Pubdate: Wed, 21 Nov 2001 Source: Northwest Florida Daily News (FL) Copyright: 2001 Northwest Florida Daily News Contact: http://www.nwfdailynews.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/313 ASHCROFT TRAMPLES ON STATES' RIGHTS Attorney General John Ashcroft fervently defends the principle of states' rights - until it no longer suits his purpose. Last week, he ran roughshod over it. He told federal drug officials to prosecute Oregon doctors who prescribe drugs in accordance with that state's physician-assisted suicide law. In doing so, he dismissed the will of Oregon voters, who twice passed referendums establishing assisted suicide. He disregarded the intent of the U.S. Supreme Court, which said that states can decide the issue for themselves. And he took it upon himself to try to do what Congress twice has refused to do: ban assisted suicide nationwide. Mr. Ashcroft can't do anything for now. Oregon's attorney general is fighting Ashcroft's order, and the issue is being pushed and pulled in the court system. But many Oregonians are angry at Ashcroft's power play. Oregon is the only state to permit assisted suicide. Since the law took effect four years ago, 70 terminally ill people - fewer than 20 per year - have ended their lives with narcotics prescribed by physicians. Only individuals with less than six months to live, judged mentally competent by two doctors, are eligible for assisted suicide under the law. Mr. Ashcroft directed the Drug Enforcement Administration to revoke the licenses of doctors who prescribe lethal doses of federally regulated drugs. He cited a recent Supreme Court ruling that the federal government can override state laws permitting the use of marijuana for medicinal purposes. But that decision, dealing with illegal drugs, provides a thin rationale for trampling on a state's right to regulate the practice of medicine - a power that Congress traditionally has ceded to states. It's also a selective reading of the Supreme Court. While rejecting a constitutional right to assisted suicide, a majority of justices said in a 1997 ruling that states should have latitude to permit assisted suicide. Justice Sandra Day O'Connor cited the benefit of having states serve as a "laboratory" on difficult issues. Mr. Ashcroft instructed the drug agency to pursue only those doctors who prescribed drugs to intentionally cause death, not those who may have hastened death in an effort to relieve pain. But Oregon's doctors have cause for worry if drug agents start looking over their shoulders, deciding how - and whether - they can practice medicine. Given current events, Mr. Ashcroft should be directing all his energy toward fighting terror, not terrifying doctors in Oregon who are complying with the public's will and their patients' wishes. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Stevens