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No law bars Kevorkian from try for Congress

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  • No law bars Kevorkian from try for Congress

    FayObserver.com, NC
    April 5 2008


    No law bars Kevorkian from try for Congress


    Catherine Pritchard


    Q: I heard that Dr. (Jack) Kevorkian is running for Congress. How can
    he do that? He's a felon. - B.W., Southern Pines

    A: That doesn't bar him from running for Congress. Nor would it bar
    him from serving there, if he were elected.

    Under the U.S. Constitution, members of Congress must meet just three
    qualifications - a minimum age (25 for House members and 30 for
    senators); a minimum length of U.S. citizenship (seven years for
    House members and nine years for senators); and, at the time of
    election, they must be living in the state they represent.

    Kevorkian is 79 and a lifelong U.S. citizen. He lives in Michigan,
    the state he says he wants to represent in Congress, so he's good to
    go.

    The states can set different rules for their own offices.

    Under North Carolina's Constitution, for example, members of the N.C.
    House and N.C. Senate must be `qualified' voters in this state, and
    felons are barred from voting in North Carolina unless they've had
    their citizenship rights restored.

    Note: In this state, general citizenship rights are automatically
    restored to a felon once he (or she) is unconditionally discharged
    from prison, probation or parole, whichever applies. (There are other
    situations permitting restoral, too.)

    Note 2: That restoral doesn't affect North Carolina's prohibition
    against felons owning guns.

    Back to Kevorkian: He's on parole for his 1999 conviction of
    second-degree murder. The retired pathologist is a long-time advocate
    of physician-assisted suicide for terminally ill patients. Between
    1990 and 1998, according to him, he participated in more than 100
    such suicides.

    He has said that in all but one instance - the last - the patients
    tripped the machines that led to their deaths. He hooked them up to
    it.

    In 1998, he administered a lethal injection to 52-year-old Thomas
    Youk, who was suffering from Lou Gehrig's Disease. Youk was
    physically unable to commit suicide and asked Kevorkian to give him
    the lethal injection.

    Before that, Kevorkian had been tried four times on assisted-suicide
    charges. Three of those trials ended in acquittal and one in a
    mistrial.

    In the Youk case, he was tried and convicted of a charge of
    second-degree murder. Kevorkian was released on parole in 2007 on the
    condition that he never help anyone else to die. He was also barred
    from caring for anyone who's older than 62 or disabled.

    Kevorkian, an independent, would face eight-term Republican incumbent
    Joe Knollenberg in the race and Democrat Gary Peters.

    Q: Where can I buy a child's beanie with a musical rotating propeller
    on top? I urgently need one. - B.C., Foxfire Village

    A: Uh oh. We don't know.

    If it's any help, we can point you to places where you can buy
    nonmusical beanies with propellers. Check sites such as
    GeekCulture.com, Amazon.com and eBay.com.
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