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- Date: Tue, 22 Dec 1992 13:28:30 -0500
- Sender: CHRISTIA@ASUACAD
- From: Dan Harling <harling@ROADRUNNER.PICTEL.COM>
- Subject: Re: Assisted suicide
- Lines: 44
-
- > Date: 21 Dec 1992 09:39:14 -0500 (EST)
- > From: TQX%CORNELLC.BITNET@asu.edu
- > Subject: Assisted suicide
- > To: Multiple recipients of list CHRISTIA <CHRISTIA%ASUACAD.BITNET@asu.edu>
- >
- > In a little village not far from where I live, a despondent teenager
- > and one of his friends who was a little older were talking. Apparently
- > the older boy tired of his friends negativity and handed him a rifle
- > and told him that he might as well end it all and walked away. The
- > younger boy then did exactly that. The older youth is now serving
- > a prison sentence for assisting a suicide in spite of the fact that
- > he said he only joking. A subsequent appeal was turned down and the
- > sentence was allowed to stand. There are laws, at least in New York
- > State, against facilitating a suicide.
-
- Dang, wouldn't you think he'd feel bad enough *without* a jail
- sentence? Imprisonment or no, I'd be devastated by what had happened
- if I had jokingly made the suggestion and then seen him follow up with
- it. I'm his friend, after all! That ploy works all the time in the
- movies; how was I supposed to know he felt *that* bad?
-
- If it's true that he was only joking, then I can see how one might
- accuse him of insensitivity, or impropriety, but of facilitating a
- suicide? Certainly not intentionally. It's not like he was the kid's
- psychologist, a professional who is trained and expected to see the
- warnings and know how to tread lightly through someone else mind.
-
- People are already loath to stop at the scene of an accident, because
- they can be held responsible for any injuries they cause, no matter how
- noble their intentions. If you were to extricate someone who was
- trapped in a burning car, and you twist their ankle in the process, you
- can be sued (I have heard of a similar occurrence). Legally speaking,
- you are better off leaving him trapped in the car, because "failure to
- render assistance" is harder to enforce.
-
- With predecents like this, soon nobody will want to listen to anyone's
- problems, for fear of being implicated as an accessory to their
- successful or attempted suicide. "Yes, I did talk to him about his
- problems one week before he took his life." "Thank you. The
- prosecution rests, your honor." Pretty scary, huh?
- ____________________________________________________________________________
- Daniel A. Harling (harling@pictel.com)
- PictureTel Corp. Opinions expressed are not necessarily those of
- Peabody, MA 01960 PictureTel Corp. (so there!)
-