This paper is a research and persuasive paper on the legalization of euthanasia.
Assisted Suicide: Ethical or immoral? Assisted Suicide, also known as mercy killing, occurs when a physician provides the means (drugs or other agents) by which a person can take his or her own life. This assistance is one of the most debated issues today in society followed by abortion. Physicians are frequently faced with the question of whether or not assisted suicide is ethical or immoral. Although assisted suicide is currently illegal in almost all states in America, it is still often committed.
Is assisted suicide ethical? Studies have found that the majority of Americans support assisted suicide. One must weigh both sides of the argument before they can decide. On July 26, 1997, the U.S. Supreme Court unanimously upheld decisions in New York and Washington State that criminalized assisted suicide. These decisions overturned rulings in the 2nd and 9th Circuit Courts of Appeal, which struck down state statutes banning physician-assisted suicide. Those courts had found that the statutes, which prohibited doctors from prescribing lethal medication to competent, terminally ill adults, violated the 14th Amendment. In striking the appellate decisions, the U.S. Supreme Court found that there was no constitutional right to die, but left it to individual states to enact legislation permitting or prohibiting physician-assisted suicide.
As of April 1999, physician-assisted suicide is illegal in the majority of states. Over thirty states have enacted statutes prohibiting assisted suicide, and of those that do not have statutes, a number of them arguably prohibit it through common law. Currently, Oregon is the only state that has legalized assisted suicide. The Oregon statute, which came into effect in October 1997, states that a doctor may prescribe, but not administer, a lethal dose of medication to a patient who has less than six months to live. It is required that two separate doctors...
More Death Penalty
essays:
Capital punishment, the legal infliction of the death penalty
... US Courts of Appeals (federal) who will decide if the trial court has erred in some way. If the appeal is granted In the state court system the appellate will be sent to the State Supreme Court, or ...
Euthanasia
... banning of assisted suicide was upheld as being constitutional (Pozgar & Santucci, 2005). However, the U. S. Supreme Court has also agreed that the states may decide whether or not they will allow physician-assisted suicide (Pozgar ...
Cost of Capital Punishment
... district court of appeals. After exhausting state appeals, a defendant can file federal habeas corpus petitions. Appeals to federal courts must be confined to alleged violations of the ...
OPPOSING VIEWS ON THE DEATH PENALTY IN THE U.S
... S. Court of Appeals for the Circuit in which the case was tried. There is also one chance to present any facts which were overlooked or unavailable at the time of the trial. All other review, such as Supreme Court review ...
Capital Punishment Is Wrong
... automatic state review, post-conviction hearing, and Supreme Court petitions. The cost of maintaining the death row inmates in prisons, clemency hearings, and of the ...
This paper discusses the evolution of the death penalty in the US and arguments for and against its application to juveniles.
... highest State court of appeals to ensure that the penalty is in proportion to the gravity of the offense and is imposed even-handedly under State law. By 1995, 38 States and the Federal Government had enacted statutes authorizing ...
The Death Penalty
... Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals. If the Ninth Circuit finds error, it may reverse the district court's decision either on behalf of the defendant or on behalf of the state, and ...
Term paper opposing the death penalty.
... the Supreme Court of the United States and it has remained an issue ever since. In 1972, the court struck down existing capital punishment statutes on ... A physician named Harold Hillman who is also an expert in electrical burns, studied the autopsies of thirteen ...