Judge Daniel Ottolia has rejected a motion to vacate his decision overturning the deceptively named, "End of Life Options Act." The act remains null and void. For more information, click here Pages to Show
- California Home
- Choice is an Illusion, Main Site
- Attorney Slams New Assisted-Suicide Bill
- ABX2-15 Talking Points
- "Big Business" & Assisted Suicide
- New Bill For Special Session: ABX2-15
- Quick Facts About Assisted Suicide
- Prohibition Against Assisted Suicide is Constitutional
- Memo to Assembly
- John Kelly: Second Thoughts on ABX2-15
- Baker Amendments Unenforceable
- Assisted Suicide Bill Narrowly Passes Assembly
- Lawsuit Filed To Stop Assisted Suicide
Thursday, May 31, 2018
Judge Ottolia Rejects Motion to Vacate Order Invalidating Assisted Suicide/Euthanasia Law
Judge Daniel Ottolia has rejected a motion to vacate his decision overturning the deceptively named, "End of Life Options Act." The act remains null and void. For more information, click here
Labels:
assisted suicide,
euthanasia
Thursday, May 24, 2018
Assisted Suicide Law is Unconstitutional; Decision Upheld by Appeals Court
Alex SchadenbergExecutive Director - Euthanasia Prevention Coalition
Last week, Riverside Superior Court Judge, Daniel Ottolia, overturned California's assisted suicide law when he ruled that the legislature acted outside the scope of its authority [when enacting it]
California passed the state's assisted suicide law in a special health care funding session after the legislature failed to pass the assisted suicide bill in its normal session.
Judge Ottolia, held that "the End of Life Option Act [legalizing assisted suicide] does not fall within the scope of access to healthcare services," and that it "is not a matter of health care funding."
Tuesday, May 15, 2018
Stephanie Packer Denied Life Saving Drugs
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| Ms. Packer |
After the End of Life Option Act was implemented, Stephanie’s insurance company denied coverage of life-saving chemotherapy treatment, but said it would pay for “aid-in-dying” drugs, which would cost $1.20.
Stephanie has spoken out against assisted suicide in California and other states, saying, “I am so grateful that California’s assisted suicide law was overturned today. The bill’s proponents tout dignity, choice, compassion, and painlessness. I am here to tell you that nothing could be further from the truth. Choice is really an illusion for a very few. For too many, assisted suicide will be the only affordable ‘treatment’ that is offered them.”
Labels:
End of Life Option Act,
Stephanie Packer
Assisted Suicide Law Ruled Unconstitutional
NAPA, Calif., Life Legal — A California judge overturned the state’s assisted suicide law this morning, ruling that the legislature acted outside the scope of its authority when it enacted the End of Life Option Act.The Act’s sponsors introduced the bill in a special session of the legislature convened by Governor Jerry Brown to address Medicaid funding shortfalls, services for the disabled, and in-home health support services.
Labels:
assisted suicide,
euthanasia,
Unconstitutional
Monday, October 2, 2017
Washington Post: I Prepared to End my Life, But I Kept Living
To view the entire article, click here.
In April 2015, at the age of 55, I was diagnosed with one of the most lethal and aggressive brain tumors, a brainstem glioblastoma multiforme in an advanced stage. The prognosis was both grim and precise: Without treatment, I might have a few months; with treatment, I could last six months. If I beat overwhelming odds, I’d toast the new year one last time.
Labels:
Washington Post
Monday, June 12, 2017
An 8-year-old was taken off life support, his organs donated. Now, Los Angeles police are investigating
Richard Winton and Harriet RyanContact ReportersBy the time Cole Hartman arrived at Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center, he was in grave condition. The 8-year-old had gone into cardiac arrest after nearly drowning in a washing machine at his Castaic home. Paramedics had gotten his heart beating again, but he remained in a coma and on a ventilator.
Physicians at UCLA's pediatric intensive care unit told Cole's family that the child was not brain-dead but would never recover normal neuro function and could never awaken, according to an entry in his medical chart.
The Hartmans decided to take Cole off life support and donate his organs. He was removed from the ventilator and, 23 minutes later with his family at his bedside, pronounced dead by an anesthesiologist.
The seemingly peaceful death four years ago is now the subject of an investigation by Los Angeles police and the district attorney's office. Homicide detectives are looking into an allegation by a coroner's investigator that the anesthesiologist gave Cole a fatal dose of the opioid fentanyl to hasten his death and increase the likelihood his organs could be harvested. No charges have been brought.
A lawyer for the anesthesiologist, Dr. Judith Brill, said the allegation was "factually wrong and patently offensive."
Brill's "only concern was to assure that this child, who had drowned and was never going to recover, would not suffer any pain following the removal of life support," attorney Mark Werksman wrote in an email to The Times.
A rare criminal investigation
The probe is one of only a handful of known criminal investigations into a doctor's role in an organ donation, and it offers a window into the ethical issues that can play out during a donor's last moments of life.
"As you can imagine, this is very complicated," said LAPD Capt. William Hayes, who oversees the elite Robbery-Homicide Division conducting the investigation. "We need to clearly understand what was done and the implications of those actions."
To read more, go here
Friday, October 21, 2016
"If Dr. Stevens had believed in assisted suicide, I would be dead"
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| Jeanette Hall and her son, Scott, in November 2000 |
I live in Oregon where assisted suicide is legal. Our law passed in 1997 by a ballot measure that I voted for.
In 2000, I was diagnosed with cancer and told that I had 6 months to a year to live. I knew that our law had passed, but I didn’t know exactly how to go about doing it. I tried to ask my doctor, Kenneth Stevens MD, but he didn’t really answer me. In hindsight, he was stalling me.
Labels:
assisted suicide,
Jeanette Hall
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