Criminal case opened after Sarco capsule – which releases nitrogen gas at the touch of a button – used in Merishausen
Criminal case opened after Sarco capsule – which releases nitrogen gas at the touch of a button – used in Merishausen
Swiss police say they have opened a criminal investigation and arrested several people after the suspected death of a woman in a so-called suicide capsule.
According to local reports, the capsule, named the Sarco Pod by its inventor, was used for the first time on Monday afternoon in a forest close to the German border in the Swiss town of Merishausen.
The person who died was reportedly a 64-year-old American woman. Switzerland is one of the few countries in the world where assisted suicide is legal, under certain conditions.
Police in the canton of Schaffhausen, in northern Switzerland, confirmed the arrests, while the public prosecutors’ office confirmed it had opened an investigation into suspected incitement and aiding and abetting of suicide.
The person who died was reportedly a 64-year-old American woman. Switzerland is one of the few countries in the world where assisted suicide is legal, under certain conditions.
But the article does state that the interior minister does question the morality and legality of the device:
Switzerland’s interior minister, Élisabeth Baume-Schneider, questioned the moral and legal status of the Sarco Pod, a device that is designed to allow a person inside to push a button that injects nitrogen gas into the sealed chamber.
It's hard to say why the arrests happened without more details, but I'd suspect the nationality of the individual may play a role.
I know from working in healthcare in Germany, that you can get euthanasia as a non Swiss national if you go through the appropriate channels. You don't even have to live in Switzerland.
But it is for all a legally controlled, very lengthy and detailed process with several independent doctors and psychiatrists having to sign off on it.
My uneducated guess would be, that there are some rules and regulations they haven't followed exactly. Maybe they thought since the patient has the controll over the button themselves, they wouldn't be bound by all of them.
I'd suspect the nationality of the individual may play a role.
I'm not convinced. Kevorkian was acquitted 3 times and had one mistrial for basically the exact same thing back in the 90s and US opinion has continued to soften on assisted suicide since then. It's legal in 10 states. Kevorkian was eventually convicted of 2nd degree murder but that was after he pushed the button for a patient and represented himself in court. Maybe Swiss officials are giving it undue scrutiny because she was American but I doubt that American officials are pushing for this to get any special attention.
Painless death needs to be attainable, society needs to become a place where people aren't beaten down to the point of wanting to escape life as a way of escaping society, and we somehow impossibly need to have the painless suicide methods not get used for the million horrible things they'll totally be used for.
amen. im good for the moment but im over 50 and I have seen some things with folks in the decade ahead. If it get to bad I don't want to suffer. The time aspect of our timespace goes for like 70 years and yeah some will go for a decade or so longer and the rare few maybe 3 decades but rarer still is those where those decades are enjoyable.