Windsor Star

Assisted suicide advocate Taylor dies of infection

Tried to get laws changed

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VANCOUVER A woman who became Canada’s new face for the fight for assisted suicide has died of natural causes, long before her efforts to have laws banning the practice overturned for good could be completed.

Earlier this year, Gloria Taylor, 64, won a court-approved exemption from the laws when a judge ruled Canada’s ban on physician-assisted suicide infringes on the rights of disabled people.

The announceme­nt of her death came on Friday from the B.C. Civil Liberties Associatio­n, which took up her court fight.

“Gloria’s death was sudden and unexpected,” said a news release from the group.

“The cause of death was a severe infection resulting from a perforated colon. Due to the acute nature and brief course of her illness from the infection, Gloria did not need to seek the assistance of a physician to end her life.”

The release went on to say that Taylor died quickly and peacefully in hospital, surrounded by family.

“She was spared from the prolonged death from ALS that she dreaded and which inspired her participat­ion in the lawsuit.”

Taylor was among the plaintiffs in the landmark case that prompted Judge Lynn Smith to rule the ban on assisted suicide violates two sections of the Charter of Rights covering the right to equality and the right to life, liberty and security of the person.

She said the law must allow for doctor-assisted suicide in cases where patients have a serious illness or disability and are experienci­ng intolerabl­e suffering.

Such patients must ask for the help, must be free of coercion and cannot be clinically depressed, the ruling noted.

Smith also granted an immediate exemption to the law, allowing Taylor, one of the women who brought the lawsuit, to die with a doctor’s help.

The federal government launched an appeal in August and also asked the B.C. Appeal Court to overturn Taylor’s exemption, but Justice Jo-Ann Prowse rejected that request.

In a written decision, Prowse said revoking Taylor’s exemption would cause irreparabl­e harm to Taylor, something that would outweigh the federal government’s interests.

Prowse acknowledg­ed Taylor has become a symbol in the right-to-die case, but the judge said that Taylor is also a person who shouldn’t be sacrificed for the “greater good.”

Taylor’s mother, Anne Fomenoff, said in a statement issued by the civil liberties associatio­n that her daughter will be missed.

“But we are grateful that Gloria was given the solace of knowing that she had a choice about how and when she would die. … Gloria was able to live her final days free from the fear that she would be sentenced to suffer cruelly in a failing body.”

Fomenoff said she was immensely proud of her “feisty and determined daughter.”

Grace Pastine, litigation director for the B.C. Civil Liberties Associatio­n, called Taylor a “heroic woman.”

“Even as her own body failed her, she fought for all Canadians to have choice and dignity at the end of life.”

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