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Kevorkian discusses assisted suicide, prison reform in Detroit

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  • Kevorkian discusses assisted suicide, prison reform in Detroit

    MLive.com, MI
    Nov 29 2007


    Kevorkian discusses assisted suicide, prison reform in Detroit

    11/29/2007, 4:46 p.m. EST
    By COREY WILLIAMS
    The Associated Press

    DETROIT (AP) - Nearly six months after his release from a Michigan
    prison, Jack Kevorkian still maintains he was right to help suffering
    people end their lives.

    The assisted suicide advocate also urged Wayne State University
    students to be vigilant of government and a courts system he accuses
    of being "dishonest and corrupt."

    Wearing his trademark blue cardigan, Kevorkian was the featured
    speaker during an often humorous, hour-long lecture Thursday
    afternoon before more than 300 people on the school's Detroit campus.
    The topic of the program was billed as prison reform, but he didn't
    address that subject until 45 minutes into the lecture.

    Instead, he talked about the U.S. Constitution's 9th Amendment and
    the importance of fighting for the rights it guarantees. Kevorkian
    used the 9th Amendment to justify his right to help someone commit
    suicide.

    "I did my duty as a physician," Kevorkian said. "The person wanted to
    die. He said: 'Please help.' I was a doctor. What was I supposed to
    do, let them suffer?"

    The 79-year-old retired pathologist claims to have helped at least
    130 people die from 1990 to 1998. He completed eight years in prison
    following his second-degree murder conviction in the death of a
    52-year-old man with Lou Gehrig's disease.

    Kevorkian is on parole for two years, and has promised not to help in
    any other assisted suicides.

    But his criticisms of the government apparently weren't softened by
    his prison stay.

    "Right now, what I'm saying is dangerous for me because the tyrant
    doesn't like it when you infringe on his power," Kevorkian said. "Law
    never creates rights. All the law can do is stop you from exercising
    it."

    He pointed to the law that prohibited the drinking of alcohol between
    1920 and 1933, and included a thinly veiled stab at assisted suicide
    opponents.

    "You have the right to drink anything you want, cyanide even,"
    Kevorkian said.

    He also stressed the need for prison reform, where some type of
    mediation is allowed between victims and those accused of crimes.

    "Punishment doesn't work," he said. "The system we have now is very
    cruel and punitive."

    Psychology student Charles Bell of Detroit said he agreed with many
    of Kevorkian's ideas, but he can see why others don't.

    "He goes against the norm," said Bell, 21.

    The largely student audience gave Kevorkian a loud ovation at the end
    of the lecture, with a dozen or more lining up afterward to meet him.

    Kevorkian also is expected to speak Jan. 15 at the University of
    Florida in Gainesville.

    "My mission is simply to teach," he said.
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