Print

Print


With apologies for cross posting, please see forwarded text.

Regards,

Mike Higgins
Assistant Personnel Officer
University of Sheffield
Firth Court
Western Bank
Sheffield S10 2TN
E-mail: [log in to unmask]
Tel: 0114 222 1620
Fax: 0114 222 1633


----------
From: [log in to unmask]
To: 
Cc: [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; Debbie Jolly <[log in to unmask]>;
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; Radio Radom <[log in to unmask]>;
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask];
[log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]; [log in to unmask]
Subject: Kevorkian Trial Fundraiser
Date: 01 February 1999 19:25

January 25, 1999

Dear Not Dead Yet Members and Supporters:

The courts of Michigan are preparing to send a worldwide message about
the euthanasia of people with disabilities.
Will Jack Kevorkian be convicted and imprisoned?
Or will he be acquitted once more, never to be charged again?

Could it happen?  A serial killer of disabled people, out on the streets,
free to kill again?

Yes.  It's happened before.  Kevorkian has only been prosecuted in
connection with the deaths of six of his estimated 130 victims.

Kevorkian's last completed trial in 1996 involved his assisted suicides
of two disabled women: (1) Marjorie Wantz, with a type of pelvic pain
for which no physical cause could be found, and (2) Sherry Miller---
who lost custody of her children when she got MS, whose husband
left her, and who was "forced" to move in with her parents.  Neither
was terminally ill, both were disabled, like about two-thirds of his
victims----people like us.  No careful exploration of alternatives and
safeguards.  No suicide intervention or support.  No advocacy for child
custody, provision of needed personal assistance services---that would
be too much trouble.  The victims' families almost always agree to the
"voluntary suicide."

A non-disabled jury acquitted him anyway.  It's called jury
nullification---
when the jury votes contrary to law.  The judge can overrule the jury,
but the judge was pro-assisted suicide. So much for equal protection of
the law when it comes to people with disabilities.

The risks in this new--and perhaps final---prosecution are very great.  We
have a new and stronger anti-assisted suicide law, but we have the same
prosecutor, and the same pro-assisted suicide judge.  The jury?---What
do you think we can expect?

The most important new element in the upcoming trial is Not Dead Yet.
· Not Dead Yet, which formed in April 1996 after the last acquittal,
already
held a two-day sit-in at the prosecutor's office immediately following the
60 Minutes spectacle of the killing of Thomas Youk with ALS (Kevorkian's
"test case" for the new law).
· Not Dead Yet was next there at Kevorkian's arraignment, when Oakland
County released, for the first time, a first degree murder defendant on a
"personal bond."
· Not Dead Yet was there at the pre-trial when Kevorkian lied to the press
that people like us would not be eligible for "his services."

A dozen, then two dozen of us--- the press out-numbered us two-to-three
times over.  We got some press attention, but the cameras remained
focused on the face of Kevorkian, not the faces of those of us who
represent his past, present and future victims.

Our only chance to change this picture is that Not Dead Yet must be
there again at the trial---in numbers too big to ignore.

The whole world is watching what happens next.  Last November, Michigan
voters defeated a referendum to legalize assisted suicide----seniors
and African Americans helped us defeat Proposition B.  The law is now
clear.  The evidence is irrefutable.

But the press continues to be pro-Kevorkian.  ABC Nightline responded
to the 60 Minutes broadcast of the euthanasia of Thomas Youk by setting
up a debate between two white women who head national pro-euthanasia
organizations and a white male physician who opposes it.  Nightline
producers talked with Not Dead Yet for four days before the show, but
ultimately decided against disability representation.  (They wouldn't take
Paul Longmore or Diane Coleman, who have been on Nightline before,
or Marca Bristo.)

Reporters ignore the fact that most of Kevorkian's victims have been
disabled, not terminal, ignore the discrimination and oppression that
drove each of them to despair---ignore the injustice in a society that
helps people die, but refuses to help us live with the basic respect and
the simple supports we deserve.

We are all tired, as individuals, as advocates.  Each significant gain in
the struggle for our rights is followed by anti-disability backlash and the
slow, grinding work of enforcement.  Each day brings new letters, calls,
faxes and emails calling upon us to do everything in our power to stop the
injustice in all its forms.  Olmstead, an ADA case on our right to freedom
from institutions, will be decided this summer.  How can we do more?

But at the core of all these struggles is the question which society is
asking itself---would everyone else be better off without us?  And, since
most others believe that the answer is a self-evident "yes," it would be
better if we did not exist, then how can society justify allocating scarce
resources to us?  This is the question the bio-ethicists are asking in
their
professional journals, and the newspapers in their editorials.  Whether
it's
a "voluntary" do-not-resuscitate order, a surrogate decision by a family
member, an involuntary "futility guideline," or health insurance denials,
we
are being eliminated through the withholding of medical treatment.
Pro-euthanasia advocates are now raising funds for expansion of their
advocacy efforts to openly include people with non-terminal conditions.
They have also called for involuntary euthanasia through judicial order,
targeting "burdensome" family members.  They distance themselves from
Kevorkian when it suits them, but they won't call for his imprisonment.

Kevorkian is their symbol.  He compares himself to King and Ghandi.  Only
we can stop him, and turn back the tide---before it's gone too far.  This
trial
will be an historic event.  Let's make it our history----disability rights
history.

What can you do?  If you live in Michigan, Illinois, Indiana or Ohio, be
there
 if you can.  Contact Not Dead Yet for up-to-date information on the trial
schedule and location.  Even if you live too far away to adjust to changes
in the trial schedule, things we cannot predict yet, turn the page and help
someone else attend.  Become an official card-carrying Not Dead Yet
member, buy a sweatshirt or T-shirt, button or bumper sticker, a Credo
for Support poster, or make a donation for the trial.  This is your chance
to make a difference.

Diane Coleman, Founder and President


Yes, I want to support Not Dead Yet!

I'd like to become a card-carrying member of Not Dead Yet.

/_/  $35 Professional   /_/  $20 Regular   /_/  $0 - $15 Reduced

I will receive a laminated Not Dead Yet membership card, and a one year
subscription to the soon-to-be-published newsletter The Resistance.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
----------------------
I'd like to make an additional contribution to support the work of Not Dead
Yet to stop the euthanasia movement and put Jack Kevorkian behind bars.

/_/  $500   /_/$100   /_/  $50   /_/  $25   /_/  Other Amount
_______________

I will receive a commemorative "Not Dead Yet" button from the
internationally
covered protest before the U.S. Supreme Court while supplies last, or the
latest NDY button to wear with disability pride.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
--
--------------
I'd like to show my support by buying "Not Dead Yet":

Item	 Quantity	Size		Price		Total
Sweatshirt						$23 +$4 shpg	
T-Shirt							$15 +$4 shpg	
"Credo" Poster**				$10 + $3.50 shpg	
NDY Buttons
10-Pack						$10 + $3.50 shpg.=$13.50	
NDYBumper sticker (2pak)		$5 + $1 shpg. = $6.00	
			TOTAL	$__________
** "Credo for Support," the powerful words by Norm Kunc &
Emma Van der Klift on a poster, dedicated to the memory of Tracy Latimer,
the 12-year-old with cerebral palsy murdered by her father.
MAKE CHECKS PAYABLE TO:
NOT DEAD YET, 7521 MADISON STREET, FOREST PARK, IL  60130

Name ____________________________________
Organization_______________________________		T-Shirt picture
Address __________________________________
City, State, Zip _____________________________
Phone (email) ______________________________
CHECK TOTAL: ___________________________

/_/  I want to attend all or part of the Kevorkian trial.  Call me about
details, hotel, etc.
----------



%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%