Los Angeles Times

AID IN DYING LAW IS STRUCK DOWN

Ruling, on procedural grounds, gives state 5 days to file appeal.

- By Soumya Karlamangl­a

A Riverside County judge overturned California’s physician-assisted suicide law on Tuesday, giving the state attorney general five days to file an appeal to keep the law in place.

California’s law, which allows terminally ill patients to request lethal medication­s from their doctors, has been the subject of a fierce and emotional debate since it was approved in 2015. The state was the fifth in the nation to legalize the practice.

Superior Court Judge Daniel A. Ottolia said Tuesday that the California Legislatur­e violated the law by passing the End of Life Option Act during a special session dedicated to healthcare issues, according to the plaintiffs in the case as well as advocates for the law.

“We’re very happy with the decision today,” said Alexandra Snyder, head of the Life Legal Defense Foundation, one of the groups that filed the lawsuit. “We will now wait and see what the attorney general does.”

In a statement emailed to The Times, California Atty.

Gen. Xavier Becerra said: “We strongly disagree with this ruling, and the state is seeking expedited review in the Court of Appeal.”

California’s law allows patients with less than six months to live to request end-of-life drugs from their doctors, a practice that has been allowed in Oregon for more than 20 years. Now, nearly 1 in 5 Americans live in a state where physiciana­ssisted suicide is legal, according to advocacy group Compassion and Choices.

In the first six months that California’s law was in effect, more than 100 people made use of it to end their lives. State data show 59% of them had cancer.

John C. Kappos, an attorney representi­ng Compassion and Choices, which advocated for the law, said he believes the passage of the law was constituti­onal because aid in dying is a healthcare issue.

“Ultimately, we are confident an appeals court will rule the Legislatur­e duly passed the End of Life Option Act and reinstate this perfectly valid law, which the strong majority of California­ns support,” he said in a statement.

He cited a 2015 survey conducted by UC Berkeley that found that 76% of California­ns supported allowing terminally ill patients to take their own lives.

Harry Nelson, a healthcare attorney in Los Angeles, said he thinks it’s unlikely the law will be overturned permanentl­y. He said that even if the court’s decision stands, the Legislatur­e could reinstate the law with whatever changes the court deems necessary.

“I think this is a shortterm victory for people who object on religious principles to the availabili­ty of this option,” said Nelson, who represents several doctors who have written prescripti­ons under the law.

He said Ottolia’s decision to give Becerra five days to file an emergency appeal was “aggressive.”

“It basically leaves the attorney general’s office with a really narrow window to do everything they need to do to get the court of appeals to intervene and uphold and continue the law,” he said.

The push for physiciana­ssisted suicide in California came after Brittany Maynard, a 29-year-old California­n with brain cancer, moved to Oregon to take advantage of its end-of-life law.

When Gov. Jerry Brown signed the law, he said he was unsure what he would want in such a situation but imagined “it would be a comfort to be able to consider the options afforded by this bill. And I wouldn’t deny that right to others.”

Dan Diaz, Maynard’s husband, who advocated for the law on her behalf, said in a statement that he would “once again focus all my efforts to convince Gov. Brown, the attorney general and the courts to keep this law in effect.”

Writing the lethal prescripti­ons is voluntary for doctors and medical facilities in California, and some, including all Catholic and church-affiliated hospitals, have not allowed their physicians to prescribe such medicines. California’s data from the law’s first six months show that 173 physicians wrote the 191 prescripti­ons statewide.

The suit was originally filed on the day the law took effect two years ago, when a judge denied a temporary restrainin­g order that would have stopped the law from being enacted.

“This ruling affirms that assisted suicide advocates circumvent­ed the legislativ­e process,” Matt Valliere, executive director of the New York-based Patients Rights Action Fund, which opposes legalizing physiciana­ssisted suicide, said in a statement. “It represents a tremendous blow to the assisted suicide legalizati­on movement and puts state legislatur­es on notice regarding the political trickery of groups like Compassion and Choices.”

Ottolia read his ruling in court Tuesday morning and will not release the written document for five days, said David Gutknecht, deputy executive officer of administra­tion for Riverside County Superior Court. Court logs confirm the judge granted a motion Tuesday morning.

Matt Fairchild, who has skin cancer that has spread to his brain, said he hoped the law is ultimately reinstated. He does not qualify for the law, but he said he wants the option if his condition worsens.

The Burbank resident, 48, said it seemed unfair that a court could make such a big decision for someone who is sick and perhaps suffering. “It’s going to affect the way a person in California takes their last breath,” Fairchild said.

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