for his client to remain detained and possibly be extradited.

“Laws differ from state to state,” Weis asserted. “This is not a majoritorian question. Dual criminality requires either federal or West Virginia criminality, not a majority of states.”

Wright countered that the detention hearing was still too early in the process to be a stage for arguing the merits or flaws of the treaty itself.

“Our position is that this is the law. Let’s rule on detention, and then examine the merits at a full-blown extradition hearing. Extradition treaties are to be construed liberally, so as to enhance or enforce the treaty. We can’t allow someone in West Virginia (which has no specific statute against euthanasia) or Oregon (where assisted suicide is legal) to escape, whereas someone from Ohio or Texas could not,” he said.

Probability of success (on Exoo’s part) was raised by the judge as a special circumstance in the case that was not met by Weis. “Had he (Exoo) presented witnesses for an alibi or shown a probability of success on the basis of legal theories, while there may be some possibility of success, it would not be a high probability,” VanDervort stated, observing earlier that Weis’ arguments seemed to be based more on legal, rather than factual, theories.

Wright also claimed Exoo was not likely to voluntarily surrender himself to Irish authorities if released and then confronted with extradition.
—–
Exoo was arrested by federal authorities on Monday in connection with his purported participation in Ireland’s first-ever assisted suicide.
Rosemary Toole, 49, reportedly overdosed on drugs and breathed helium through a plastic bag until she died on Jan. 25, 2002, in Dublin. Investigators believe Exoo was paid $6,000 to participate in the woman’s death. Toole is said to have spent more than a year contacting right-to-die representatives.
Exoo has denied assisting in the suicide, but has admitted he was present when the woman ended her life.
Irish authorities have been involved from the inception of the case in keeping abreast of the American investigation.
Bryan O’Connell, an Irish reporter, said in 2002 that Exoo could face stiff penalties if convicted.
In Ireland, anyone caught “aiding, abetting, counseling or procuring the suicide of another” is guilty of a felony and can be jailed up to 14 years, according to a law enacted there in 1993.
Irish authorities began formally seeking Exoo’s extradition in 2004.

For George Exoo’s life and story, please visit his ‘Compassionate Chaplaincy’

_______________________________________________

On Monday morning, June 25, 2007, The Reverend George David Exoo, a Unitarian minister and euthanasia (literal meaning: “good death”) advocate living in Beckley, West Virginia, was arrested by FBI agents and taken to the Southern Regional Jail, near Beckley. There he was booked and jailed, pending a hearing on Friday, June 29, at 2:30 at the Federal Building in Beckley. At that time it will be determined if he is eligible for bond while awaiting legal proceedings to determine if there are any legal grounds for his extradition to Ireland.

Irish police want to prosecute Exoo for his role in the suicide death of Rosemary Toole (formally known as Rosemary Elizabeth Toole Gilhooly), a 48-year-old Irish woman who suffered from the debilitating effects of Cushing’s Syndrome and profound depression. Toole ended her life by taking a massive overdose of sleeping pills mixed with alcohol and by inhaling helium gas. This method of suicide, which Ms. Toole chose to employ, is explained in the international best-selling book, Final Exit, by Derek Humphry, founder of The Hemlock Society USA.

Exoo denies that he took any active role in Toole’s suicide, stating that he broke no laws by providing her with suicide counseling, observing her death, and providing a compassionate presence as she carried out her last wishes by her own hand. He will contest any attempts to extradite him.

Read the fuller story at the Compassionate Chaplaincy site.

Hunger for knowledge about hastened death appears to be growing worldwide. Derek Humphry, author of five well-known books on assisted suicide and voluntary euthanasia, most notably ‘Final Exit,‘ has noticed an upsurge in demand for his books worldwide which bodes well for the wider progress of the movement for the right to choose to die.

Humphry is the founder of the original Hemlock Society USA in l980 (dissolved in 2003) and today heads the Euthanasia Research & Guidance Organization (ERGO).

A publisher in Turkey has purchased the rights to ‘Jean’s Way’ in translation, somewhat surprising in a country overwhelmingly Muslim. ‘Jean’s Way’ — an account of how he helped his terminally ill first wife die — was first published in l978, and has never been out of print in English since.

The same book will soon appear in Spanish under the title “Jean Murio A Su Manera,’ published in Mexico City. And a South Korea publisher has recently purchased the translation rights to ‘Final Exit.’

In March, an Italian publisher — Eleuthera in Milan — published in translation Humphry’s ‘The Good Euthanasia Guide’ under the title “Liberi Di Morire: Le Ragioni Dell’Euthanasia”.

Eleuthera has kept ‘Final Exit’ in print in Italy [Eutanasia: Uscita Di Sicurezza] since it was first published in l991. It has just renewed the contract for a further ten years.

From the well-known publisher in Barcelona, Tusquets, ‘Final Exit’ has consistently been kept in print under the title ‘El Ultimo Recurso’ since l992, as well as ‘The Right to Die’ entitled ‘El Derecho A Morir: Comprender La Eutanasia.’

There have also been recent inquiries for these books from publishers in China, which is going through its own controversial debate on the ethics of euthanasia.

Tthe World Federation of Right to Die Societies, an umbrella group, has grown from zero in l976 when started to 38 groups in 23 countries.

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