|
ACLJ
Files Brief in Support of Attorney General Ashcroft in Legal
Challenge of Physician-Assisted Suicided in Oregon
September
30, 2002
(Washington,
DC) - The American Center for Law and Justice, an international
public interest law firm that specializes in pro-life issues,
today filed a friend-of-the-court brief with the U.S. Court
of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit - supporting U.S. Attorney
General John Ashcroft's effort to give federal drug agents
the go-ahead to take action against doctors in Oregon who
assist terminally ill patients commit suicide.
"The
position of the Attorney General is legally correct and constitutionally
sound," said Jay Sekulow, Chief Counsel of the ACLJ.
"This is a critical case that centers on the defense
of human life - a case that focuses on the federal government's
right to legally prohibit physicians from prescribing life-ending
medication to assist patients commit suicide. The Attorney
General clearly has the authority to use a federal statute
to prevent physicians from assisting in taking the lives of
terminally ill patients."
In
April 2002, a federal judge in Portland, Oregon blocked the
Justice Department from using the Controlled Substances Act
to prevent physicians in Oregon from prescribing life-ending
drugs to patients who want to commit suicide. In a directive
issued in November 2001, Attorney General Ashcroft said that
assisting in suicide is not a "legitimate medical purpose"
and stated that physicians who prescribed life-ending drugs
would lose their licenses to prescribe federally controlled
drugs.
In
its brief filed today with the federal appeals court in San
Francisco, the ACLJ contends that there is legal precedence
- including decisions from the U.S. Supreme Court - that permits
the Justice Department to legally determine that suicide is
not a "legitimate medical purpose" and that physicians
who prescribe life-ending medication could be punished under
the Controlled Substances Act. The ACLJ brief is posted at
its Website at www.aclj.org.
The
Justice Department filed its appeal with the 9th circuit last
week concluding that "the Attorney General has permissibly
concluded that suicide is not a legitimate medical purpose."
The
ACLJ is an international public interest law firm that specializes
in constitutional law and works to protect the sanctity of
human life. The ACLJ is headquartered in Virginia Beach, VA
and its web site address is www.aclj.org.
|