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Wednesday, November 21, 2001
PORTLAND, Ore. — A federal judge
on Tuesday extended a court order that has temporarily blocked a move by
the U.S. government to dismantle an Oregon law allowing physician-assisted
suicide, the only one of its kind in the nation.
U.S. District Judge Robert E. Jones
gave the state of Oregon and the U.S. Justice Department up to five months
to prepare their arguments.
The state of Oregon has asked Jones
to permanently block a Nov. 6 order by U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft
that effectively blocked the physician-assisted suicide law by prohibiting
doctors from prescribing lethal doses of federally controlled drugs to
terminally ill patients.
Jones on Tuesday extended a Nov.
8 temporary restraining order that has prevented the federal government
from taking action against doctors who help patients commit suicide under
Oregon's Death with Dignity Law.
Jones emphasized that the Oregon
law remains in effect pending his final ruling.
Under Jones' schedule for hearing
arguments in the case, he will issue a ruling on Ashcroft's order within
five months.
Jones stressed that his order "nullifies
giving any legal effect to the directive issued by John Ashcroft" -- in
other words, doctors should have not fear of legal repercussions if they
prescribe the lethal doses to terminally ill patients.
During a four-hour court hearing,
the Justice Department repeated its arguments that Oregon does not have
the right to be an exception to drug laws.
But Steve Bushong, an Oregon assistant
attorney general, argued that Ashcroft's order exceeded powers given to
him by Congress.
In his Nov. 6 directive, Ashcroft
said "prescribing, dispensing, or administering federally controlled substances
to assist suicide violates the CSA," the Controlled Substances Act, passed
by Congress in 1970 as part of the nation's war on drug use.
Bushong argued that by applying the
CSA to physicians who help terminally ill patients hasten their deaths,
Ashcroft was interpreting the CSA in a way that was not intended by Congress.
"The congressional will expressed
in the Controlled Substances Act has been violated by the action taken
by the agency here," said Bushong, referring to the U.S. Justice Department.
Many Oregon doctors have been reluctant
to assist with suicides because of Ashcroft's order, said Brad Wright,
who is with Compassion in Dying, a group that supports physician-assisted
suicide.
Advocates of Oregon's physician-assisted
suicide law contend that Ashcroft's order, if allowed to stand, will prompt
doctors nationwide to cut back on the amount of federally controlled pain
medication they provide terminally ill patients out of fear their licenses
to issue those drugs could be revoked.
Supporters of Oregon's law have vowed
to take their case all the way to the U.S. Suprem documents filed in court
are statements by four terminally ill patients who are pleading that people
like themselves be permitted to end their suffering on their own terms.
The four have joined the state of Oregon in the lawsuit against Ashcroft.
One plaintiff, 68-year-old Karl Stansell,
has terminal throat cancer. He's received chemotherapy and radiation therapy,
and is being fed through a feeding tube. His doctors have told him he has
less than six months to live as the cancer spreads through his body.
"Eventually I will be unable to swallow
anything and will die in agony," Stansell said.
Under Oregon's Death with Dignity
Law, doctors may provide -- but not administer -- a lethal prescription
to terminally ill adult state residents. It requires that two doctors agree
the patient has less than six months to live, has voluntarily chosen to
die and is capable of making health care decisions.
The measure was approved by voters
in 1994, survived legal challenges, and was re-approved in a 1997 referendum
by a wide margin.
Ashcroft's order reversed a 1998
order by his predecessor, Janet Reno. The state accused him of stripping
Oregon's right to govern the practice of medicine.
©Associated Press
Associated Press