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KEVORKIAN PAROLED: 'I'm Not Going To Do It Again'

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  • KEVORKIAN PAROLED: 'I'm Not Going To Do It Again'

    KEVORKIAN PAROLED: 'I'M NOT GOING TO DO IT AGAIN'
    By Kathleen Gray

    Detroit Free Press, MI
    Dec 14 2006

    He says he'll follow the law and be an advocate

    A compassionate doctor to some, a ghoulish murderer to others, Jack
    Kevorkian will, in less than six months, become something he hasn't
    been for more than eight years -- a free man.

    Kevorkian, a frail 78-year-old, was granted parole Wednesday by two
    members of the Michigan Parole Board after he promised not to conduct
    any more assisted suicides. He will be eligible for release June 1.

    Oakland County Prosecutor David Gorcyca said he would not appeal.

    "He has served his minimum term, and I did not object to his release,"
    Gorcyca said. "I'm certainly not particularly surprised, just due to
    his alleged health concerns."

    Known as the assisted-suicide doctor and Dr. Death, Kevorkian claimed
    to have helped at least 130 terminally or chronically ill people die
    during the 1990s, though he told parole board chairman John Rubitschun
    that he turned down six or seven prospective patients for every one
    he helped.

    He told Rubitschun he would push for the legalization of assisted
    suicide after his release, but promised to not participate in any
    form of assisted suicide or euthanasia.

    "You can put any conditions you want on me. I'm not going to do it
    again," Kevorkian said in a Dec. 7 hearing, according to an account
    based on notes from the meeting. "Anything that will bring me back
    to prison, I will avoid. Prison is not a place a live."

    Kevorkian was convicted in 1999 of second-degree murder in the Sept.

    17, 1998, death of Thomas Youk, 52, of Waterford, a victim of the
    debilitating Lou Gehrig's disease.

    The death was different from others in two ways. First, it was
    videotaped and aired on the CBS show "60 Minutes." Second, Youk was
    unable to press the button to deliver a fatal dose of drugs, and the
    tape showed Kevorkian doing it for him, which provided prosecutors with
    evidence that Kevorkian had stepped past the assisted-suicide line.

    Kevorkian's defiant approach brought physician-assisted suicide to the
    national spotlight. In 1998, an Oregon law went into effect legalizing
    the practice. But Michigan passed a law in 1999 banning it.

    Kevorkian said he should have gone the legal route to advocate for
    assisted suicide.

    "If I had to do it again, I would have done it that way," he said.

    Although Kevorkian won't be eligible for release until June 1, his
    attorney, Mayer Morganroth, said he'll once again ask Gov. Jennifer
    Granholm to release his client early from the Lakeland Correctional
    Facility in Coldwater. The governor has denied requests to commute
    the sentence four times.

    "Certainly, it's a relief; it's a man's life we're talking about,"
    Morganroth said. "The next thing we have to do is talk to the governor
    so he doesn't die in prison in the next six months."

    There is little precedent for such an early release, said Corrections
    Department spokesman Russ Marlan.

    "Each time he's done that, he's said he has less than 12 months to
    live," Marlan said. "I've personally witnessed that he appears to be
    doing pretty well."

    If his health hasn't changed since the last evaluation this summer,
    there would be no reason to release him early, Marlan said. Liz
    Boyd, spokeswoman for Gov. Jennifer Granholm, said Wednesday that
    the governor would have no comment until a commutation request is
    turned in.

    According to Morganroth, Kevorkian suffers from hepatitis C and high
    blood pressure. He takes insulin four times a day and has hardening
    of the arteries. He recently fell, breaking two ribs and his wrist.

    'He was very grateful'

    Terrence Youk, Thomas Youk's brother, said Kevorkian never should
    have been in prison.

    "I was starting to believe that they would never let him out," Youk
    said from his home in Montpelier, Vt. "Jack put himself on the line
    many, many times. All he wanted to do was help people have a choice
    at the end of their life when they don't have any other choices."

    Ruth and Sarah Holmes, a mother and daughter who have become friends
    with and frequent visitors of Kevorkian, said he can't wait to get
    home for a turkey wrap, some pickled vegetables and some fresh fruit.

    "He was very grateful that the process finally worked," said Ruth
    Holmes of Bloomfield Hills, after talking to Kevorkian on Wednesday.

    "He was not in great shape when he went in, and he's had a rough
    winter."

    Sarah Holmes attended the parole hearing and told Rubitschun that few
    people know the side of Kevorkian that she has seen -- the musician,
    the poet, the painter, the historian, the family man.

    "I tried to add the human element of Jack Kevorkian," she said. "He
    is the most honest man you would ever meet, when he gives his word,
    he sticks with it."

    But retired Waterford Police Chief John Dean, who helped investigate
    the Youk case, said he would oppose Kevorkian's parole.

    "I'm convinced he'll do it again to make a statement," he said.

    Kevorkian's first assisted suicide was in June 1990, when Janet Adkins,
    a Portland, Ore., woman with Alzheimer's disease, died in the back
    of the pathologist's rusty Volkswagen van. He helped dozens more
    people die over the years in vans, hotel rooms, private homes and in
    his Royal Oak apartment. Most of the people were women, and all the
    deaths were in Michigan. Many of the patients were from other states.

    The state revoked his medical license in 1991 after he had conducted
    five assisted suicides. Without a license, he could no longer buy
    some of the drugs he used, so he began using different techniques,
    which included the use of carbon monoxide canisters.

    He was acquitted of murder three times and got a mistrial declared
    in a fourth case.

    Southfield attorney Geoffrey Fieger defended Kevorkian in all of
    the acquittals, at turns disparaging prosecutors and at other times
    scolding his famous client for courtroom outbursts.

    "He was, at the time he went to prison, perhaps one of the most famous
    people in the world," Fieger said Wednesday. "Certainly, he moved
    the issue of individuals' rights not to suffer at the end of lives,
    far greater than any person before him."

    ******************** The parole decision

    Dr. Jack Kevorkian became eligible for parole on a 10- to 25-year
    sentence of second-degree murder after serving more than eight years
    in prison.

    A three-person panel of the Michigan Parole Board considers each
    eligible case. One member of the panel interviews the prisoner and
    passes a recommendation to a second member. If they agree, a third
    member of the panel isn't consulted, and parole is granted.

    In Kevorkian's case, John Robitschun, chairman of the parole board,
    interviewed Kevorkian on Dec. 7. He recommended that parole be
    approved, and parole board member Miguel Berrios agreed. They announced
    their decision Wednesday.

    The Oakland County Prosecutor's Office can appeal the ruling to
    the Oakland County Circuit Court, but Prosecutor David Gorcyca said
    he won't.

    ************************** How lives were ended

    With $45 worth of materials in the 1980s, Dr. Jack Kevorkian created
    what he called a suicide machine -- a simple, effective device for
    assisting people who wanted to end their lives.

    The contraption was made of three bottles: One contained saline
    solution, one held a sedative, and the last had lethal potassium
    chloride.

    Kevorkian hooked people to the device and allowed them to press a
    button, starting the intravenous flow from the bottles.

    In 1991, after his medical license was revoked, he switched to a
    canister filled with carbon monoxide because he was no longer able
    to get potassium chloride.

    Ruby Bailey *************************

    Jack Kevorkian Age: 78

    Claim to fame: Says he helped more than 130 people with various
    illnesses end their lives.

    Nickname: Dr. Death.

    Personal: Son of Armenian immigrants, raised in Pontiac, never married,
    no children.

    Education: Graduated from the University of Michigan Medical School
    in 1952. Trained as a pathologist.

    Employment: Worked at Pontiac General, Detroit Receiving and several
    California hospitals.

    Hobbies: Music, painting, languages, poetry. Published a book,
    "Glimericks," while in prison.

    ************************* Good for a laugh?

    In the heyday of his assisted-suicide practice, Dr. Jack Kevorkian's
    name became part of the nation's popular culture.

    A popular paint pattern for fishing spoons used for salmon and trout
    is called Kevorkian because it lures the fish to their deaths.

    And Kevorkian was a favorite for David Letterman's lists. Consider:

    ~U Nov. 18, 1996, ways O.J. Simpson is raising legal funds: Freelancing
    for Dr. Kevorkian.

    ~U July 23, 1996, Dr. Kevorkian pickup lines: "My friends say I
    look like Brad Pitt -- but they probably just say that so I don't
    kill them."

    ~U Feb. 14, 1996, signs you're dating a loser: "He has Dr. Kevorkian
    on speed dial."

    ~U Dec. 1, 1995, other Ann Landers mistakes: Referred "Depressed in
    Detroit" to Dr. Kevorkian.

    ******************************** Photo at
    http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID= /20061214/NEWS06/612140349/1008/NEWS06
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