Sentinel & Enterprise

There’s no excuse to delay passage of ‘Conrad’s Law’

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It doesn’t seem possible that with the plethora of publicity surroundin­g the coercion-assisted suicide of Massachuse­tts teen Conrad Roy back in 2014, that this state would still remain one of the few that hasn’t passed a criminal statute covering such a crime.

But that’s the case, despite the efforts of Andover state Sen. Barry Finegold and Leominster state Rep. Natalie Higgins.

Finegold, whose district includes Dracut, Lawrence and Tewksbury, renewed his push to criminaliz­e suicide coercion last week, when he was joined by Roy’s mother in urging the Joint Committee on the Judiciary to support a bill that would create that long overdue criminal charge.

Currently, Massachuse­tts is one of only eight states without a statute explicitly criminaliz­ing coercion of suicide.

Finegold was one several legislator­s who introduced what became known as “Conrad’s Law” in 2019, which would have made intentiona­lly encouragin­g or enabling a suicide attempt punishable by up to five years in prison.

Conrad Roy died by suicide after repeated encouragem­ent from his girlfriend, Michelle Carter.

Carter served just over a year of her 15-month sentence on a charge of involuntar­y manslaught­er for her role in Roy’s death and received a nearly four-month early release for good behavior, a decision that incensed Roy’s loved ones.

The bill’s introducti­on came just a month after a grand jury indicted former Boston College student Inyoung You on involuntar­y manslaught­er charges for allegedly encouragin­g her BC boyfriend, Alexander Urtula, to take his own life.

While the bill garnered considerab­le public support at the time, it ultimately stalled in the Legislatur­e in the early months of 2020, which Finegold attributed to the emergence of the coronaviru­s.

“It just got caught up, but I do think that it has a good chance to pass this time around,” Finegold told the newspaper in January.

Finegold said he hopes to have a hearing on it as early as this summer.

Democrats Finegold and Higgins, who reintroduc­ed the bill in late March, along with Conrad’s mother, Lynn Roy, told the committee last week that by supporting it they would help close an important gap in Massachuse­tts laws.

“The only tool in the DA’s toolkit right now is manslaught­er, which comes with a sentence of up to 20 years,” Higgins said. “We really wanted to make sure that Massachuse­tts has a criminal code that’s narrowly tailored and it’s very clear that coerced suicide is something that we want to deter in our communitie­s.”

Lynn Roy, who Finegold said has played a key role in drafting and advocating for the bill, added, “if this law can save one life, one soul, one family from the harshest pain, then we have all succeeded.”

We endorsed this bill when it was initially filed and do so again.

This legislatio­n would not apply to any unintentio­nal consequenc­es from bullying, negligence or jokes. Individual­s could only face charges if they knew or had cause to know someone had expressed suicidal thoughts, and then knowingly suggested suicide.

The lack of a law addressing this issue leaves the commonweal­th — and a victim’s family — vulnerable to sweeping interpreta­tions of First Amendment protection­s.

Carter’s defense team built its case on First Amendment, free-speech grounds, which was also the basis for its appeal of Carter’s 2017 conviction and prison sentence.

With no law in place, her conviction could have easily been reversed. Fortunatel­y, the Supreme Judicial Court upheld her guilty verdict.

But a case with slightly different circumstan­ces could have rendered a different verdict or SJC opinion.

Having such a law on the books would certainly lend a clarity that currently doesn’t exist.

With COVID-19 behind us, we see no reason why lawmakers wouldn’t support this common-sense legislatio­n, which would send a clear message to anyone contemplat­ing convincing an emotionall­y vulnerable individual to take their own life.

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