Definitions
-
Euthanasia: the intentional killing by act or omission
of a dependent human being for his or her alleged benefit.
(The key word here is "intentional". If death
is not intended, it is not an act of euthanasia)
-
Voluntary euthanasia: When the person who is killed has
requested to be killed.
-
Non-voluntary: When the person who is killed made no request
and gave no consent.
-
Involuntary euthanasia: When the person who is killed
made an expressed wish to the contrary.
-
Assisted suicide: Someone provides an individual with
the information, guidance, and means to take his or her
own life with the intention that they will be used for
this purpose. When it is a doctor who helps another person
to kill themselves it is called "physician assisted
suicide."
-
Euthanasia By Action: Intentionally causing a person's
death by performing an action such as by giving a lethal
injection.
-
Euthanasia By Omission: Intentionally causing death by
not providing necessary and ordinary (usual and customary)
care or food and water.
There
is no euthanasia unless the death is intentionally caused
by what was done or not done. Thus, some medical actions
that are often labeled "passive euthanasia" are
no form of euthanasia, since the intention to take life
is lacking. These acts include not commencing treatment
that would not provide a benefit to the patient, withdrawing
treatment that has been shown to be ineffective, too burdensome
or is unwanted, and the giving of high doses of pain-killers
that may endanger life, when they have been shown to be
necessary. All those are part of good medical practice,
endorsed by law, when they are properly carried out.
History
of Assisted Suicide
The following excerpt is taken from the United States
Supreme Court ruling in the 1997 Washington v. Glucksberg
(opinion written by Chief Justice Rehnquist).
We begin,
as we do in all due process cases, by examining our Nation's
history, legal traditions, and practices. See, e.g., Casey,
505 U. S., at 849-850; Cruzan, 497 U. S., at 269-279; Moore
v. East Cleveland, 431 U.S. 494, 503 (1977) (plurality opinion)
(noting importance of "careful `respect for the teachings
of history'"). In almost every State--indeed, in almost
every western democracy--it is a crime to assist a suicide.
[n.8] The States' assisted suicide bans are not innovations.
Rather, they are longstanding expressions of the States'
commitment to the protection and preservation of all human
life. Cruzan, 497 U. S., at 280 ("[T]he States--indeed,
all civilized nations--demonstrate their commitment to life
by treating homicide as a serious crime. Moreover, the majority
of States in this country have laws imposing criminal penalties
on one who assists another to commit suicide"); see
Stanford v. Kentucky, 492 U.S. 361, 373 (1989) ("[T]he
primary and most reliable indication of [a national] consensus
is . . . the pattern of enacted laws"). Indeed, opposition
to and condemnation of suicide--and, therefore, of assisting
suicide--are consistent and enduring themes of our philosophical,
legal, and cultural heritages. See generally, Marzen, O'Dowd,
Crone & Balch, Suicide: A Constitutional Right?, 24
Duquesne L. Rev. 1, 17-56 (1985) (hereinafter Marzen); New
York State Task Force on Life and the Law, When Death is
Sought: Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia in the Medical Context
77-82 (May 1994) (hereinafter New York Task Force).
More
specifically, for over 700 years, the Anglo American common
law tradition has punished or otherwise disapproved of both
suicide and assisting suicide. [n.9] Cruzan, 497 U. S.,
at 294-295 (Scalia, J., concurring). In the 13th century,
Henry de Bracton, one of the first legal treatise writers,
observed that "[j]ust as a man may commit felony by
slaying another so may he do so by slaying himself."
2 Bracton on Laws and Customs of England 423 (f. 150) (G.
Woodbine ed., S. Thorne transl., 1968). The real and personal
property of one who killed himself to avoid conviction and
punishment for a crime were forfeit to the king; however,
thought Bracton, "if a man slays himself in weariness
of life or because he is unwilling to endure further bodily
pain . . . [only] his movable goods [were] confiscated."
Id., at 423-424 (f. 150). Thus, "[t]he principle that
suicide of a sane person, for whatever reason, was a punishable
felony was . . . introduced into English common law."
[n.10] Centuries later, Sir William Blackstone, whose Commentaries
on the Laws of England not only provided a definitive summary
of the common law but was also a primary legal authority
for 18th and 19th century American lawyers, referred to
suicide as "self murder" and "the pretended
heroism, but real cowardice, of the Stoic philosophers,
who destroyed themselves to avoid those ills which they
had not the fortitude to endure . . . ." 4 W. Blackstone,
Commentaries *189. Blackstone emphasized that "the
law has . . . ranked [suicide] among the highest crimes,"
ibid, although, anticipating later developments, he conceded
that the harsh and shameful punishments imposed for suicide
"borde[r] a little upon severity." Id., at *190.
For
the most part, the early American colonies adopted the common
law approach. For example, the legislators of the Providence
Plantations, which would later become Rhode Island, declared,
in 1647, that "[s]elf murder is by all agreed to be
the most unnatural, and it is by this present Assembly declared,
to be that, wherein he that doth it, kills himself out of
a premeditated hatred against his own life or other humor:
. . .his goods and chattels are the king's custom, but not
his debts nor lands; but in case he be an infant, a lunatic,
mad or distracted man, he forfeits nothing." The Earliest
Acts and Laws of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence
Plantations 1647-1719, p. 19 (J. Cushing ed. 1977). Virginia
also required ignominious burial for suicides, and their
estates were forfeit to the crown. A. Scott, Criminal Law
in Colonial Virginia 108, and n. 93, 198, and n. 15 (1930).
Over
time, however, the American colonies abolished these harsh
common law penalties. William Penn abandoned the criminal
forfeiture sanction in Pennsylvania in 1701, and the other
colonies (and later, the other States) eventually followed
this example. Cruzan, 497 U. S., at 294 (Scalia, J., concurring).
Zephaniah Swift, who would later become Chief Justice of
Connecticut, wrote in 1796 that
"[t]here
can be no act more contemptible, than to attempt to punish
an offender for a crime, by exercising a mean act of revenge
upon lifeless clay, that is insensible of the punishment.
There can be no greater cruelty, than the inflicting [of]
a punishment, as the forfeiture of goods, which must fall
solely on the innocent offspring of the offender. . . .
[Suicide] is so abhorrent to the feelings of mankind, and
that strong love of life which is implanted in the human
heart, that it cannot be so frequently committed, as to
become dangerous to society. There can of course be no necessity
of any punishment." 2 Z. Swift, A System of the Laws
of the State of Connecticut 304 (1796).
This
statement makes it clear, however, that the movement away
from the common law's harsh sanctions did not represent
an acceptance of suicide; rather, as Chief Justice Swift
observed, this change reflected the growing consensus that
it was unfair to punish the suicide's family for his wrongdoing.
Cruzan, supra, at
294
(Scalia, J., concurring). Nonetheless, although States moved
away from Blackstone's treatment of suicide, courts continued
to condemn it as a grave public wrong. See, e.g., Bigelow
v. Berkshire Life Ins. Co., 93 U.S. 284, 286 (1876) (suicide
is "an act of criminal self destruction"); Von
Holden v. Chapman, 87 App. Div. 2d 66, 70-71, 450 N. Y.
S. 2d 623, 626-627 (1982); Blackwood v. Jones, 111 Fla.
528, 532, 149 So. 600, 601 (1933) ("No sophistry is
tolerated . . . which seek[s] to justify self destruction
as commendable or even a matter of personal right").
That
suicide remained a grievous, though nonfelonious, wrong
is confirmed by the fact that colonial and early state legislatures
and courts did not retreat from prohibiting assisting suicide.
Swift, in his early 19th century treatise on the laws of
Connecticut, stated that "[i]f one counsels another
to commit suicide, and the other by reason of the advice
kills himself, the advisor is guilty of murder as principal."
2 Z. Swift, A Digest of the Laws of the State of Connecticut
270 (1823). This was the well established common law view,
see In re Joseph G., 34 Cal. 3d 429, 434-435, 667 P. 2d
1176, 1179 (1983); Commonwealth v. Mink, 123 Mass. 422,
428 (1877) ("`Now if the murder of one's self is felony,
the accessory is equally guilty as if he had aided and abetted
in the murder'") (quoting Chief Justice Parker's charge
to the jury in Commonwealth v. Bowen, 13 Mass. 356 (1816)),
as was the similar principle that the consent of a homicide
victim is "wholly immaterial to the guilt of the person
who cause[d] [his death]," 3 J. Stephen, A History
of the Criminal Law of England 16 (1883); see 1 F. Wharton,
Criminal Law §§451-452 (9th ed. 1885); Martin
v. Commonwealth, 184 Va. 1009, 1018-1019, 37 S. E. 2d 43,
47 (1946) (" `The right to life and to personal security
is not only sacred in the estimation of the common law,
but it is inalienable' "). And the prohibitions against
assisting suicide never contained exceptions for those who
were near death. Rather, "[t]he life of those to whom
life ha[d] become a burden--of those who [were] hopelessly
diseased or fatally wounded--nay, even the lives of criminals
condemned to death, [were] under the protection of law,
equally as the lives of those who [were] in the full tide
of life's enjoyment, and anxious to continue to live."
Blackburn v. State, 23 Ohio St. 146, 163 (1872); see Bowen,
supra, at 360 (prisoner who persuaded another to commit
suicide could be tried for murder, even though victim was
scheduled shortly to be executed).
The
earliest American statute explicitly to outlaw assisting
suicide was enacted in New York in 1828, Act of Dec. 10,
1828, ch. 20, §4, 1828 N. Y. Laws 19 (codified at 2
N. Y. Rev. Stat. pt. 4, ch. 1, tit. 2, art. 1, §7,
p. 661 (1829)), and many of the new States and Territories
followed New York's example. Marzen 73-74. Between 1857
and 1865, a New York commission led by Dudley Field drafted
a criminal code that prohibited "aiding" a suicide
and, specifically, "furnish[ing] another person with
any deadly weapon or poisonous drug, knowing that such person
intends to use such weapon or drug in taking his own life."
Id., at 76-77. By the time the Fourteenth Amendment was
ratified, it was a crime in most States to assist a suicide.
See Cruzan, supra, at 294-295 (Scalia, J., concurring).
The Field Penal Code was adopted in the Dakota Territory
in 1877, in New York in 1881, and its language served as
a model for several other western States' statutes in the
late 19th and early 20th centuries. Marzen 76-77, 205-206,
212-213. California, for example, codified its assisted
suicide prohibition in 1874, using language similar to the
Field Code's. [n.11] In this century, the Model Penal Code
also prohibited "aiding" suicide, prompting many
States to enact or revise their assisted suicide bans. [n.12]
The Code's drafters observed that "the interests in
the sanctity of life that are represented by the criminal
homicide laws are threatened by one who expresses a willingness
to participate in taking the life of another, even though
the act may be accomplished with the consent, or at the
request, of the suicide victim." American Law Institute,
Model Penal Code §210.5, Comment 5, p. 100 (Official
Draft and Revised Comments 1980).
Though
deeply rooted, the States' assisted suicide bans have in
recent years been reexamined and, generally, reaffirmed.
Because of advances in medicine and technology, Americans
today are increasingly likely to die in institutions, from
chronic illnesses. President's Comm'n for the Study of Ethical
Problems in Medicine and Biomedical and Behavioral Research,
Deciding to Forego Life Sustaining Treatment 16-18 (1983).
Public concern and democratic action are therefore sharply
focused on how best to protect dignity and independence
at the end of life, with the result that there have been
many significant changes in state laws and in the attitudes
these laws reflect. Many States, for example, now permit
"living wills," surrogate health care decisionmaking,
and the withdrawal or refusal of life sustaining medical
treatment. See Vacco v. Quill, post, at 9-11; 79 F. 3d,
at 818-820; People v. Kevorkian, 447 Mich. 436, 478-480,
and nn. 53-56, 527 N. W. 2d 714, 731-732, and nn. 53-56
(1994). At the same time, however, voters and legislators
continue for the most part to reaffirm their States' prohibitions
on assisting suicide.
Footnotes:
8. See
Compassion in Dying v. Washington, 79 F. 3d 790, 847, and
nn. 10-13 (CA9 1996) (Beezer, J., dissenting) ("In
total, forty four states, the District of Columbia and two
territories prohibit or condemn assisted suicide")
(citing statutes and cases); Rodriguez v. British Columbia
(Attorney General), 107 D. L. R. (4th) 342, 404 (Can. 1993)
("[A] blanket prohibition on assisted suicide . . .
is the norm among western democracies") (discussing
assisted suicide provisions in Austria, Spain, Italy, the
United Kingdom, the Netherlands, Denmark, Switzerland, and
France). Since the Ninth Circuit's decision, Louisiana,
Rhode Island, and Iowa have enacted statutory assisted suicide
bans. La. Rev. Stat. Ann. §14:32.12 (Supp. 1997); R.
I. Gen. Laws §§11-60-1, 11-60-3 (Supp. 1996);
Iowa Code Ann. §§707A.2, 707A.3 (Supp. 1997).
For a detailed history of the States' statutes, see Marzen,
O'Dowd, Crone & Balch, Suicide: A Constitutional Right?,
24 Duquesne L. Rev. 1, 148-242 (1985) (Appendix) (hereinafter
Marzen).
9. The
common law is thought to have emerged through the expansion
of pre-Norman institutions sometime in the 12th century.
J. Baker, An Introduction to English Legal History 11 (2d
ed. 1979). England adopted the ecclesiastical prohibition
on suicide five centuries earlier, in the year 673 at the
Council of Hereford, and this prohibition was reaffirmed
by King Edgar in 967. See G. Williams, The Sanctity of Life
and the Criminal Law 257 (1957).
10.
Marzen 59. Other late medieval treatise writers followed
and restated Bracton; one observed that "man slaughter"
may be "[o]f [one]self; as in case, when people hang
themselves or hurt themselves, or otherwise kill themselves
of their own felony" or "[o]f others; as by beating,
famine, or other punishment; in like cases, all are man
slayers." A. Horne, The Mirrour of Justices, ch. 1,
§9, pp. 41-42 (W. Robinson ed. 1903). By the mid 16th
century, the Court at Common Bench could observe that "[suicide]
is an Offence against Nature, against God, and against the
King. . . . [T]o destroy one's self is contrary to Nature,
and a Thing most horrible." Hales v. Petit, 1 Plowd.
Com. 253, 261, 75 Eng. Rep. 387, 400 (1561-1562).
In 1644,
Sir Edward Coke published his Third Institute, a lodestar
for later common lawyers. See T. Plucknett, A Concise History
of the Common Law 281-284 (5th ed. 1956). Coke regarded
suicide as a category of murder, and agreed with Bracton
that the goods and chattels--but not, for Coke, the lands--of
a sane suicide were forfeit. 3 E. Coke, Institutes *54.
William Hawkins, in his 1716 Treatise of the Pleas of the
Crown, followed Coke, observing that "our laws have
always had . . . an abhorrence of this crime." 1 W.
Hawkins, Pleas of the Crown, ch. 27, §4, p. 164 (T.
Leach ed. 1795).
11.
In 1850, the California legislature adopted the English
common law, under which assisting suicide was, of course,
a crime. Act of Apr. 13, 1850, ch. 95, 1850 Cal. Stats.
219. The provision adopted in 1874 provided that "[e]very
person who deliberately aids or advises, or encourages another
to commit suicide, is guilty of a felony." Act of Mar.
30, 1874, ch. 614, §13, 400, 255 (codified at Cal.
Penal Code §400 (T. Hittel ed. 1876)).
12.
A person who purposely aids or solicits another to commit
suicide is guilty of a felony in the second degree if his
conduct causes such suicide or an attempted suicide, and
otherwise of a misdemeanor." American Law Institute,
Model Penal Code §210.5(2) (Official Draft and Revised
Comments 1980).
|