The morning Welles died, Williams relieved a friend who had spent the night with the dying man.
"John needs to do this. Are you able to do this with him?" the friend asked Williams, according to a police affidavit.
Williams, a volunteer emergency medical technician and retired high school teacher, had watched his wife, Rebecca, die of ovarian cancer a decade ago. He replied that he could "honor John's wishes."
He cleaned Welles' .38-caliber revolver and carried it outside. Smoking a pipe and leaning on a walker, Welles headed to the front yard.
The men shook hands and Williams walked down the driveway. Before Williams could say "God bless," he heard a gunshot.
"This is what John wanted," Williams told police. "I had a comfortable feeling that this was right for him, knowing the man." [source]
The Connecticut legislature is considering easing the penalties for assisting in suicides. The legislation was prompted by the Williams case, and his lawyer believes probation is the best he can do. Many Cornwall residents support Williams. But there are some opposition voices. "Why should we have a separate standard for old, ill or disabled people who want to die?" asked Stephen Drake of the Chicago-based Not Dead Yet. "We talk about the suicides of younger people as tragedies. Why should we be sanctioning the suicides of certain people?" [source] It's gonna be a long year folks. Linkage:
- Wired News
- NPR: Connecticut Mulls Easing Assisted-Suicide Penalties (audio)
- NPR: Assisted Suicide -- Personal or Legal Issue? (audio)
- Hartford Courant: Slow Death
- And, of course, the Prophet or Madman List of Living Will and End of Life resources
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