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UK mother cleared of attempted murder of ME-suffering daughter
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January 26, 2010
Original URL: http://en.wikinews.org/wiki/UK_mother_cleared_of_attempted_murder_of_ME-suffering_daughter



Bridget Gilderdale, a mother from Stonegate, East Sussex, has been found
not guilty of the attempted murder of her daughter, Lynn Gilderdale—a
31-year-old sufferer of chronic fatigue syndrome (more commonly known as
ME)—after her daughter was found dead at their home on 4 December,
having been killed using a concoction of pills and morphine. The case
has called into question the United Kingdom's assisted suicide laws.

Bridget Gilderdale had already admitted to aiding and abetting her
daughter's suicide, but the jury decided, unanimously, to acquit her of
a charge of attempted murder. The presiding judge, Mr Justice Bean, had
already questioned the accusation's suitability, asking prosecutor Sally
Howes "why it was considered to be in the public interest". Once the
verdict was delivered, he said, "I do not normally comment on the
verdicts of juries but in this case their decision, if I may say so,
shows common sense, decency and humanity which makes jury trials so
important in a case of this kind. "There is no dispute that you were a
caring and loving mother and that you considered that you were acting in
the best interests of your daughter."

Gilderdale was given a 12-month conditional discharge. The case stands
in contrast to the life sentence received last week by Frances Inglis,
who killed her severely brain damaged son Tom by injecting him with
heroin. Tom had, however, never expressed any wish to die, and his
mother had ignored medical advice, while Lynn had previously attempted
suicide. When this attempt had failed, her mother had assisted her in
ending her life.

The case has brought into the limelight the debate over a person's
"right to die" and the United Kingdom's laws on assisted suicide. Some
claim that, with a new draft policy clarifying the law in the pipeline,
Bridget Gilderdale should not have been prosecuted at all. A spokeswoman
for the Crown Prosecution Service defended the decision to prosecute,
saying that "It was not clear cut: there was a  sequence of events and
the toxicologist could not prove which of these  stages resulted in
death," and that it was not certain whether Lynn Gilderdale had died
from assisted suicide. Sarah Wootton, chief executive of Dignity in
Dying, says that there is a "clear ethical difference" between asisted
suicide and murder, and that the law does not take this into account.
She said, "Ultimately, the Government needs to review the law in this
area, as this case  highlights at present the law is a mess."

== Related news ==
* UK woman convicted of 'mercy' murder of son

== Sources ==
* http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/sussex/8479211.stm
* http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/law/article7002006.ece