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Jr_Bullit
11-11-2004, 09:31 AM
How guilty do you think he was in the first place? :)

Citing Poor Health, Kervorkian Asks For Pardon
Last Updated: 11/8/2004 2:39:50 PM

An attorney for Jack Kevorkian asked the state parole board Monday to recommend that the assisted suicide advocate be released from prison for health reasons.

Attorney Mayer Morganroth said Kevorkian has health problems including high blood pressure, a hernia and arthritis, and the board should urge Gov. Jennifer Granholm to either pardon him or commute his sentence.

Kevorkian's blood pressure "has been extremely volatile in nature and has risen to the danger level for a heart attack at times," Morganroth wrote in the request.

Kevorkian, 76, has served 51/2 years of a 10- to 25-year prison sentence for second-degree murder and his health has worsened, Morganroth said. He is not eligibile for parole until 2007.

The request comes a week after U.S. Supreme Court justices decided against hearing Kevorkian's appeal of his conviction for the 1998 poisoning of Thomas Youk.

Youk suffered from Lou Gehrig's disease and his death, which Kevorkian called a mercy killing, was videotaped and shown on national television.

Morganroth said Kevorkian would not assist in any more suicides if he is released.

Russ Marlan, a spokesman for the state Department of Corrections, said the department had not yet received Kevorkian's request. But he said medical commutations are normally granted only for inmates expected to live a year or less.

"We have plenty of prisoners that have cataracts and arthritis, but that doesn't mean they should be granted a commutation," Marlan said. "They're only granted for offenders that have little chance of surviving very much longer."

The request for pardon or commutation is Kevorkian's second. The state parole board voted against his first request a year ago.

Jr_Bullit
11-11-2004, 09:32 AM
For those of you who don't know much about him:

Jack Kevorkian

Born: 26-May-1928
Birthplace: Pontiac, MI

Gender: Male
Ethnicity: White
Occupation: Doctor

Level of fame: Famous
Executive summary: Euthanasia enthusiast

Dr. Jack Kevorkian has been known as "Dr. Death" since at least 1956, when he conducted a study photographing patients' eyes as they died. Results established that blood vessels in the cornea contract and become invisible as the heart stops beating. That's science, folks. In a 1958 paper, he suggested that death row inmates be euthanized, and their bodily organs harvested. In 1960, he proposed using condemned prisoners for medical experiments.

In 1989, a quadriplegic, too handicapped to kill himself, publicly asked for assistance, and Dr. Kevorkian began tinkering on a suicide machine. But a different patient -- Janet Adkins, a 54-year-old with Alzheimer's -- was the first to test the device. It worked. Kevorkian then provided services to at least 45 and possibly many more satisfied customers.

In 1997, however, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that Americans who want to kill themselves -- but are physically unable to do so -- have no Constitutional right to end their lives. Kevorkian is now serving 10-25 years in prison, and reportedly in ill health.

Jr_Bullit
11-11-2004, 09:33 AM
Or for a more in-depth review: http://www.rotten.com/library/bio/mad-science/jack-kevorkian/

Westy
11-11-2004, 09:42 AM
I believe in the right to die but Kevorkian knew the laws and decided to test them.

valve bouncer
11-11-2004, 09:47 AM
I believe in the right to die but Kevorkian knew the laws and decided to test them.
Agreed, however I don't see how keeping an 80 year old man in prison is doing anyone any good.

Jr_Bullit
11-11-2004, 09:50 AM
Except that he announced when going in that when released he'd do it again....

People should have the right to off themselves at any point in their life, and it's especially understandable when you're full of pain, at the end of your natural life....

but Kevorkian pursued "assisting" people with a very creepy lust

Westy
11-11-2004, 09:51 AM
Agreed, however I don't see how keeping an 80 year old man in prison is doing anyone any good.

We American love to incarcerate, why else do you think we have the highest per capita prison population in the world. Hell we spend almost as much money on jails than we do on education, and we damn well better have prisoners to show for it.

valve bouncer
11-11-2004, 10:16 AM
We American love to incarcerate, why else do you think we have the highest per capita prison population in the world. Hell we spend almost as much money on jails than we do on education, and we damn well better have prisoners to show for it.
I thought it was because you all love jail sex so much. Not that there's anything wrong with that. :nono: ;) :D

Slugman
11-11-2004, 10:29 AM
I believe in the right to die but Kevorkian knew the laws and decided to test them.


Except that he announced when going in that when released he'd do it again....

People should have the right to off themselves at any point in their life, and it's especially understandable when you're full of pain, at the end of your natural life....

but Kevorkian pursued "assisting" people with a very creepy lust

But isn't this how you get people to change - by challenging the rules w/out backing down?

In a sense, he is doing the same thing Rosa Parks did...

However when you go to a parole board and say you're going to do it again... don't pack before hand.

IMO - he did nothing wrong, what he did is to give comfort and remove suffering. He should never have been in there because the laws are bogus and based on religious ideals.

pnj
11-11-2004, 10:51 AM
he should be free. set him free!!!

did you see the guy who just got released, or will be soon, because DNA said he DIDN'T commit the rape and murder he was charged with NINETEEN YEARS ago?

no amount of money can bring those years back.
"Counselor, could you be there?!"

s1ngletrack
11-11-2004, 11:02 AM
Or for a more in-depth review: http://www.rotten.com/library/bio/mad-science/jack-kevorkian/

Ah... another rotten.com fan.

I don't think that he should've been locked up to begin with.

s1ngletrack
11-11-2004, 11:06 AM
Personally, I know that I feel much safer with serial rapists and pedophiles out on the streets than I would knowing that Dr. Kevorkian and all of those terrible pot dealers were out running around. :rolleyes:

Silver
11-11-2004, 11:34 AM
I thought it was because you all love jail sex so much. Not that there's anything wrong with that. :nono: ;) :D

It's only wrong if you're not in jail. Then it's a dirty, immoral, and decadent sin. If you happen to be in jail, it's God's righteous punishment.