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    Assisted suicide advocate Kevorkian dies at age 83

    DETROIT (AP) — Jack Kevorkian, the audacious doctor who spurred on the national right-to-die debate with a homemade suicide machine that helped end the lives of dozens of ailing people, died at a Detroit-area hospital after a brief illness. He was 83.

    Kevorkian died Friday at William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, where he had been hospitalized since May with pneumonia and kidney problems. He suffered from a blood clot that traveled up from his leg, according to attorney Mayer Morganroth, who was present and said his friend was "totally in peace, not in pain."

    "His medical directive was not to be given any CPR or continuing life program." Morganroth said.

    The retired pathologist, who said he injected lethal drugs that helped some 130 people die during the 1990s, likened himself to Martin Luther King and Gandhi and called prosecutors Nazis and his critics religious fanatics. He burned state orders against him, showed up at court in costume, called doctors who didn't support him "hypocritic oafs" and challenged authorities to stop him or make his actions legal.

    "The issue's got to be raised to the level where it is finally decided," Kevorkian said during a broadcast of CBS' "60 Minutes" that aired a Lou Gehrig's disease patient's videotaped 1998 death as Kevorkian challenged prosecutors to charge him in the case that eventually sent him to prison.

    Experts credit Kevorkian, who insisted that people had the right to have a medical professional help them die, with publicizing physician-assisted suicide. Even so, few states made it legal. Laws went into effect in Oregon in 1997 and Washington state in 2009, and a 2009 Montana Supreme Court ruling effectively legalized the practice in that state.

    "Somebody has to do something for suffering humanity," Kevorkian once said. "I put myself in my patients' place. This is something I would want."

    In the end, however, he was too weak to take advantage of the option he offered others, said Geoffrey Fieger, Kevorkian's former attorney.

    "If he had enough strength to do something about it, he would have," Fieger said at a news conference in Southfield. "Had he been able to go home Jack Kevorkian probably would not have allowed himself to go back to the hospital."

    The former prosecutor whose office convicted Kevorkian of second-degree murder said he found a trace of hypocrisy in Kevorkian's death.

    "I assumed that someday he'd commit suicide and tape it and air it for the world to see," said David Gorcyca, who oversaw prosecutions in the Detroit suburbs of Oakland County.

    People who died with Kevorkian's help suffered from cancer, Lou Gehrig's disease, multiple sclerosis, paralysis. They died in their homes, an office, a Detroit island park, a remote cabin and the back of Kevorkian's van.

    Nicknamed "Dr. Death," Kevorkian catapulted into public consciousness in 1990 when he used his homemade "suicide machine" in his rusted Volkswagen van to inject lethal drugs into an Alzheimer's patient who sought his help in dying.

    For nearly a decade, he escaped authorities' efforts to stop him. His first four trials, all on assisted suicide charges, resulted in three acquittals and one mistrial.

    Murder charges in earlier cases were thrown out because Michigan at the time had no law against assisted suicide; the Legislature wrote one in response to Kevorkian. He also was stripped of his medical license.

    Devotees filled courtrooms wearing "I Back Jack" buttons. But critics questioned his publicity-grabbing methods, aided by Fieger until the two parted ways before the 1999 trial in which Kevorkian was convicted of second-degree murder.

    "I think Kevorkian played an enormous role in bringing the physician-assisted suicide debate to the forefront," Susan Wolf, a professor of law and medicine at University of Minnesota Law School, said in 2000.

    "It sometimes takes a very outrageous individual to put an issue on the public agenda," she said, and the debate he engendered "in a way cleared public space for more reasonable voices to come in."

    Fieger said Friday that Kevorkian didn't accept money and "never gained any wealth" for assisting in suicides, and he was sorry to see him imprisoned for his actions.

    "I did not want him to be a martyr because I cared for him and I loved him," Fieger said.

    Kevorkian's ultimate goal was to establish "obitoriums" where people would go to die. Doctors there could harvest organs and perform medical experiments during the suicide process. Such experiments would be "entirely ethical spinoffs" of suicide, he wrote in his 1991 book "Prescription: Medicide — The Goodness of Planned Death."

    His road to prison began in September 1998, when he videotaped himself injecting Thomas Youk, a 52-year-old Lou Gehrig's disease patient, with lethal drugs. He gave the tape to "60 Minutes."

    Two months later, a national television audience watched Youk die and heard Kevorkian say of authorities: "I've got to force them to act." Prosecutors quickly responded with a first-degree murder charge. The U.S. Supreme Court twice turned back appeals.

    Kevorkian was freed in June 2007 after serving eight years of a 10- to 25-year sentence. His lawyers had said he suffered from hepatitis C, diabetes and other problems, and he had promised in affidavits that he would not assist in a suicide if he was released.

    In an interview at the time, Youk's brother Terrence said his brother received "a medical service that was requested and, from my point of view, compassionately provided by Jack. It should not be a crime."

    But Tina Allerellie became a fierce critic after her 34-year-old sister, Karen Shoffstall, turned to Kevorkian in 1997. She said in 2007 that Shoffstall, who suffered from multiple sclerosis, was struggling with depression and fear but could have lived for years longer.

    "(Kevorkian's) intent, I believe, has always been to gain notoriety," Allerellie said.

    Born in 1928, in the Detroit suburb of Pontiac, Kevorkian graduated from the University of Michigan's medical school in 1952 and became a pathologist.

    Kevorkian said he first became interested in euthanasia during his internship year when he watched a middle-aged woman die of cancer. She was so emaciated, her sagging, discolored skin "covered her bones like a cheap, wrinkled frock," Kevorkian wrote.

    After building a suicide device in 1989 from parts he found in flea markets, he sought his first assisted-suicide candidate by placing advertisements in local newspapers. Newspaper and TV interviews brought more attention.

    On June 4, 1990, he drove his van to a secluded park north of Detroit. After Janet Adkins, 54, of Portland, Oregon, met him there, he inserted a needle into her arm and, when she was ready, she flipped the switch that released a lethal flow of drugs.

    He later switched from his device to canisters of carbon monoxide, again insisting patients took the final step by removing a clamp that released the flow of deadly gas to the facKevorkian's life story became the subject of the 2010 HBO movie, "You Don't Know Jack," which earned actor Al Pacino Emmy and Golden Globe Awards for his portrayal of Kevorkian.

    Pacino paid tribute to Kevorkian during his Emmy acceptance speech and recognized the world-famous former doctor, who sat smiling in the audience.

    ___

    Associated Press writers Jeff Karoub and Ed White contributed to this report.

     

    148 comments

    • Chris F  •  11 mths ago
      I find it hard to believe that we wouldn't allow our pets continue on in misery once they have no quality of life, but we will for a family member. It makes no sense to endure such a long drawn out death when there's no hope of recovery. Dr. Kevorkian had the right idea.
      • aqua 11 mths ago
        I completely agree. People have no issue euthanizing suffering animals and allowing them to die to avoid further suffering but we don't choose this for ourselves. I worked for a vet and it occured to me often how this paradox exists. As soon as a pet is diagnosed with a terminal illness, families discuss euthanasia as the "kind and loving" option. I have had to watch my Grandmother lose all ability to talk, think, eat, and care for herself as she slowly dies from Alzheimer's. It is horrifying to see a person waste away and there is nothing kind about letting her continue living this way. It has been ten years now and it is never going to get better. Instead she will continue on and we have to watch and can do nothing...
    • beatrice  •  11 mths ago
      May he rest in peace.
    • fricknfarm  •  11 mths ago
      This man spent eight years in prison for his conviction that each of us has absolute control over our own bodies, that each of us can practice self determinantion as to how much suffering we want to endure and how much suffering our loved ones must endure as we fight a losing battle that will end in death ANYWAY. How many of you critics out there would spend even ONE DAY incarcerated for YOUR beliefs? Don't be so quick to judge, each of us is already on a journey thet has only one end. To tryt not to suffer too much at the last is NOT a terrible sin. Those who believe that God creates disease...well look at the disease causing agents we live with daily.
      • rock 11 mths ago
        you are very right. i'm 62 and in my twilight years. i ask for only 2 things in my old age.....not too much suffering, and maintaining my dignity.
    • dom  •  11 mths ago
      It looks like he died with dignity, we all should have that right. I remember my father in terrible pain from prostate cancer which had spread throughout his body. I prayed he would die to end his suffering. He did not die with dignity and he should have had the right to. Once all hope is gone why force someone to suffer, it is just not right. We are allowed to show compassion to animals and end thier suffering why not humans? My God would understand, how come my government does not?
      • Mary McPherson 11 mths ago
        Letting people die on their own terms without first bankrupting the family is bad for business in a for-profit "health care" system. While we all vote, the corporations and CEO's pay the politicians off. No wonder we get the policies we do.
      • littyluv 11 mths ago
        Same thing happened to my dad, who died from pancreatic cancer. He was in terrible, horrible pain and died without dignity. Same for my mom who died from a rare lung disorder. She basically suffocated because her lungs could not absorb oxygen. It caused brain damage before it was all over. They both suffered tremendously. Why weren't they given the right to die with dignity?
    • iMrightURaMoron  •  11 mths ago
      The ban on assisted suicide is immoral. There is nothing more precious than life, except for the quality of life. And when the quality of life has deteriorated to the point when a sane person wants to end their suffering in a dignified manner, then that person is really no longer living. It is immoral and cruel to force them to live in pain and with no dignity.
    • iMrightURaMoron  •  11 mths ago
      The ban on assisted suicide is another atrocity committed by America's taliban.
    • hoss  •  11 mths ago
      Murder was never committed here.......the real crime is the government taking away free choice of American citizens. While I don't condone suicide anymore that I condone abortions it all comes down to free choice.......neither issue forces an action on anybody. It's their own decision.
      • D. 11 mths ago
        Terri Schiavo did not have that choice. She committed no crime, yet was sentenced to death by the court.
      • Peter 11 mths ago
        Schiavo was not able to make that choice so the court decided that her husband was the best person to make the choice for her and carry out her wishes.
      • Bud 11 mths ago
        I guess you didn't read the autopsy report D. Shiavo had no brain left. Her head was filled with fluid.
    • Paul Atreides  •  11 mths ago
      Until you are in the sad, and painful position to NEED Dr. Kevorkian's help, you can't JUDGE him, or those he helped. I pray I WON"T ever be IN that position. Instead of coming on here making judgements, spend your time PRAYING that YOU DON'T, as well, my friend...
      • D. 11 mths ago
        Heb 9:27 And as it is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment:
    • Gamma Ray Burst  •  11 mths ago
      Kevorkian was a true leader and he helped many people on the road to death with dignity. It is too bad that politicians and religious types can't get on board with the idea that we all should be allow to die as we see fit.
    • Murasaki no Ryuu  •  11 mths ago
      If we ultimately decide if its wrong, it still should be brought to public forums. The more people talking intelligently about these things, the more we learn. Someone should be able to die with dignity. We have control over our own lives (and have abused it in every way possible), why is it illegal to make /informed/, conscious and resolute choices about our deaths? How strange he was, but he was a rare person and very crucial towards this discussion.
    • Michael  •  11 mths ago
      The ultimate freedom is the ability to decide, without government intervention, when you would like to die. Kevorkian was a true hero.
    • majrblkout  •  11 mths ago
      I wish to thank the doctor for trying to do the right thing.
    • EngrB  •  11 mths ago
      Euthanasia is a matter of personal choice and conviction.

      It cannot be applied generally. It is technical suicide.
    • Vanessa Isa  •  11 mths ago
      probably because he didn't want to die. it is an option.
    • Jerry  •  11 mths ago
      Dr. Kevorkian spent 8 years in jail for helping an adult end their life while late term abortions are preformed on those without a voice.
    • robert  •  11 mths ago
      R.I.P. Dr. Kevorkian. You were a good man.
    • -  •  11 mths ago
      ...and yet a puritan society with more people in prison than employment. We cry for the unborn and enslave them to poverty in the ghettos of America. Yet I have no right to die with dignity. They'll argue for the right to carry a gun, even to wiretap their neighbor.

      Singing praise unto the Lord on Sunday and on Monday kill another doctor. They'll prey on the poor and use the mentally ill to kill people. And then tell me how I should conduct my life. They tell me I'm a 'spick or a wap, a jap or a nig--r', but when I tell them I just want to die in peace they claim to like me then.
    • Maureen  •  11 mths ago
      I agree with Dr. Kevorkian. It is our right, as a human being, as long as we are of sound mind, to decide when to end our own pain and suffering. The present medical society is based on prolonging life regardless of quality of life. I believe quality far out weights quantity.
    • Guilbert  •  11 mths ago
      Was he assisted to his death? Maybe his most loyal assistant doubted his advocacy in the end?
    • lynnm  •  11 mths ago
      HERO...ANGEL OF MERCY...I only wish I could've done more to show my support of what he accomplished. May ALL of his opponents exercise their right to suffer before their deaths...now, he can't help them should they "change their minds".
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