AP/ May 14, 2012, 9:43 PM

Right-to-die group Final Exit Network indicted by Minnesota jury

This photo provided by the Baltimore Police Department shows Dr. Lawrence D. Egbert, 81, Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2009, in Baltimore.

This photo provided by the Baltimore Police Department shows Dr. Lawrence D. Egbert, 81, Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2009, in Baltimore. / AP Photo/Baltimore Police Department

(AP) HASTINGS, Minnesota - A grand jury has indicted a U.S. right-to-die group and several members for their actions in the 2007 suicide of a suburban woman, prosecutors announced Monday.

The 17-count indictment charges the medical director of Final Exit Network, Lawrence Egbert of Baltimore, and three other officials with felony counts of assisting suicide and interference with a death scene, a gross misdemeanor. It also charged the group in its corporate capacity.

"This investigation and prosecution is not a politically motivated attack on the right-to-die movement," prosecutor James Backstrom said at a news conference. "Rather, it is an effort to bring to justice a corporation and several of its officers and volunteers who we are alleging advised, encouraged or assisted Doreen Dunn in the taking of her own life on May 30, 2007, in violation of Minnesota law."

Officials with First Exit Network have said they acted within the law and within their free speech rights when they counseled Dunn. She was 57 when she committed suicide at her Apple Valley home after suffering through a decade of intense, chronic pain following a medical procedure that went wrong. She died of asphyxia from inhaling helium, which Backstrom said is the method the group generally recommends.

Minnesota law prohibits aiding, advising or encouraging a suicide, and Backstrom said he's obligated to enforce that.

"If the people of our state wish to authorize assisted suicide, this should be done through clearly defined laws enacted by the Minnesota Legislature with proper restrictions and requirements to ensure the protection of a terminally ill patient and with the direct involvement of the patient's physician and family," he said.

The indictment names Egbert, 84; Jerry Dincin, 81, Roberta Massey, 66, and Thomas Goodwin, 65. Backstrom said Egbert and Dincin traveled to Minnesota to be with Dunn on the day she died, and that they likely dumped the equipment she used to kill herself in a trash bin on their way back to the airport.

Wendell Stephenson, the president of Final Exit Network and a philosophy instructor at Fresno City College in California, said he thought the indictments were "almost certainly misplaced."

"We do not assist in suicide. We do not violate the laws in assisting suicide. We are very careful about that," he said.

He added: "The taxpayers' money is being badly wasted in trying to prosecute us. They wasted it in Georgia. They wasted it in Arizona."

Final Exit Network is run by volunteers who help U.S. residents who "are suffering from intolerable medical circumstances, are mentally competent, (and) want to end their lives," according to the New Jersey-based group's website. It does not require that people who seek its help be terminally ill, and Dunn was not.

The group says Minnesota's law is unconstitutional because it violates freedom of speech by preventing it from educating people on how to commit suicide. It also contends on its website that it's careful to avoid crossing the line into assisting suicides. It says volunteers may attend deaths to provide emotional support, but they don't provide the means for members to kill themselves and they don't provide physical assistance in doing so.

A ruling is expected within the next couple of months on a free-speech challenge to Minnesota's statute in another case. The Minnesota Court of Appeals heard oral arguments last month in the case of an ex-nurse who stalked online suicide chat rooms and was convicted of encouraging two depressed people to kill themselves.

An autopsy in 2007 concluded Dunn died of coronary artery disease and noted that she had suffered from chronic pain. It did not list her death as a suicide.

Police began investigating her death after the Georgia Bureau of Investigation sent a letter to other law enforcement agencies in 2009 about a criminal case there. Charges against four Last Exist Network members were dismissed when the Georgia Supreme Court ruled in February that the state's ban on suicide assistance ads was an unconstitutional restriction on speech.

Last year in Arizona, a jury found Egbert, the medical director, not guilty of conspiring to assist in a suicide. The jury deadlocked in the case of a volunteer accused of assisting and conspiring to assist in the same suicide. Massey and another volunteer pleaded guilty to misdemeanors.

None of the four defendants were in custody. Backstrom said they would have to appear in court for arraignment at some point or face extradition. Backstrom said Minnesota sentencing guidelines call for up to a year in jail for the four defendants if convicted on the felony charges.

© 2012 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
13 Comments Add a Comment
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MissRedd1004 says:
Yes but When a perfectly heathly 28yr takes his life beacuse this group basically walks you through a pain free way to do it! That;s the problem! I just lost my bestfriend last week because he followed one on this stupid videos....it's sick
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hypnotoad72 says:
Right to life, but then we make it impossible to live, and all that begins the moment an insurance company states a newborn has a preexisting condition and therefore cannot be covered...

Yet we go after comparatively harmless kooks like "right to die"...
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reality_sanity says:
by slatep May 15, 2012 1:25 AM EDT
...
It's my understanding that the Obamacare plan calls for mandatory counseling every five years, ...

---

The same old lies -- The law calls for OPTIONAL counseling (at the request of the PATIENT) to be reimbursed (payment to the provider) once in any 5 year period per patient.
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hypnotoad72 replies:
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And Romney had his hands in "Obamacare" as well:

http://www.forbes.com/sites/aroy/2011/10/11/how-mitt-romneys-health-care-experts-helped-design-obamacare/
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DCCorruption says:
telling others who to live their lives.....that should be telling others how to live their lives.
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djseavy says:
It's all about money. People who choose to avoid suffering until their final breath are a threat to the medical community and the legal community. Backstrom can claim it's not political all he wants to, but a prosecutor does nothing unless it's political and he/she can score points.
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hypnotoad72 replies:
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*bingo*
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TJphoto says:
I only hope that when the people who oppose "the right to die" are faced with the same situation, that someone tells them, "you must face the value of your convictions". It's called Karma
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hypnotoad72 replies:
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If Karma, God, or magical tadpoles existed, we'd all be in a better society by now...
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Jaylah54 says:
Exactly, Eric.
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Ericwvb says:
What is wrong with this country? We consider anyone who doesn't euthanize a pet that suffers year after year from unbearable pain a cruel person, and pets can't even clearly communicate to us to tell us they want to die. And yet, a human being in the same exact situation, who clearly expresses a wish to end their life, is forced to suffer as long as possible.
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DCCorruption replies:
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Eric,
The answer to this is because the flag waving GOP/Libertarians are all about THEIR views and rights and controlling those who don't agree with them. Thy will tell you that you don't have the right to privacy, the right to marry who you want, the right to die a less painful death etc. Oh yes, the phony Christian right wingers are all about control and telling others who to live their lives.
hypnotoad72 replies:
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How else do hospitals, insurance companies, and pharmacists make their money?
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