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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Kevorkian set to be paroled in June


Dr. Jack Kevorkian, seen here in June 1998, is in ill health, his attorney says, and is set to be paroled from prison in 2007.
 (Associated Press / The Spokesman-Review)
Kathy Barks Hoffman Associated Press

LANSING, Mich. – After more than eight years behind bars for murder, an ailing Dr. Jack Kevorkian will be paroled in June on a promise not to help anyone else commit suicide, prison officials said Wednesday.

Corrections Department spokesman Russ Marlan said the parole board took the 78-year-old Kevorkian’s declining health into consideration, along with the question of whether the former pathologist would be a danger to society if he were set free.

“They decide if he is safe for release. And in the decision of the parole board, he is,” Marlan said.

Over the summer, Kevorkian’s lawyer said that Kevorkian was suffering from hepatitis C and diabetes, that his weight had dropped to 113 pounds and that he had less than a year to live. Last Thursday, Kevorkian promised the parole board he would not take part in another suicide if released.

“I think they believed him – that he would never do it again,” his attorney Mayer Morganroth said Wednesday. “I think they understand he is not well, that he should be treated at a proper facility outside prison.”

Kevorkian, once the nation’s most vocal advocate of assisted suicide, had been turned down for early release four times, but was scheduled to come up for parole for the first time in June.

He is serving a 10- to 25-year sentence for second-degree murder for helping to give a lethal dose of drugs in 1998 to Thomas Youk, a 52-year-old man with Lou Gehrig’s disease whose death was videotaped and shown on “60 Minutes.”

Kevorkian, who claimed to have assisted in at least 130 suicides in the 1990s, called it a mercy killing. He was sent to prison in 1999. He was credited with a year and nine months for good behavior.

Morganroth said he will ask Gov. Jennifer Granholm to speed up Kevorkian’s release. He said Kevorkian recently fell and cracked two ribs while being transported to a prison hospital in ankle chains.

“I’d like to see him have a comfortable existence in the time he has left,” the lawyer said, adding that Kevorkian plans to live with friends in the Detroit suburb of Birmingham after his release.

During a preparole interview Dec. 7 with parole board Chairman John Rubitschun, Kevorkian acknowledged that what he did was wrong, according to Marlan, who sat in on the meeting. “He said, ‘Legally it was wrong. It was an infraction of the law. I had to do it that way – or so I thought,’ ” Marlan said.

Now that Oregon has a law on the books allowing assisted suicide in certain cases, Kevorkian said he sees that he should have worked on a legislative solution, rather than trying to go through the courts, the department spokesman said.