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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

Terminally ill lawyer wants to die on her own terms

By Rebecca Quilliam
Bay of Plenty Times·
25 May, 2015 09:30 PM3 mins to read

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Lecretia Seales is in court fighting for her right to die.

Lecretia Seales is in court fighting for her right to die.

A former Tauranga woman fighting to have the option of dying on her own terms says she was not coerced into making the decision to choose whether to die before a terminal brain tumour kills her.

Lecretia Seales, 42, has possibly only months to live, after being diagnosed with incurable brain cancer. Ms Seales grew up in Tauranga and attended Tauranga Girls' College before moving to Wellington to study law. She has taken a legal battle to the High Court at Wellington to have the law clarified over whether her doctor can assist in her death before her quality of life becomes intolerable and undignified.

Lecretia Seales' father Larry Seales (left) and husband, Matt Vickers, arrive at the High Court in Wellington.
Lecretia Seales' father Larry Seales (left) and husband, Matt Vickers, arrive at the High Court in Wellington.

Her case relies on provisions in the Bill of Rights Act enshrining the rights to not be deprived of life or subjected to cruel treatment.

The former lawyer was present periodically throughout the day yesterday sitting in a wheelchair next to her mother, often with her eyes closed while she listened to her lawyers' submissions.

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Five counsel made up Ms Seales' legal team, and two of those lawyers spent the day giving submissions on their client's personal situation, similar legal cases and how the Crown's case contradicted the Bill of Rights Act.

Dr Andrew Butler, Lecretia Seales' lawyer.
Dr Andrew Butler, Lecretia Seales' lawyer.

One of her lawyers, Chris Curran, said Ms Seales' dignity was a central part of her claim.

That dignity underpinned the Bill of Rights framework, he said.

It was also dignity that was being "assaulted" by the Crown's case, he said.

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Another of Ms Seales' lawyers, Andrew Butler, told the court that his client, in an affidavit, had sworn she had not been talked into her euthanasia decision and she wanted the choice to be able to say when enough was enough.

Her family, sometimes reluctantly, had accepted her decision, she said.

It was a "sound decision" that she trusted herself to make, Ms Seales said.

He read an affidavit written by his client's doctor, who was given name suppression, who said she would be prepared to assist in Ms Seales' death if that action was ruled legal.

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She said it was clear that Ms Seales was competent and able to give consent.

Dr Butler also read a number of affidavits from international palliative care experts, that said end of life care did not address all suffering, including the psychological impacts of suffering.

Surgical oncologist at the University of New Mexico Katherine Morris said in an affidavit that for some terminally ill patients having lethal medicine prescribed gave them "reasons to live" and made their last months less stressful.

American doctor Eric Kress, involved in palliative care in Montana, said some people faced a "hard death" regardless of their care.

Ms Seales had been living with the diagnosis since March 2011, when a neurologist determined brain cancer after she had been experiencing headaches and loss of vision in her left eye.

The public gallery was packed for the hearing.

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About 10 of Ms Seales' supporters, including her Tauranga parents Shirley and Larry Seales, and high-profile lawyer Sir Geoffrey Palmer, were seated in the jury box.

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