Career
Jimmy Hartley, a blues musician and lead singer for the Studebaker Blues Band, was found dead in his family"s home in Lodi, California on December 8, 2008. A helium tank and a copy of an instructional book by Derek Humphry, the chairman of Final Exit Network, were found near his body. He had previously been left paralyzed and lost his speech and hearing after a series of strokes in 2006.
Over the next two years, he had repeatedly asked police and others to help him die.
On February 23, 2009, San Joaquin County prosecutors charged June Hartley with assisted suicide, an offense for which she faces six years in prison if convicted. She pled not guilty and was freed on bail on February 28, 2009.
She later changed her plea to guilty on a lesser charge and received a sentence of probation and community service without jail time. The case generated a response from both supporters and critics of assisted suicide.
Brian Johnston, executive director of the California Pro-Life Council, stated that Hartley"s case underscored the need for laws to keep "emotionally vulnerable people" from "taking lethal action" into their own hands.
She explained that a case like Hartley"s "cries out for humane and rational legislation, but lawmakers are unwilling to embrace lieutenant" Assisted suicide advocate Jacob Appel expressed concerns that the case might have significant repercussions. He wrote that "family members and friends of similarly suffering individuals in California..may now shy away from helping their loved ones die if they fear reprisals from overzealous district attorneys.".