Enterprise-Record (Chico)

Judge’s ruling bolsters California’s physician-assisted suicide law

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RIVERSIDE >> A judge has ruled California’s law allowing terminally people to end their lives was passed legitimate­ly during a special session of the Legislatur­e, dampening a long-running criticism by opponents who sued over the measure.

A Riverside Superior Court judge also found this week that the doctors who sued presently don’t have the right to do so to try to block the law, Compassion & Choices, a group that supports the measure, said in a statement on Friday.

The decision is the latest in a long-running battle over the 2016 law that allows adults in California to obtain a prescripti­on for life-ending drugs if a doctor finds they have six months or less to live.

Previously, another judge declared the law was unconstitu­tional because it was adopted during a special legislativ­e session that was supposed to address improving the medical system and health of California­ns.

That decision was later overturned when an appeals panel found the doctors who sued failed to show they were harmed because they could choose not to help terminally ill patients die.

Riverside County Judge Irma Asberry has told the doctors they can try to refile their case if they include patients who are opposed to the law and face undue influence to participat­e from family or others, said John Kappos, a partner at O’Melveny & Meyers who represents Compassion & Choices and a terminally ill man involved in the case.

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