All language subtitles for Picket Fences s03e19 Final Judgement
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1
00:00:01,130 --> 00:00:02,590
Previously on Pig Advances.
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The morphine was turned up to 40 cc's
with the full knowledge that it would
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Harry. Which one of you did it?
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The morphine was upped by your wife.
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Yes, I did it.
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Euthanasia is illegal, Dr. Brock. Well,
I certainly know that, Mr. Littleton.
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But in cancer cases with extreme
suffering, we customarily increase the
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level in order to relieve that
suffering.
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You think I was wrong to up the
morphine?
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00:00:33,590 --> 00:00:34,590
Yes.
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You actually want to try this case?
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The Attorney General wants time served.
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We have to be a strong family.
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We have to be together.
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We find the defendant, Dr. Jill Brock,
guilty as charged.
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Two years. That's my final offer. She's
a mother. She's law -abiding. She has a
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man -fought conviction.
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Come on, Warren. We're talking about a
reputable doctor, ex -mayor,
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distinguished humanitarian with extended
community service. You've got your
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verdict, made your point. But nothing,
absolutely nothing is served by the
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incarceration of this woman.
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Two years.
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I don't think he likes it that you talk
fast.
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He won't budge. He's actually going to
put me in jail? No, he is not. Plan B.
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Court was just called in session. Let's
go.
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I'll hear from the defense first on
sentencing.
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We don't want to be hurt on sentencing.
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We ask that your honor set aside the
verdict.
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What? On grounds that the law against
physician -assisted suicide is
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unconstitutional. Your honor has already
made that ruling two years ago with the
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singing serial killer Nunn. Excuse me?
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The what?
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And since that ruling, a federal appeals
court in Washington has followed your
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lead. They have declared that the law
against assisting suicide is a violation
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of a fundamental right to privacy. Your
Honor, this is a sentencing hearing. We
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don't raise constitutional appeal at
sentencing hearings. Things go a little
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differently around here. This is a
sentencing hearing.
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He repaints himself, Judge.
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Shut up. Will you be quiet?
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Defense counsel raises a point, Mr.
Greer.
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If the law Gerald Brock violated is a
law which should be tossed out, why...
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Your Honor, I admit I am new to this
courtroom and have yet to grasp all the
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idiosyncrasies that make this forum like
no other. But it is not the province of
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a state court judge to be invalidating
laws on constitutional grounds.
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Why not?
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Because it just isn't done on a superior
court level.
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Mr. Greer, the defendant is a friend of
mine.
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Now, I'll be a fair judge.
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I'll rule according to the law.
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But I see no reason to subject her to a
lengthy and costly appellate process if
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we can deal with the issue right here.
Your Honor, you cannot do this.
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Oh, but I can.
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Tomorrow, the law against euthanasia
goes on trial.
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It goes on trial here.
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Until then...
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Get out.
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This is a dream.
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To argue this issue in front of Judge
Henry Bone, there isn't a jurist
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more sympathetic to doctor -assisted
suicide. This isn't exactly feeling like
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dream, Mr. Dale. Try to control your
goosebumps a little.
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I don't enjoy being a test case as much
as you do.
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Honey. Look at these news trucks pulling
in.
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That's only because you're better
looking than Kevorkian. Your doctor
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would dress.
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What? I won't say it in court.
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Jill, don't worry.
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We... You keep saying that. Don't worry.
Don't worry.
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I'm still looking at going to jail.
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I'm worried.
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No, Jill.
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We will win this.
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Suppose you don't.
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What's this?
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A swan.
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Dead, dirty, and heavy. Well, what do
you want me to do? It's the third one we
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found like this. Can you autopsy it?
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Autopsy a swan? I could take it to the
vet, but...
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They don't got investigational skills.
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You're like a detective.
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Where'd you find him?
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In the public gardens where they live.
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He looks pretty beat up. I think
somebody murdered him.
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This is a justifiable use of tax dollars
using a medical examiner for... It's a
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swan. People shouldn't be killing a
beautiful swan.
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The Supreme Court has held that for
deeply personal choices...
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Those decisions are protected by the
Constitution against government
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The Supreme Court has never ruled on
physician -assisted suicide.
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Not directly. But it held that
competent, terminally ill people can
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unwanted medical treatment. There's a
big difference between refusing medical
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treatment and active euthanasia, Mr.
Dell. Oh, come on, Counsel. What's the
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difference? If the refusal of treatment
means the patient dies, how's that
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different from giving him morphine?
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Both acts kill him.
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To say, okay.
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We won't postpone the inevitable.
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Let's not prolong the suffering. And to
turn off a respirator, that's one thing.
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It's quite something else to inject a
patient to cause death. That's just a
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of crap. I'm sorry.
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Under the current law, it's okay to shut
off a nutrition tube and let a patient
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die. But it's not okay to let him go
humanely and peacefully with a drug.
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How do you justify that? I justify it by
saying the state has an interest
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against suicide.
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We have an interest in the continued
suffering of dying patients?
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What about the depressed man who just
lost his job?
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The soccer player who loses his leg?
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They could be competent people who also
choose to die. Do we just give them
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morphine and say, nice knowing you? That
isn't this case. But it's very much the
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00:07:02,990 --> 00:07:06,050
danger posed by this case. Where do you
draw the line?
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00:07:06,390 --> 00:07:09,770
Many Alzheimer patients want to die
before dementia begins. We're all
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with the slippery slope argument.
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Once you start letting some do it, next
thing we'll have fast food restaurants
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dispensing barbiturates at the drive
-thrus. It's a very lovely theory.
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don't trivialize. Everything you say
goes to policy.
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But a court has to stay focused on
rights.
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Legal rights.
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And I repeat, the Supreme Court has held
that for profoundly personal decisions,
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for matters that go to an individual's
autonomy, to his human dignity, for
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cases, the message to the state is...
Bought out.
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And I submit, what could be closer to
the heart of personal liberty than the
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decision by a terminally ill, suffering
person to decide, I've had enough. I
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don't want to live anymore. I don't
dispute Mr. Fenwick's right to make that
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decision. I take issue with her killing
him. That's an unconscionable
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distinction. It's okay for him to kill
himself, but it's wrong for a physician
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to make it more humane. It's wrong for
her to make it easier.
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If we let doctors jump in and facilitate
suicide, we tacitly endorse it as an
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acceptable thing. That's wrong.
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Oh, that's right.
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Suicide should remain a disgrace. Yes,
it should.
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If we destigmatize it, we make it more
imaginable, more conceivable.
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What if that court's ruling caused
somebody out there to think, hey,
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noble?
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What if that court caused somebody you
love to put a gun to their head?
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Hey, you're out of order.
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I should hold you in contempt.
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What did I say? If a person puts a gun
to his head, that's insanity.
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It has no bearing on.
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It's insanity.
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We're adjourned.
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Till tomorrow.
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That swan didn't die of natural causes.
It was beaten to death.
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I knew it. And we're not talking about a
couple of whacks. It was struck more
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than a hundred times.
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Uh, what's going on?
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We've had some swans killed. I asked
Carter to let us know. This was a mute
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swan, female. She may have been killed
for her eggs. They're worth about a
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thousand dollars on the black market.
Swan eggs.
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This is a special swan, extremely
protective of offspring. That's why
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dead. Poachers usually have to kill the
mother before they can even get close to
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the eggs. So a poacher beat it to death?
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The weapon appeared to be wood.
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But I also dug out some tiny fragments
of fiberglass. Where are the other two?
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We buried them, but they look just the
same as this one.
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It's either poachers after the eggs or
we got a serial swan killer. Either way,
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this is big.
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I should be deputized.
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You don't have to be the judge on every
case, Henry.
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Maybe this one strikes too close. This
case has nothing to do with anything
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personal to me.
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Oh, yeah, I could see but a little
tantrum you threw, which was probably
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outburst of objectivity. This is an ex
parte communication.
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This conversation is out of line.
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Henry, if you can't separate this from
your own tragedy, you shouldn't be the
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judge. I will rule as the law tells me
to rule.
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The law will control.
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I can't believe anybody would kill a
swan.
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Maybe it was suffering.
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Maybe it was mercy killing.
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Please, Zachary, just eat your dinner.
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Yeah, eat it.
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And you just be quiet if you don't mind.
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What?
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Is there a problem?
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Problem? No. You're looking at me like
there's a problem.
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There's no problem.
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Kimberly, I know that you think what I
did was wrong.
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But I would appreciate it if you
wouldn't punish me. This has been tough
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Zach, can you pass the spinach?
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Appreciate all your support.
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Oh, grow up.
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What did you say?
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Can we just have dinner? No, no, no. If
she's got something to say to me, I
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would really enjoy hearing about it.
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What do you think it's like to go to
school these days?
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How do you think Zach feels hearing the
whispers?
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What about Matthew having to hand a note
to his principal saying, please excuse
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me from my gym class, but I have to
attend my mother's manslaughter trial?
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I know this hasn't been easy for any of
you.
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Did you consider that before you up Mr.
Fenwick's morphine? Kimberly. Did you
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stop to think that there may be
consequences for us? That's enough.
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I'm sorry, but you brought this on, Mom.
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And we are just trying to survive it. We
survive by sticking together.
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I told you this was going to be hard.
It's hard, damn it.
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We stay together.
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I'm sorry.
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If you don't feel like I'm supporting
you, then I just have to try harder.
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00:13:14,840 --> 00:13:21,540
No, I don't know if I'm... I'm so on
edge because I'm afraid of going to
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jail or just because I'm afraid what I
did was wrong.
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And I suppose it would be easier to
think that you believed what I did was
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right.
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00:13:33,960 --> 00:13:35,680
I'm not saying I don't.
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I just don't know.
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I do love you.
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You know that?
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Yeah.
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00:13:53,110 --> 00:13:54,110
I do.
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He can't call a witness. Why not?
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00:13:57,870 --> 00:14:02,010
Because this is an argument on the
constitutional viability of a law. It is
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an evidentiary hearing. One of the ways
we evaluate the constitutional basis of
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a law is to examine its application.
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00:14:08,770 --> 00:14:10,730
Cynthia Adelson is from Portland,
Oregon.
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Her husband died by physician -assisted
suicide. This case has nothing to do
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with Cynthia Adler. Your Honor, it's
fine for lawyers to get up here and
213
00:14:18,880 --> 00:14:20,420
pontificate on legal theory.
214
00:14:20,660 --> 00:14:25,800
But the guts of any law is how does it
work. If a lay witness helps answer that
215
00:14:25,800 --> 00:14:29,240
question... Objection. This is just an
attempt to be inflammatory. That's a
216
00:14:29,240 --> 00:14:31,120
objection. We're doing this before a
judge.
217
00:14:31,340 --> 00:14:35,320
And I reiterate, this is an argument of
law. It is not an evidentiary
218
00:14:35,320 --> 00:14:37,200
proceeding. I'll hear the witness.
219
00:14:37,480 --> 00:14:38,860
I strenuously object.
220
00:14:39,300 --> 00:14:40,300
Oh?
221
00:14:41,010 --> 00:14:42,010
Strenuously?
222
00:14:43,890 --> 00:14:44,890
Call the witness.
223
00:14:51,670 --> 00:14:52,670
Hockey sticks.
224
00:14:53,070 --> 00:14:56,410
What? The fiberglass fragments match the
kind of coating used on the blade.
225
00:14:56,750 --> 00:14:59,630
Plus, I found traces of black friction
tape, the kind they use... This one was
226
00:14:59,630 --> 00:15:00,630
killed with a hockey stick?
227
00:15:00,890 --> 00:15:01,890
Stick, plural.
228
00:15:02,250 --> 00:15:05,290
There were multiple samples of different
kind of fiberglass and different brands
229
00:15:05,290 --> 00:15:07,930
of tape, so we're looking at more than
one stick. I think we have a hockey team
230
00:15:07,930 --> 00:15:08,930
gang.
231
00:15:09,270 --> 00:15:10,270
Don't mock me.
232
00:15:10,570 --> 00:15:13,330
You're mocking me with a look. We know
the kind of savages who play hockey. I
233
00:15:13,330 --> 00:15:16,650
tried a game once. They bit me. And Joey
Millen seemed hanging around that swan
234
00:15:16,650 --> 00:15:17,830
pond. He plays hockey.
235
00:15:18,190 --> 00:15:19,470
Stop with the mocking look.
236
00:15:20,010 --> 00:15:22,290
Joey Millen is the prime suspect. All
right, all right. I'll pick up Joey
237
00:15:22,290 --> 00:15:23,290
Millen.
238
00:15:24,510 --> 00:15:25,510
What's with him?
239
00:15:26,370 --> 00:15:27,370
New swan.
240
00:15:28,030 --> 00:15:29,290
Mate for life.
241
00:15:29,690 --> 00:15:32,850
Now, this here is the partner of the one
I autopsied. Now, these birds are also
242
00:15:32,850 --> 00:15:36,830
very, very aggressive when threatened.
That's why poachers have to kill them to
243
00:15:36,830 --> 00:15:37,649
get to their eggs.
244
00:15:37,650 --> 00:15:41,120
So? So, I think this swan will tell us
who killed his mate.
245
00:15:42,300 --> 00:15:44,660
Again with the mocking look. This is an
intelligent bird.
246
00:15:46,240 --> 00:15:48,480
If it sees the attacker, he'll let us
know. He will.
247
00:15:49,720 --> 00:15:50,920
We're going to help you, Bob.
248
00:15:51,360 --> 00:15:52,360
His name's Bob.
249
00:15:54,600 --> 00:15:56,160
Together we're going to catch the bad
guy.
250
00:15:59,460 --> 00:16:06,360
Carl had emphysema.
251
00:16:08,170 --> 00:16:10,930
By the end, he always felt that he was
suffocating.
252
00:16:12,130 --> 00:16:17,890
And he had this pulmonary disease,
which, well, you know, because of the
253
00:16:17,890 --> 00:16:22,330
blood flow, he had pain in his arms and
his legs.
254
00:16:22,690 --> 00:16:23,690
He was terminal?
255
00:16:23,950 --> 00:16:24,950
Yes.
256
00:16:26,270 --> 00:16:32,110
And at some point, you, he, and your
doctor discussed turning up the
257
00:16:32,770 --> 00:16:33,770
Yes.
258
00:16:34,010 --> 00:16:36,650
How did you come to discuss this, Mrs.
Adelson?
259
00:16:37,070 --> 00:16:42,990
Well, Carl, he knew about it. Well, you
know, it became a law in Oregon, and
260
00:16:42,990 --> 00:16:46,810
so he asked the doctors about it.
261
00:16:47,070 --> 00:16:48,090
What did you think?
262
00:16:48,410 --> 00:16:55,230
Well, I was against it at first, but
then he convinced me that he
263
00:16:55,230 --> 00:17:01,570
didn't want to live anymore. He was in
pain, and he had to be hooked up to this
264
00:17:01,570 --> 00:17:04,970
tank in order to breathe, and he...
265
00:17:05,200 --> 00:17:11,980
wanted to die with some dignity, and...
I couldn't really disagree with that.
266
00:17:13,119 --> 00:17:20,079
And, Mrs. Adelson, you convinced that
your husband was of competent mind when
267
00:17:20,079 --> 00:17:22,119
decided to terminate his life? Oh, yes.
268
00:17:22,380 --> 00:17:23,560
Yes, he was quite competent.
269
00:17:24,280 --> 00:17:25,700
He was too competent.
270
00:17:26,099 --> 00:17:27,160
What do you mean by that?
271
00:17:27,380 --> 00:17:33,520
Well, the idea that he was not of
service to his family was hateful to
272
00:17:33,520 --> 00:17:34,520
I think that...
273
00:17:35,250 --> 00:17:39,970
When he heard about that law and when he
read about all those other elderly
274
00:17:39,970 --> 00:17:45,210
people who were terminating their lives
so that they would not be a financial
275
00:17:45,210 --> 00:17:51,850
and emotional burden on their families,
I think Carl, or a part of Carl, came to
276
00:17:51,850 --> 00:17:55,490
believe that it was the right thing to
do.
277
00:17:56,510 --> 00:18:01,510
That a good father or a good husband,
that's what they would do.
278
00:18:02,910 --> 00:18:04,430
Now, do you think...
279
00:18:04,910 --> 00:18:11,110
This new law in Oregon, the one that
allows for physician -assisted suicide,
280
00:18:11,110 --> 00:18:14,610
you think it played a part in Carl's
decision to end his life?
281
00:18:16,150 --> 00:18:20,310
Not directly, but indirectly, yes.
282
00:18:21,590 --> 00:18:26,010
That law made suicide one of the
acceptable options.
283
00:18:27,590 --> 00:18:32,210
And added to that, if a doctor comes in
and tells you that he's going to help
284
00:18:32,210 --> 00:18:33,210
you die...
285
00:18:35,080 --> 00:18:40,200
I just think that Carl came to believe
that he should die.
286
00:18:42,000 --> 00:18:45,820
That he would be less of a family man if
he chose to go on living.
287
00:18:48,240 --> 00:18:49,600
Thank you, Mrs. Adelson.
288
00:18:50,300 --> 00:18:53,260
I know that the testimony has been very
difficult.
289
00:19:05,350 --> 00:19:06,490
I didn't kill any swan.
290
00:19:06,930 --> 00:19:08,270
You were seen near the pond, Joey.
291
00:19:08,690 --> 00:19:10,790
You play hockey, the birds were killed
with hockey sticks.
292
00:19:11,530 --> 00:19:12,530
Are you telling the truth?
293
00:19:15,070 --> 00:19:16,070
Yes.
294
00:19:16,610 --> 00:19:18,510
Joey, could you look at the swan,
please?
295
00:19:18,730 --> 00:19:19,730
Carter.
296
00:19:21,590 --> 00:19:23,290
Just look him in the eye for a second.
297
00:19:24,430 --> 00:19:25,430
Please.
298
00:19:27,630 --> 00:19:28,630
Look at him, Joey.
299
00:19:39,139 --> 00:19:40,600
Why is he looking at me like that?
300
00:19:41,160 --> 00:19:45,960
Joey, that hockey stick beside you, I
want you to slowly pick it up.
301
00:19:46,340 --> 00:19:47,340
Do I have to?
302
00:19:47,540 --> 00:19:48,540
Yes.
303
00:19:48,720 --> 00:19:49,720
Pick up the stick.
304
00:20:08,810 --> 00:20:09,810
Can I go now?
305
00:20:21,930 --> 00:20:22,930
Don't you dare.
306
00:20:25,010 --> 00:20:27,830
I am not coming in to try and influence
your decision.
307
00:20:29,670 --> 00:20:30,670
I promise.
308
00:20:34,330 --> 00:20:35,330
You okay?
309
00:20:38,280 --> 00:20:39,280
I don't know.
310
00:20:44,540 --> 00:20:50,040
I wonder if my son thought there was
something redemptive in taking his life.
311
00:20:52,440 --> 00:20:58,460
Because, you know, if people could think
that, I'd shatter that perception with
312
00:20:58,460 --> 00:20:59,560
one swing of my gavel.
313
00:21:01,620 --> 00:21:03,780
Because I don't want any other father to
have to.
314
00:21:08,330 --> 00:21:09,650
This case isn't about your son.
315
00:21:13,150 --> 00:21:14,150
Yeah.
316
00:21:15,230 --> 00:21:16,230
Yeah.
317
00:21:19,270 --> 00:21:26,070
You know, when he was five, he'd never
go to sleep unless
318
00:21:26,070 --> 00:21:27,070
I sang to him.
319
00:21:28,690 --> 00:21:35,230
When he'd finally close his eyes, I'd
just stay there and stare at his little
320
00:21:35,230 --> 00:21:36,230
face.
321
00:21:38,410 --> 00:21:41,390
Life was never more rich.
322
00:21:52,910 --> 00:21:57,710
He grew up to abuse and molest children.
323
00:21:57,930 --> 00:21:59,590
He shot himself in the head.
324
00:22:00,590 --> 00:22:03,470
I'm not sure right now life even has
meaning, Gary.
325
00:22:04,710 --> 00:22:06,450
Maybe I should recuse myself.
326
00:22:08,620 --> 00:22:15,060
Who the hell am I to be deciding when a
life should be ending
327
00:22:15,060 --> 00:22:20,120
or... Maybe life has no meaning.
328
00:22:28,300 --> 00:22:31,100
I've never needed to believe in heaven
more than I do now.
329
00:22:32,560 --> 00:22:37,480
I pray that when I go, I'll meet my son
in heaven again.
330
00:22:39,690 --> 00:22:46,690
But with what he did, with how he took
his life, he wouldn't be in heaven,
331
00:22:46,790 --> 00:22:48,470
would he?
332
00:23:10,510 --> 00:23:11,510
Plea bargain?
333
00:23:12,710 --> 00:23:14,550
All of a sudden you want a bargain?
334
00:23:15,330 --> 00:23:16,330
Here's the problem.
335
00:23:17,710 --> 00:23:19,950
Greer made an impression with that
witness.
336
00:23:21,350 --> 00:23:25,310
For the first time, I really think we
could lose.
337
00:23:25,610 --> 00:23:27,990
Well, all the same, then we go to
appeals court.
338
00:23:28,230 --> 00:23:29,870
On the verdict, yes, but not on the
sentence.
339
00:23:31,250 --> 00:23:32,610
Sentencing takes place now.
340
00:23:33,250 --> 00:23:34,350
Suppose you get a year.
341
00:23:35,070 --> 00:23:37,110
The appeals court won't overturn that.
342
00:23:38,110 --> 00:23:39,610
If they upheld the verdict itself,
343
00:23:40,320 --> 00:23:42,340
You'd be stuck with a year in jail.
344
00:23:43,420 --> 00:23:49,160
So our thinking is, if we could plead it
out to three months today, it's worth
345
00:23:49,160 --> 00:23:50,160
considering.
346
00:23:51,040 --> 00:23:52,740
Three months in jail?
347
00:23:53,700 --> 00:23:55,020
And be done with it.
348
00:23:59,860 --> 00:24:00,860
Maybe I should.
349
00:24:01,840 --> 00:24:03,780
Go to jail?
350
00:24:05,900 --> 00:24:06,920
Get it over with.
351
00:24:07,660 --> 00:24:09,800
You think Greer would go for three
months?
352
00:24:10,240 --> 00:24:11,240
I think so now.
353
00:24:11,800 --> 00:24:15,000
He's faced with the case being tossed
all together. I think he'd love to see
354
00:24:15,000 --> 00:24:16,000
three months served.
355
00:24:29,080 --> 00:24:34,820
I won't agree to three months.
356
00:24:35,160 --> 00:24:38,980
If he overturns the verdict... I can
appeal. I can appeal his ruling just
357
00:24:38,980 --> 00:24:39,938
you can.
358
00:24:39,939 --> 00:24:41,260
One year. Best offer.
359
00:24:41,840 --> 00:24:42,840
One year.
360
00:24:43,060 --> 00:24:47,000
Consecutively? Come on, Warren. Even if
you win, the likelihood of Bone doling
361
00:24:47,000 --> 00:24:49,220
out a year... I'll take my chances. You
can't. No.
362
00:24:50,120 --> 00:24:52,120
She committed a homicide. One year.
363
00:24:52,920 --> 00:24:55,880
Could I talk with Mr. Greer alone,
please? Absolutely not. I don't think
364
00:24:55,880 --> 00:24:58,440
good idea. I would like to speak with
Mr. Greer in private.
365
00:24:59,940 --> 00:25:01,780
I have no problem with that. Well, I do.
366
00:25:02,120 --> 00:25:03,120
Please.
367
00:25:04,280 --> 00:25:05,280
Please.
368
00:25:05,540 --> 00:25:06,540
Everybody get out.
369
00:25:07,320 --> 00:25:08,320
I'm waiving counsel.
370
00:25:09,360 --> 00:25:10,560
Everybody out now.
371
00:25:17,600 --> 00:25:19,440
Are you out of your mind?
372
00:25:21,280 --> 00:25:22,880
These birds have retention skills.
373
00:25:23,260 --> 00:25:23,999
Are you busy?
374
00:25:24,000 --> 00:25:25,000
No, I guess not.
375
00:25:25,480 --> 00:25:30,080
So it wasn't Joey Millen. Maybe... You
want me to put a line up in front of a
376
00:25:30,080 --> 00:25:31,540
swan? Suppose you pick somebody.
377
00:25:31,880 --> 00:25:35,240
How admissible is that? I got a list of
suspects. Six boys who were seen. No.
378
00:25:35,240 --> 00:25:37,860
Kenny. No. Too bad for you. Max is out
of town.
379
00:25:38,250 --> 00:25:41,110
She'd love this agricultural police
work, but I don't. Now get him out of
380
00:25:41,110 --> 00:25:42,110
and you go with him.
381
00:25:42,550 --> 00:25:43,670
Is my father here?
382
00:25:44,010 --> 00:25:45,590
Not yet. He's due back any second.
383
00:25:46,070 --> 00:25:47,190
How can he have that helmet on?
384
00:25:49,730 --> 00:25:50,730
Look at that.
385
00:25:51,230 --> 00:25:52,230
He looks upset.
386
00:25:52,330 --> 00:25:53,330
Whoa, what's the matter?
387
00:25:54,350 --> 00:25:55,450
He looks upset, Carter.
388
00:26:21,130 --> 00:26:22,130
The swan's under control.
389
00:26:23,890 --> 00:26:27,250
Zach, that swan seemed to know you.
390
00:26:28,750 --> 00:26:30,250
He seemed pretty mad at you.
391
00:26:33,230 --> 00:26:34,790
Did you hurt that swan's mate?
392
00:26:39,290 --> 00:26:44,070
I've been watching you, Mr. Greer. I
know that you're a compassionate man. I
393
00:26:44,070 --> 00:26:49,110
know that you understand why I did what
I did, and yet you prosecute me with
394
00:26:49,110 --> 00:26:50,110
such a vengeance.
395
00:26:50,280 --> 00:26:53,340
Why? I don't think you'll like the
explanation, Dr. Brock.
396
00:26:55,460 --> 00:26:57,060
I would like to understand you.
397
00:26:57,940 --> 00:26:59,100
Right now, I don't.
398
00:27:11,760 --> 00:27:15,580
Last October, my brother died of AIDS.
399
00:27:17,580 --> 00:27:19,420
He had the skin and sinus infections.
400
00:27:21,060 --> 00:27:22,540
Suffered the grand mal seizures.
401
00:27:23,120 --> 00:27:24,340
Was even going blind.
402
00:27:25,480 --> 00:27:28,500
And he decided that he didn't want to
live anymore.
403
00:27:31,340 --> 00:27:35,040
Together, we attached the hose to the
exhaust pipe.
404
00:27:35,700 --> 00:27:37,280
I closed the garage door.
405
00:27:39,060 --> 00:27:43,440
Got in on the passenger side and held
the keys in my hand.
406
00:27:44,640 --> 00:27:46,400
We broke open a bottle of wine.
407
00:27:47,820 --> 00:27:49,020
Put on some music.
408
00:27:49,840 --> 00:27:51,320
sang together, cried together.
409
00:27:53,220 --> 00:27:59,060
About an hour later, I kissed him
goodbye, gave him the keys, and went in
410
00:27:59,060 --> 00:28:00,060
house.
411
00:28:02,060 --> 00:28:05,100
What? And you blame yourself for that?
412
00:28:05,500 --> 00:28:06,880
The story's not over yet.
413
00:28:09,040 --> 00:28:12,680
Another hour went by, and I came back.
414
00:28:13,480 --> 00:28:18,940
And there he sat, crying, with his hand
on the ignition.
415
00:28:21,100 --> 00:28:23,080
He couldn't bring himself to turn it
over.
416
00:28:26,320 --> 00:28:32,320
Intellectually, reflectively, even
emotionally, he wanted to die, no
417
00:28:33,260 --> 00:28:38,420
But there was something inside that
stopped him from starting that car.
418
00:28:44,680 --> 00:28:46,120
And he asked me to.
419
00:29:03,310 --> 00:29:08,850
He ended up suffering a horrible,
painful, natural death.
420
00:29:12,150 --> 00:29:15,430
If I had started that car, it would have
been commensurate with my brother's
421
00:29:15,430 --> 00:29:16,430
wishes.
422
00:29:16,690 --> 00:29:21,310
But at the same time, I would have been
overriding him. And you think that I was
423
00:29:21,310 --> 00:29:23,830
overriding Harry Fenwick when I turned
up the morphine?
424
00:29:24,250 --> 00:29:25,610
Would he have turned it up himself?
425
00:29:31,130 --> 00:29:32,130
What's going on?
426
00:29:32,240 --> 00:29:35,480
They're in the coffee room. The swan
attacked him? The swan was definitely
427
00:29:35,480 --> 00:29:36,480
happy.
428
00:29:36,940 --> 00:29:37,440
I
429
00:29:37,440 --> 00:29:45,560
can't
430
00:29:45,560 --> 00:29:46,780
believe what I just heard.
431
00:29:46,980 --> 00:29:47,980
Hold on.
432
00:29:48,560 --> 00:29:53,220
Zach, I want you to tell your father
exactly what you told me.
433
00:29:55,340 --> 00:29:57,400
A bunch of kids.
434
00:29:58,240 --> 00:30:00,880
They decided instead of street hockey...
435
00:30:01,480 --> 00:30:03,360
That might be fun to play swan hockey.
436
00:30:04,780 --> 00:30:11,520
So, capture a swan, put it in a sack, go
to the parking lot at Hanson Field
437
00:30:11,520 --> 00:30:17,160
and let the swan out of the sack and
they'd play.
438
00:30:17,940 --> 00:30:18,940
Wait a minute.
439
00:30:19,460 --> 00:30:21,060
What is swan hockey?
440
00:30:22,800 --> 00:30:26,340
Instead of a puck or a tennis ball, you
play with a swan.
441
00:30:27,880 --> 00:30:30,340
Try to hit the swan into the other
team's goal.
442
00:30:31,159 --> 00:30:33,140
That's how all these swans were killed?
443
00:30:35,660 --> 00:30:41,520
You all just... You hit them with your
hockey stick to put them into a goal?
444
00:30:43,580 --> 00:30:45,000
Zach and I never hit them.
445
00:30:45,200 --> 00:30:46,200
But you were in the game.
446
00:30:47,040 --> 00:30:50,740
We never hit the swans. We stayed out
near the side. But you were in the game.
447
00:30:53,580 --> 00:30:54,580
Yes.
448
00:30:56,120 --> 00:30:58,640
And Zach was at the pond when the last
one was captured.
449
00:30:58,940 --> 00:31:00,420
That's why the mate remembered him.
450
00:31:00,810 --> 00:31:01,810
And attacked.
451
00:31:04,470 --> 00:31:05,590
I'm sickened by this.
452
00:31:07,390 --> 00:31:09,110
How could you two be a part of this?
453
00:31:10,850 --> 00:31:12,450
We never really wanted to be.
454
00:31:13,350 --> 00:31:15,450
But we couldn't squeal.
455
00:31:16,270 --> 00:31:18,190
So you just let the swan be killed?
456
00:31:20,070 --> 00:31:21,530
We didn't know it was a felony.
457
00:31:31,760 --> 00:31:34,900
Your Honor, I've asked my attorneys if I
could do my own closing.
458
00:31:35,640 --> 00:31:38,520
Mr. Wambaugh said it was something you
would allow.
459
00:31:39,700 --> 00:31:40,780
Well, it's irregular.
460
00:31:41,640 --> 00:31:47,160
But if the alternative is listening to
him, yes, it's okay. I object.
461
00:31:48,280 --> 00:31:49,440
But just a little.
462
00:31:51,340 --> 00:31:51,820
I
463
00:31:51,820 --> 00:31:58,660
know all
464
00:31:58,660 --> 00:31:59,940
the reasons against...
465
00:32:02,080 --> 00:32:04,500
Euthanasia. The potential for abuse.
466
00:32:06,700 --> 00:32:09,660
The woman who testified, Mrs. Allison.
467
00:32:11,000 --> 00:32:15,520
The idea that perhaps her husband felt
obligated to die.
468
00:32:17,280 --> 00:32:18,280
That's shocking.
469
00:32:19,560 --> 00:32:25,540
That doctors or family members could
possibly seduce patients with
470
00:32:26,460 --> 00:32:28,000
Of course that's horrible.
471
00:32:30,160 --> 00:32:36,740
That a doctor's help might cause a
patient to do it. A patient who might
472
00:32:36,740 --> 00:32:37,780
it without the help.
473
00:32:38,520 --> 00:32:39,780
That's unthinkable.
474
00:32:41,720 --> 00:32:42,860
It's unthinkable.
475
00:32:48,620 --> 00:32:53,520
I must admit that I've never really read
our Constitution.
476
00:32:54,760 --> 00:32:59,400
I don't know what our founding fathers
thought about euthanasia. I suspect...
477
00:32:59,760 --> 00:33:00,920
They didn't give it much thought.
478
00:33:01,860 --> 00:33:05,640
Most people don't until they're faced
with it.
479
00:33:07,160 --> 00:33:08,680
I was faced with it.
480
00:33:10,000 --> 00:33:16,000
And I promise you, when you are looking
into the eyes of a dying man,
481
00:33:16,300 --> 00:33:21,200
it's tough to concentrate on the big
societal picture.
482
00:33:22,600 --> 00:33:25,760
When a patient begs you for peace,
it's...
483
00:33:26,160 --> 00:33:33,080
hard to prioritize the integrity of the
law over the dignity of that man's
484
00:33:33,080 --> 00:33:34,080
life.
485
00:33:34,740 --> 00:33:38,060
Harry Fenwick wanted to die.
486
00:33:38,440 --> 00:33:44,420
He didn't want to exist in a painful,
degrading manner. He wanted
487
00:33:44,420 --> 00:33:48,880
to die. And he asked me, his doctor,
488
00:33:49,080 --> 00:33:53,420
to prescribe some humanity.
489
00:33:56,300 --> 00:33:59,040
The law says that I should have let him
suffer.
490
00:33:59,660 --> 00:34:03,840
A law -abiding person would have let him
suffer, I guess.
491
00:34:07,500 --> 00:34:08,659
I couldn't.
492
00:34:11,100 --> 00:34:12,100
I couldn't.
493
00:34:15,420 --> 00:34:18,960
Good law or bad law, you're the judge.
494
00:34:42,889 --> 00:34:49,090
Mr. Greer, if you don't mind, I'll hear
your summation tomorrow.
495
00:35:29,000 --> 00:35:30,720
One of these your grandchild? What?
496
00:35:31,300 --> 00:35:32,300
Oh.
497
00:35:32,940 --> 00:35:34,040
No, no.
498
00:35:34,820 --> 00:35:35,820
Just look.
499
00:35:37,060 --> 00:35:38,480
Nothing more beautiful, huh?
500
00:35:39,280 --> 00:35:40,280
No.
501
00:35:41,280 --> 00:35:42,280
Nothing.
502
00:35:54,500 --> 00:35:57,620
I don't understand how you could ever...
503
00:35:57,880 --> 00:36:02,220
Allow it to happen. How you could let a
poor, innocent swan just be killed?
504
00:36:02,720 --> 00:36:07,060
We kill frogs for biology, cows for
meat. That's a little different than
505
00:36:07,060 --> 00:36:08,960
a swan to death with a hockey stick.
506
00:36:09,220 --> 00:36:12,380
You want to become Jewish because of the
be kind to animals rule.
507
00:36:13,540 --> 00:36:15,140
What has happened to you, Zach?
508
00:36:15,420 --> 00:36:18,960
I didn't hit the swan. I didn't like it
that the other kids did.
509
00:36:19,340 --> 00:36:21,180
We just didn't want to be squealers.
510
00:36:22,700 --> 00:36:26,560
Well, I don't see how you could even be
friends with boys who could do something
511
00:36:26,560 --> 00:36:27,560
so awful.
512
00:36:27,850 --> 00:36:31,230
Some of your friends go hunting and
shoot bear and moose.
513
00:36:32,170 --> 00:36:36,450
How is it different? Because beating a
swan is cruel.
514
00:36:36,670 --> 00:36:37,670
It's torture.
515
00:36:38,010 --> 00:36:40,230
It wasn't killed. It was tortured.
516
00:36:41,590 --> 00:36:42,870
You don't see the difference?
517
00:36:48,810 --> 00:36:53,790
A few years ago, they came out with a
book called The Final Exit.
518
00:36:54,190 --> 00:36:55,470
A suicide manual.
519
00:36:55,890 --> 00:36:57,290
A how -to book.
520
00:36:59,050 --> 00:37:03,730
A week after it hit the stands, it went
to the top of the New York Times
521
00:37:03,730 --> 00:37:04,730
bestseller list.
522
00:37:06,490 --> 00:37:08,270
A suicide manual.
523
00:37:12,030 --> 00:37:13,510
What is going on?
524
00:37:18,870 --> 00:37:25,710
In a day where 30 % of today's
teenagers, 30%, actually
525
00:37:25,710 --> 00:37:27,970
consider taking their own lives,
526
00:37:29,040 --> 00:37:33,140
How can we be cultivating a permissive
attitude towards suicide?
527
00:37:35,460 --> 00:37:39,520
I'm told that some teenage boys in this
town have been killing swans.
528
00:37:40,800 --> 00:37:43,360
To me, that certainly crosses the line.
529
00:37:44,300 --> 00:37:47,760
But how do we really draw that line
today, Your Honor?
530
00:37:48,640 --> 00:37:53,660
When kids see us reducing the value of
Harry Fenwick's life, of Carl Adelson's,
531
00:37:53,780 --> 00:37:56,720
that doesn't bode well for the swan.
532
00:37:58,090 --> 00:38:01,590
You really think these incidents are
connected? I don't know.
533
00:38:03,050 --> 00:38:08,050
But I do know the equation isn't nearly
as simple as defense counsel suggests.
534
00:38:09,030 --> 00:38:13,630
It's much more complicated than an
individual's right to die or his right
535
00:38:13,630 --> 00:38:14,630
out with dignity.
536
00:38:14,810 --> 00:38:21,190
Once we say that it's okay for doctors
to help kill patients, once the erosion
537
00:38:21,190 --> 00:38:26,630
of life's value is so complete, can it
really be a surprise?
538
00:38:27,370 --> 00:38:31,750
that teenage boys can think nothing of
killing birds.
539
00:38:43,270 --> 00:38:44,630
We're at that point, Your Honor.
540
00:38:48,310 --> 00:38:50,590
Life has been rendered to have no
intrinsic worth.
541
00:38:51,930 --> 00:38:56,010
Harry Fenwick, I guess, came to the
conclusion that his being alive had no
542
00:38:56,010 --> 00:38:57,770
worth. No more value.
543
00:38:58,370 --> 00:38:59,610
His doctor agreed.
544
00:39:00,590 --> 00:39:02,090
So his doctor killed him.
545
00:39:03,630 --> 00:39:08,570
We're supposed to say that according to
the United States Constitution,
546
00:39:09,090 --> 00:39:14,530
human life has no sanctity.
547
00:39:18,130 --> 00:39:19,870
What is going on?
548
00:39:47,100 --> 00:39:49,200
We'll talk about this when we get home,
okay?
549
00:39:50,760 --> 00:39:51,780
We knew it was wrong.
550
00:39:52,760 --> 00:39:54,080
Why didn't you stop them then?
551
00:39:55,260 --> 00:39:56,380
It isn't so easy.
552
00:39:56,860 --> 00:40:00,920
Jimmy, I've got the names of all the
kids. You want to prosecute?
553
00:40:02,000 --> 00:40:07,000
Uh, no, they'll just walk away thinking
what they did was illegal. I don't want
554
00:40:07,000 --> 00:40:08,000
them to get off that easy.
555
00:40:08,440 --> 00:40:11,500
Tell the parents, hold a funeral for the
swan.
556
00:40:12,120 --> 00:40:14,480
Make them all attend, parents too, okay?
557
00:40:29,920 --> 00:40:30,920
Nice beats.
558
00:40:32,580 --> 00:40:33,580
Thank you.
559
00:40:50,200 --> 00:40:54,060
If it happened today, I don't know what
I'd do with Mr. Fenwick.
560
00:40:58,040 --> 00:40:59,640
Do you know what you do with your
brother?
561
00:41:06,460 --> 00:41:07,460
No.
562
00:41:20,900 --> 00:41:23,620
We're both looking to that judge to tell
us we were right.
563
00:41:29,610 --> 00:41:30,790
They say he's a smart judge.
564
00:41:32,890 --> 00:41:33,890
Yeah.
565
00:41:35,870 --> 00:41:37,270
A very smart judge.
566
00:41:59,350 --> 00:42:04,630
Euthanasia obviously raises profound
questions about the meaning of
567
00:42:04,630 --> 00:42:07,670
human life.
568
00:42:08,770 --> 00:42:14,750
The answer, I'm afraid, comes down to
your definition of value.
569
00:42:16,270 --> 00:42:22,850
Defense counsel defines it by pointing
to the best interests of the patient.
570
00:42:23,830 --> 00:42:26,430
How much does he value it?
571
00:42:27,690 --> 00:42:30,090
Does it have enough quality to be worth
living?
572
00:42:31,830 --> 00:42:38,550
Mr. Greer speaks of the intrinsic value
of life itself, regardless of the
573
00:42:38,550 --> 00:42:40,110
patient's rights or interests.
574
00:42:40,990 --> 00:42:45,970
When you crunch this debate, Mr.
575
00:42:46,190 --> 00:42:52,890
Greer is arguing that life is
intrinsically sacred, and the defense,
576
00:42:52,890 --> 00:42:54,710
maintain that it isn't.
577
00:42:56,300 --> 00:43:03,220
I so desperately want to agree with Mr.
Greer. I want to believe that life,
578
00:43:03,420 --> 00:43:07,000
any life, has intrinsic value.
579
00:43:08,420 --> 00:43:13,420
And that respect for that life remains
distinct from what the person thinks of
580
00:43:13,420 --> 00:43:16,320
himself or what others think of him.
581
00:43:17,940 --> 00:43:23,900
That even if he is never loved, even if
he is hated,
582
00:43:25,770 --> 00:43:31,090
or if he does evil, his life,
583
00:43:31,090 --> 00:43:35,810
his life, nevertheless,
584
00:43:36,050 --> 00:43:39,390
has intrinsic value.
585
00:43:40,610 --> 00:43:47,210
His life is, nevertheless, sacred.
586
00:43:49,190 --> 00:43:51,270
According to our Supreme Court,
587
00:43:53,100 --> 00:43:59,460
The patient has the right to die if he
chooses, which means, legally,
588
00:43:59,680 --> 00:44:02,420
life enjoys no sacred protection.
589
00:44:03,020 --> 00:44:09,720
I agree with the Washington court that
there is no meaningful
590
00:44:09,720 --> 00:44:16,500
distinction between the terminal patient
on life support and the
591
00:44:16,500 --> 00:44:17,860
terminal patient who's not.
592
00:44:18,820 --> 00:44:21,520
They both want to die.
593
00:44:22,640 --> 00:44:25,440
They both need the doctor's help.
594
00:44:26,920 --> 00:44:33,120
To say one death is natural and the
other is artificial goes against my
595
00:44:33,120 --> 00:44:36,560
logic. It also goes against humanity.
596
00:44:38,380 --> 00:44:45,180
I hereby declare the law against
physician -assisted suicide to be
597
00:44:45,920 --> 00:44:51,920
I strike it down, and I'm overturning
the conviction against Jill Brock.
598
00:44:52,770 --> 00:44:54,710
The defendant is free to go.
46398
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