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Murder or suicide?
The assisted dying bill.
Looking at my life insurance policies, it will not pay out in the case of suicide. So the question is what would insurance companies call assisted dying. :dozey: your choice so is it suicide or as a doctor did it a kind of murder, see a legal nightmare ahead |
Re: Murder or suicide?
I'd say mutual agreement to pass from this earth which voids any involuntary death.
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Re: Murder or suicide?
The bill will probably not pass because mp's are only interested in their own jobs and won't ruffle any feathers, but legalised assisted death is still suicide in my eyes as it's a personal decision.
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Re: Murder or suicide?
I work for a large insurance company, and the life insurance side of the business is watching all this very closely. Word is that any indication of assisted dying will be a policy exclusion.
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Re: Murder or suicide?
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If someone is dying from ALS, it would seem cruel to deny them their payout unless they let themselves choke to death as their windpipe fails rather than take an injection a few months/weeks prior. I assume there is already a precedent for this for those who've gone to Sweden for this? As for the bill, I am supportive of the concept, but I think this bill needs to fail. It's a badly thought-out mess. Rather typical of the lack of any direction or planning from this Government. |
Re: Murder or suicide?
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Re: Murder or suicide?
My work provides (us) "terminal illness" insurance, which that pays out early for terminal diseases, cancer being the obvious one.
Looking at the L&G site (as an example) they include this as standard on life policies > 2 years. Quote:
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Re: Murder or suicide?
Insurance companies tend to love words such as “could”, “might”, “may” etc and that’s where I see most stumbling blocks presenting themselves.
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Re: Murder or suicide?
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It is not murder, which is a common law offence in which one person kills another unlawfully (i.e. common law acknowledges that there are legal reasons why one person might kill another). As a common law offence there is no Murder Act in English law. Lawful and unlawful killing of others is defined in legal precedent and other legislation. |
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