PEOPLE OF MI V JACK KEVORKIAN
Annotate this Case
Download PDF
STATE OF MICHIGAN
COURT OF APPEALS
PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF MICHIGAN,
FOR PUBLICATION
November 20, 2001
9:05 a.m.
Plaintiff-Appellee,
v
No. 221758
Oakland Circuit Court
LC No. 98-163675-FC
JACK KEVORKIAN,
Defendant-Appellant.
Updated Copy
February 1, 2002
Before: Hoekstra, P.J., and Saad and Whitbeck, JJ.
WHITBECK, J.
A jury convicted defendant of second-degree murder1 and delivering a controlled
substance.2 The trial court sentenced him to concurrent prison terms of ten to twenty-five years
for the murder conviction and seven years for the controlled substance conviction. Defendant
appeals as of right and we affirm.
I. Overview
This case is about death; in particular, the death of former racecar driver Thomas Youk in
September 1998. Youk was fifty-two years old and had amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also
known as Lou Gehrig's disease. Defendant twice videotaped himself interacting with Youk. In
the first videotape, defendant went to Youk's home to discuss his condition. In the second
videotape, defendant administered a lethal drug to Youk. Defendant later was a guest on the
television news show 60 Minutes, during which segments from both videotapes were shown.
The jury saw the videotapes and the 60 Minutes interview at defendant's trial. Nevertheless,
defendant attempted to persuade the jury not to convict him because the murder he was charged
with committing was, in his view, a "mercy killing."
Given this factual setting, this appeal presents a fascinating paradox. Though he made an
impassioned plea to the jury to adopt his views on euthanasia, in this appeal defendant has given
1
MCL 750.317.
2
MCL 333.7401(2)(b).
-1-
almost no attention to his claim that this homicide had a legal justification or excuse. Indeed,
exactly seven of the fifty pages in his brief to this Court address euthanasia. Even during oral
arguments, defendant's appellate counsel made not a single reference to this issue.
Nevertheless, euthanasia is at the core of this case. But for defendant's self-described
zealotry, Thomas Youk's death would, in all probability, not have been the subject of national
attention, much less a murder trial. Defendant, in what is now apparently something of an
afterthought, asks us to conclude that euthanasia is legal and, therefore, to reverse his conviction
on constitutional grounds. We refuse. Such a holding would be the first step down a very steep
and very slippery slope. To paraphrase the United States Supreme Court in Washington v
Glucksberg,3 it would expand the right to privacy to include a right to commit euthanasia and
thus place the issue outside the arenas of public debate and legislative action. Such a holding
would also involve the judiciary in deciding questions that are simply beyond our capacity.
Succinctly put, there is no principled basis for us to legalize euthanasia.
Defendant's other issues are more mundane and we describe the relevant facts in more
detail in the appropriate discussion sections. First, defendant asserts that his trial attorney, David
Gorosh, did not provide him with his constitutional right to effective representation. However,
defendant has failed to demonstrate that Gorosh performed deficiently at any time he actually
acted as counsel. Defendant also failed to prove that Gorosh, while acting as standby counsel,
took control of the case or did anything to destroy the jury's perception that defendant was
representing himself. Even assuming for the sake of argument that a claim alleging ineffective
assistance of standby counsel is legally cognizable, defendant still has not proved that Gorosh
acted deficiently and prejudicially. Defendant chose—almost certainly unwisely but nevertheless
knowingly, intelligently, voluntarily, and unequivocally—to represent himself. He cannot now
assign the blame for his conviction to someone who did not act as his trial counsel.
Second, defendant claims that the prosecutor improperly referred to defendant's decision
to exercise his right to remain silent, thereby denying him his rights under the Fifth Amendment.
The remarks at issue were the prosecutor's proper objections to defendant's repeated and
improper attempts to inject into his closing argument facts that were not in evidence. As such,
the prosecutor's remarks were not direct and unequivocal references to defendant's failure to
testify, and therefore, the making of those remarks did not constitute misconduct.
Third, defendant claims that the trial court erred in excluding the testimony of Terrence
and Melody Youk, Thomas' brother and sister-in-law. However, defendant misreads the
applicable standards with respect to res gestae witnesses and then fails entirely to demonstrate
how the proposed testimony would have been relevant. Thus, even on this narrow evidentiary
issue, defendant's arguments have no merit.
3
Washington v Glucksberg, 521 US 702, 721; 117 S Ct 2258; 138 L Ed 2d 772 (1997).
-2-
II. The Death Of Thomas Youk
A. The September 15, 1998, Videotape
On September 15, 1998, at 9:55 p.m., defendant went to Youk's home to discuss Youk's
condition. As the videotape of this discussion revealed, defendant stated that he was recording
their interaction in "connection with a request from Thomas [Youk] for help in . . . ending his
suffering." Youk then described his condition. He recalled that his symptoms of ALS first
became obvious to him in 1994 and that he had been confined to a wheelchair since 1997. By
September 1998, Youk said, he could not move his left arm or his legs, he had minimal use of his
right arm, he had difficulty swallowing and breathing, he was fed through a tube, and he was
forced to use a machine to help him breathe. Youk stated that, at the time, he could not do
anything for himself, that he had discussed "his wishes" with his mother, brothers, and wife, and
that they "understand why. It's my decision."
Defendant then told Youk that he needed to sign a form indicating that he was consenting
to a "direct injection instead of using the device, the machine." Defendant asked Youk if he
wished to donate his organs, and Youk declined. Defendant then read the consent form, which
stated in part:
I, Thomas Youk, the undersigned, entirely voluntarily, without any
reservation, external persuasion, pressure, or duress, and after prolonged and
thorough deliberation, hereby consent to the following medical procedure of my
own choosing, and that you have chosen direct injection, or what they call active
euthanasia, to be administered by a competent medical professional, in order to
end with certainty my intolerable and hopelessly incurable suffering.
The meeting ended at 10:15 p.m.
B. The September 16, 1998, Videotape
On September 16, 1998, at 9:49 p.m., defendant again videotaped himself and Youk at
Youk's home. Youk stated that he "wanted to go through with this" and signed the consent form.
Defendant remarked that he would inject Youk in the vein because "it's quicker," and stated,
"now I'm going to put on a cardiogram so we know when your heart is stopped, okay."
Defendant established a connection between Youk and the electrocardiogram. Defendant
injected Youk with Anectine and Seconal before injecting Youk with potassium chloride.
During this time, defendant provided a commentary on what was occurring:
Sleepy Tom? Tom are you asleep? And now we'll inject the Anectine.
You asleep Tom? Tom? You asleep? He's asleep. Now the Potassium Chloride.
This machine is recording for some reason so I'm pulling it by hand until the heart
stops. It's been, it's been about two minutes since I injected the, ah, seconal, and
one minute since I injected the—. Now we're getting agonal complexes and that's
about the, the Potassium Chloride will stop the heart, so. Now there's a straight
line. A straight line and the cardiogram will be turned off. His heart is stopped.
-3-
C. Cause Of Death
The police were dispatched to Youk's house on September 17, 1998, at 1:30 a.m. They
found Youk lying on his bed, dead. The police also found a Federal Express receipt with
defendant's name at the scene. Officials conducted Youk's autopsy at 10:00 a.m. the same day.
The medical examiner listed the manner of death as homicide and the cause of death as
intravenous injection of substances. During the autopsy, the medical examiner found two "fresh"
needle marks on Youk's left and right wrists that had been covered with makeup. The autopsy
protocol stated that the cause of death was "poisoning by intravenous injection of substances."
Oakland County Medical Examiner Ljubisa J. Dragovic, an expert in neuropathology and
pathology who later testified for the prosecution at defendant's trial, witnessed the autopsy. Dr.
Dragovic found three significant drugs in Youk's bodily fluids. First, Youk had a high level of
the barbiturate Seconal, also known as Secobarbital, in his blood. Seconal is a Schedule 2
controlled substance4 typically used to induce sleep. Dr. Dragovic believed that the amount of
Seconal in Youk's blood would have killed him in a few hours. Second, Dr. Dragovic found
Anectine, a paralyzing muscle relaxant, present in Youk's body in an amount that could have
killed Youk within five to eight minutes by causing brain death. However, Dr. Dragovic
determined that it was the third drug, potassium chloride, that defendant injected into Youk that
caused his death. As Dr. Dragovic explained, when potassium chloride is injected into the body
in a concentrated form at once, rather than in small amounts over time, it stops the heart from
beating within a matter of seconds. According to Dr. Dragovic, the toxicology reports did not
reveal the presence of potassium chloride in Youk's body because that substance is naturally
present in the body after red blood cells die.
Dr. Dragovic also confirmed that Youk had ALS. However, in Dr. Dragovic's opinion,
Youk did not die from ALS, ALS was not an underlying cause of Youk's death, and ALS did not
contribute to Youk's death in any way. Rather, Dr. Dragovic firmly reiterated that the poisons
injected into Youk killed him, constituting a homicide.
D. The 60 Minutes Interview
News correspondent Mike Wallace interviewed defendant for 60 Minutes. In the first clip
from the interview shown to the jury, Wallace stated at the outset, "You killed him." Defendant
responded: "I did, but it could be Manslaughter not Murder. It's not necessarily Murder. But it
doesn't bother me what you call it. I know what it is. This could never be a crime in any society
which deems itself enlightened." Defendant indicated that he was making an example of Youk.
Wallace then suggested that Youk was initially a little reluctant because Youk "thought he was
getting assisted suicide." Defendant replied that "this is better than assisted suicide, I explained
that to him. It's better control."
4
Dr. Dragovic explained that the Board of Pharmacy and the Federal Drug Enforcement Agency
must license a physician to prescribe Seconal.
-4-
Defendant also explained to Wallace the process leading to Youk's death. According to
defendant, the first injection paralyzed Youk's muscles and slowed his ability to take in oxygen.
When the oxygen was "cut off" and Youk could not breathe, defendant injected the "potassium
chloride to stop the heart." Defendant then told Wallace that "[e]ither they go or I go,"
apparently meaning that he would be acquitted for killing Youk or, if convicted, he would starve
to death in prison. As defendant put it: "I've got to force them to act. They must charge me.
Because if they do not, that means they don't think it's a crime. Because they don't need any
more evidence do they? Do you have to dust for fingerprints on this[?]"
Wallace suggested that defendant was "engaged in a political, medical, macabre . . .
publicity venture," and had a "ghoulish . . . desire to see the deed done." Defendant did not
disagree with those assertions, stating: "Well, it could be, I, I can't argue with that. Maybe it is
ghoulish. I don't know. It appears that way to you. I can't criticize you for that." In fact,
defendant agreed with Wallace, emphasizing that "the main point is . . . that the deed be done."
Evidently in response to the argument that legalizing euthanasia could be problematic in practice,
defendant commented that "[e]verything can be abused. You learn from abuse, you punish the
abuser, and then . . . if you want to control, you say that only certain doctors can do this in certain
areas, nobody else. . . . That's the way to control it."
Defendant then returned to one of his main themes, saying:
If you don't have liberty and self-determination, you got nothing. That's
what this country's built on and this is the ultimate self-determination to determine
when and how you're gonna die when you're suffering.
[Wallace]: And those who say that [defendant], Dr. Death, is a fanatic?
[Defendant]: Zealot. No, not if, sure, you try to take a liberty away and I
turn fanatic. . . . I'm fighting for me, Mike, me. This is a right I want when I, I'm
71, I'll be 71. You don't know what'll happen when you get older. I may end up
terribly suffering. I want some colleague to be free to come and help me when I
say the time has come. That's why I'm fighting for, me. Now that sounds selfish.
And if it helps everybody else, so be it.
III. Euthanasia And The Constitution
A. Facts And Argument
Before trial, defendant, relying on the Ninth Amendment,5 filed a motion asking the trial
court to dismiss the charges against him. Evidently, defendant intended to argue that the people
had retained the right to active euthanasia. The trial court denied the motion on the grounds that
it was untimely and that defendant had failed to cite any support for his argument. Defendant
then filed an emergency application for leave to appeal the trial court's order with this Court. In
5
US Const, Am IX.
-5-
addition to challenging the trial court's ruling, he also claimed that the prosecution violated the
Michigan constitutional counterpart to the Ninth Amendment.6 This Court ultimately determined
that defendant failed to articulate the need for immediate appellate review.7
On appeal, defendant makes two related, but separate, constitutional arguments. First, he
argues that the unenumerated rights protected by the Ninth Amendment and its Michigan
constitutional counterpart8 include a patient's right to be free from unbearable pain and suffering.
Second, he maintains that the Fourteenth Amendment9 and its Michigan constitutional
counterpart10 also include this right by proscribing state deprivation of liberty without due
process of law either under constitutional privacy concepts or as a "necessary and direct corollary
of this position . . . that a person should not be forced to suffer unbearably." Defendant claims
that he has standing to raise these due process arguments. Defendant thus contends that he is
entitled to have his murder conviction reversed and no further criminal proceedings instituted
against him for "aiding in Thomas Youk's assertion of his constitutional right to be free from
intolerable pain and suffering."
B. Standard Of Review
We review a trial court's decision to grant or deny a motion to dismiss charges for an
abuse of discretion.11 However, review de novo is appropriate for the core constitutional
questions that underlie the trial court's ruling on the motion to dismiss the charges.12
C. Constitutional Provisions
The Ninth Amendment of the United States Constitution states that "[t]he enumeration in
the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by
the people."13 The counterpart provision in the Michigan Constitution states that "[t]he
enumeration in this constitution of certain rights shall not be construed to deny or disparage
others retained by the people."14
6
Const 1963, art 1, § 23.
7
People v Kevorkian, unpublished order of the Court of Appeals, entered March 16, 1999
(Docket No. 218077).
8
Const 1963, art 1, § 23.
9
US Const, Am XIV.
10
Const 1963, art 1, § 17.
11
See People v Adams, 232 Mich App 128, 132; 591 NW2d 44 (1998).
12
See People v Houstina, 216 Mich App 70, 73; 549 NW2d 11 (1996).
13
US Const, Am IX.
14
Const 1963, art 1, § 23.
-6-
The Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution states, in relevant part, that
no state shall "deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law."15 The
counterpart provision in the Michigan Constitution states, in relevant part, that "[n]o person shall
be . . . deprived of life, liberty or property, without due process of law."16
D. The Nature Of Defendant's Arguments
At the outset it is important to understand the nature of defendant's constitutional claims.
The best way to do this is to state clearly the constitutional arguments that defendant does not
raise.
First, defendant does not ask us to hold that he acted properly in furtherance of the right
to refuse life-sustaining medical treatment. In Cruzan v Director, Missouri Dep't of Health,17 the
United States Supreme Court "assume[d] that the United States Constitution would grant a
competent person a constitutionally protected right to refuse lifesaving hydration and nutrition,"
likely under a Fourteenth Amendment due process liberty interest analysis.18 More recently, in
Glucksberg,19 the Court strengthened the constitutional basis for the Cruzan decision,
interpreting Cruzan as holding that "the right to refuse unwanted medical treatment was so rooted
in our history, tradition, and practice as to require special protection under the Fourteenth
Amendment." Here, defendant does not, and could not, rely on Cruzan; factually, this case does
not involve removing life support. Further, though not resting their decisions precisely on the
Fourteenth Amendment, Michigan courts have arrived at the same conclusion regarding a
patient's right to refuse life-sustaining medical care.20 The limited scope of these cases does not
establish a right to be free from unbearable pain and suffering that would make euthanasia legal.
There is, of course, a substantial factual distinction between refusing care, even if doing so
hastens death, and purposefully ending a life.
Second, defendant does not make any claim that this case concerns medical efforts to
relieve pain or discomfort, though these medical efforts may hasten death. Michigan exempts
such medical efforts from criminal penalties.21 Importantly, however, the exemption does not
15
US Const, Am XIV.
16
Const 1963, art 1, § 17.
17
Cruzan v Director, Missouri Dep't of Health, 497 US 261, 279; 110 S Ct 2841; 111 L Ed 2d
224 (1990).
18
Id. at 279, n 7.
19
Glucksberg, supra at 721, n 17.
20
See In re Martin, 450 Mich 204, 215-216; 538 NW2d 399 (1995), discussing In re Rosebush,
195 Mich App 675; 491 NW2d 633 (1992).
21
See MCL 752.1027(b)(3) ("[P]rescribing, dispensing, or administering medications or
procedures if the intent is to relieve pain or discomfort and not to cause death, even if the
medication or procedure may hasten or increase the risk of death" is not the felony of assisted
suicide.) (emphasis added).
-7-
apply to medical efforts designed to cause death.22 Factually, there is not a scintilla of evidence
that defendant administered potassium chloride to Youk to relieve Youk's pain or discomfort.
Defendant admits as much in his brief on appeal:
The only medical relief for Thomas Youk's conditions was the relief that
he sought from [defendant]. The injection [defendant] gave to Thomas Youk was
the only effective medical way to alleviate Thomas Youk's unbearable suffering.
No pain medication would suffice, and there was no other beneficial medical
alternative that would have aided Thomas Youk.[23]
Third, defendant does not ask us to find that his actions in this matter constituted some form of
permissible assisted suicide. In Michigan, assisting in a suicide—that is, providing the physical
means by which another person attempts or commits suicide or participating in a physical act by
which another person attempts or commits suicide—is illegal.24 The Michigan Supreme Court
has upheld the statute in question against both a Title-Object Clause challenge under the
Michigan Constitution and a Due Process Clause challenge under the United States
Constitution.25 In reaching its decision on the due process challenge, a majority of the Court
observed:
Presently, a substantial number of jurisdictions have specific statutes that
criminalize assisted suicide and the Model Penal Code also provides for criminal
penalties. Further, nearly all states expressly disapprove of suicide and assisted
suicide either in statutes dealing with durable powers of attorney in health-care
situations, or in "living will" statutes. In addition, all states provide for the
involuntary commitment of persons who may harm themselves as the result of
mental illness, and a number of states allow the use of nondeadly force to thwart
suicide attempts.[26]
Referring to Cruzan, the majority observed:
Indeed, the United States Supreme Court repeatedly and unequivocally has
affirmed the sanctity of human life and rejected the notion that there is a right of
self-destruction inherent in any common-law doctrine or constitutional phrase.[27]
Several years after the Michigan Supreme Court decision in Kevorkian I, the United States
Supreme Court in Glucksberg upheld a similar Washington statute against a similar Due Process
22
Id.
23
Emphasis supplied.
24
See MCL 752.1027.
25
People v Kevorkian, 447 Mich 436, 445-446; 527 NW2d 714 (1994) (Kevorkian I).
26
Id. at 478-479; Justices Cavanagh, Brickley, and Griffin, joined by Justices Boyle and Riley.
27
Id. at 480-481.
-8-
Clause challenge under the United States Constitution.28 The Glucksberg majority held that the
prohibition in the Washington statute against "'caus[ing]'" or "'aid[ing]'" a suicide did not offend
the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution.29
Here, defendant makes no attempt to assert that he was engaged in assisted suicide when
he injected Youk with potassium chloride, causing his death. Rather, he asserts that if the Ninth
Amendment "is to have any substantive meaning," the right to be free from inexorable pain and
suffering must be among the unenumerated rights protected by that amendment and its Michigan
counterpart. Further, defendant asserts that the right to be free from unbearable pain and
suffering caused by a medical condition is inherently part of the liberty interests secured by the
Fourteenth Amendment and its Michigan counterpart. Defendant then contends that he cannot be
prosecuted for "aiding in Thomas Youk's assertion of his constitutional right to be free from
intolerable pain and suffering." Although defendant's appellate counsel has carefully avoided
using the words, as we have already noted, the record indicates that defendant was quite specific
when describing his actions; he said he was engaged in "active euthanasia" and the consent form
that Youk signed directly refers to such active euthanasia.
In summary, defendant does not, nor could he, ask us to hold that his actions were legally
justifiable because he simply helped Youk exercise his right to refuse medical care. Defendant
does not, nor could he, ask us to hold that he was lawfully attempting to alleviate Youk's pain
and suffering by any means other than causing his death. Defendant does not, nor could he, ask
us to hold that his actions constituted a legal form of assisted suicide. In a nutshell, and using his
own terminology, defendant asks us to legalize euthanasia.
E. Reserved Rights
Defendant's argument that the people have reserved the right to euthanasia under the
Ninth Amendment and its Michigan counterpart is basically formless. He states that a right to be
free from inexorable pain and suffering "must be among" the rights protected by these two
constitutional provisions. Further, he argues that states "should recognize such a right and give it
force." Defendant does not cite a single case for this extraordinary request. As the Supreme
Court said in Mitcham v Detroit,30
It is not enough for an appellant in his brief simply to announce a position
or assert an error and then leave it up to this Court to discover and rationalize the
basis for his claims, or unravel and elaborate for him his arguments, and then
search for authority either to sustain or reject his position. The appellant himself
28
In Vacco v Quill, 521 US 793; 117 S Ct 2293; 138 L Ed 2d 834 (1997), decided the same day,
the Court upheld New York's assisted suicide ban against an Equal Protection Clause challenge.
29
Glucksberg, supra at 705-706.
30
Mitcham v Detroit, 355 Mich 182; 94 NW2d 388 (1959).
-9-
must first adequately prime the pump; only then does the appellate well begin to
flow. Failure to brief a question on appeal is tantamount to abandoning it.[31]
We conclude, therefore, that defendant has abandoned this argument on appeal.
F. Euthanasia As A Due Process Right To Privacy
(1) Defendant's Argument
Defendant starts with the proposition that there is a right to privacy that is part of the
liberty interest protected by the Fourteenth Amendment and its Michigan counterpart. He then
asserts that the "intensely personal and private right of a patient to be free from intolerable and
irremediable suffering" is either part of or similar to this privacy right. Citing Vacco, he argues
that if the administration of aggressive painkilling drugs is acceptable even if this may hasten
death, then the "necessary and direct corollary of this position is that a person should not be
forced to suffer unbearably."
Defendant then reviews the positions of Justices O'Connor, Breyer, Souter, and Stevens
in Glucksberg to reach the conclusion that "Justices on the Supreme Court have suggested
allowing for interpretation of the Fourteenth Amendment's guarantee of liberty to apply to
various privacy rights, including those related to personal and private medical procedures."32
Finally, defendant argues that he has standing to assert Youk's constitutional right to be free from
intolerable pain, claiming that Justice Stevens in Glucksberg,33 "recognized the possibility that an
individual who provides assistance to a patient who was suffering interminably could prevail on
a Constitutional challenge" and that, if we agree that there is a constitutionally protected right to
be free from unbearable suffering, then the charges against him must be dismissed. We do not
agree.
(2) Encompassing Euthanasia Within The Right To Privacy
It is one thing to assert, as defendant does, that there is a large body of case law
suggesting that due process sometimes relies on the right to privacy to protect fundamental
liberty interests.34 It is quite another thing, however, to conclude that the right to privacy
31
Id. at 203 (citations omitted).
32
This argument reflects defendant's remarks on the second day of trial in which he asserted that
justices of the United States Supreme Court want a particularized case and that "Four of them
said we want to revisit this issue again."
33
Glucksberg, supra at 750.
34
We need not address the question whether there is, in fact, a right to privacy under the United
States and Michigan Constitutions; for the purposes of dealing with defendant's arguments here,
we have assumed the existence of such a right.
-10-
encompasses euthanasia. As Justice Jackson once pointedly noted, the enduring nature of
precedent gives judicial opinions a force all their own.35
The principle then lies about like a loaded weapon . . . . Every repetition
imbeds that principle more deeply in our law and thinking and expands it to new
purposes. All who observe the work of courts are familiar with what Judge
Cardozo described as "the tendency of a principle to expand itself to the limit of its
logic."[36]
Defendant urges us to pick up the loaded weapon of the right to privacy cases. He asks us to use
this weapon to resolve the situation faced by a person who suffers from literally unbearable pain
and who wishes to end that pain by dying. As Justice O'Connor described it: "Death will be
different for each of us. For many, the last days will be spent in physical pain and perhaps the
despair that accompanies physical deterioration and a loss of control of basic bodily and mental
functions."37
We decline, however, to pick up this loaded weapon for three basic reasons. First, we can
find no meaningful precedent for expanding the right to privacy to include a right to commit
euthanasia so that an individual can be free from intolerable and irremediable suffering. To our
knowledge, no court of last resort in this country has ever recognized such a right. Even in the
assisted suicide cases dealing with an asserted "right to die," courts have steadfastly refused to
expand the right to privacy to include the right to commit or receive euthanasia. As Chief Justice
Cavanagh and Justices Brickley and Griffin explained while describing the boundaries of the
right to privacy in end-of-life cases:
We do not discern in Cruzan and its historic roots an indication that the
federal constitution protects a right more expansive than the right to refuse to
begin or to continue life-sustaining medical treatment. Neither do we find in
[Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v Casey, 505 US 833; 112 S
Ct 2791; 120 L Ed 2d 674 (1992)] or in the precedent from which it evolved an
intent to expand the liberty interests identified by the Court in such a manner.[38]
Similarly, in Glucksberg, a majority of the United States Supreme Court concluded that the
asserted "right" to assistance in committing suicide "is not a fundamental liberty interest
protected by the Due Process Clause."39 Instead, the Court determined that a state has legitimate
35
Korematsu v United States, 323 US 214, 246; 65 S Ct 193; 89 L Ed 194 (1944) (Jackson, J.,
dissenting).
36
Id., quoting Cardozo, Nature of the Judicial Process (1932), p 51.
37
Glucksberg, supra at 736.
38
Kevorkian I, supra at 465 (Cavanagh, C.J., and Brickley and Griffin, JJ.).
39
Glucksberg, supra at 728.
-11-
and countervailing interests in preserving life,40 preventing suicide,41 protecting the integrity and
ethics of the medical profession, protecting vulnerable groups from abuse, neglect, and
mistakes,42 and acknowledging the equal value of all people.43 Most importantly, the Glucksberg
majority noted that states "may fear that permitting assisted suicide will start it down the path to
voluntary and perhaps even involuntary euthanasia."44 In commenting on the Ninth Circuit Court
of Appeals decision in the underlying case,45 the majority of the Court said:
The Court of Appeals' decision, and its expansive reasoning, provide
ample support for the [state of Washington's] concerns. The court noted, for
example, that the "decision of a duly appointed surrogate decision maker is for all
legal purposes the decision of the patient himself;" that "in some instances, the
patient may be unable to self-administer the drugs and . . . administration by the
physician . . . may be the only way the patient may be able to receive them;" and
that not only physicians, but also family members and loved ones, will inevitably
participate in assisting suicide. Thus, it turns out that what is couched as a limited
right to "physician-assisted suicide" is likely, in effect, a much broader license,
which could prove extremely difficult to police and contain. [The state of]
Washington's ban on assisting suicide prevents such erosion.[46]
The majority then turned, directly, to the "slippery slope" argument. The majority cited United
States v 12 200-ft Reels of Super 8 MM Film47 for the proposition that "'[e]ach step, when taken,
appear[s] a reasonable step in relation to that which preceded it, although the aggregate or end
result is one that would never have been seriously considered in the first instance.'"48 The
40
Id., noting that the Model Penal Code, § 210.5, Comment 5, p 100 states that "'[T]he interests
in the sanctity of life that are represented by the criminal homicide laws are threatened by one
who expresses a willingness to participate in taking the life of another.'"
41
Glucksberg, supra at 730, citing H. Hendin, Seduced by Death: Doctors, Patients and the
Dutch Cure, 24-25 (1997) ("Research indicates, however, that many people who request
physician-assisted suicide withdraw that request if their depression and pain are treated.").
42
Glucksberg, supra at 731, quoting the Council on Ethical and Judicial Affairs, Decisions Near
the End of Life, 267 JAMA 2229, 2233 (1992) ("'[T]he societal risk of involving physicians in
medical interventions to cause patients' deaths is too great.'").
43
Glucksberg, supra at 728-732.
44
Id. at 732.
45
Compassion in Dying v Washington, 79 F3d 790 (CA 9,1996).
46
Glucksberg, supra at 733 (citations omitted).
47
United States v 12 200-ft Reels of Super 8 MM Film, 413 US 123, 127; 93 S Ct 2665; 37 L Ed
2d 500 (1973).
48
Glucksberg, supra at 735. The Court also referred to Justice Cardozo's observation in The
Nature of the Judicial Process, 51 (1932) of "'[t]he tendency of a principle to expand itself to the
limit of its logic.'" Glucksberg, supra at 733, n 23.
-12-
majority referred to Physician-Assisted Suicide and Euthanasia in the Netherlands49 as
suggesting that
despite the existence of various reporting procedures, euthanasia in the
Netherlands has not been limited to competent, terminally ill adults who are
enduring physical suffering, and that regulation of the practice may not have
prevented abuses in cases involving vulnerable persons, including severely
disabled neonates and elderly persons suffering from dementia.50
Here, expanding the right to privacy would begin, as the steps in the progression of defendant's
argument supporting voluntary euthanasia clearly indicate, the slide down the slippery slope
toward euthanasia. No court of final jurisdiction has so expanded the right to privacy. As a state
court of intermediate appellate jurisdiction, neither will we.
Second, we conclude that by expanding the right to privacy as defendant suggests, we
would, to a great extent, place the matter outside the arenas of public debate and legislative
action.51 Whatever the life experiences or the policy preferences of the members of this Court
might be, we must exercise the utmost care to assure, when asked to break new ground, that the
liberty protected by the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment not be subtly
transformed into an expression of personal belief rather than an adherence to the rule of law.52 If
society is to recognize a right to be free from intolerable and irremediable suffering, it should do
so through the action of the majority of the legislature, whose role it is to set social policy,53 or
by action of the people through ballot initiative. As the Michigan Supreme Court observed when
analyzing the constitutionality of the prohibition of assisted suicide:
We are keenly aware of the intense emotions and competing moral
philosophies that characterize the present debate about suicide in general, and
assisted suicide in particular. The issues do not lend themselves to simple
answers. However, while the complexity of the matter does not permit us to avoid
the critical constitutional questions, neither does it, under the guise of
constitutional interpretation, permit us to expand the judicial powers of this Court,
especially where the question clearly is a policy one that is appropriately left to the
49
A Report of Chairman Charles T. Canady to the Subcommittee on the Constitution of the
House Committee on the Judiciary, 104th Cong, 2d Sess (Comm Print, 1966), pp 16-21.
50
Glucksberg, supra at 734.
51
Id. at 720.
52
See Moore v East Cleveland, Ohio, 431 US 494, 502; 97 S Ct 1932; 52 L Ed 2d 531 (1977)
(plurality opinion).
53
See Taylor v Kurapati, 236 Mich App 315, 355; 600 NW2d 670 (1999).
-13-
citizenry for resolution, either through its elected representatives or through a
ballot initiative under Const 1963, art 2, § 9.[54]
Third, we observe that by expanding the right of privacy to include a right to commit
euthanasia in order to end intolerable and irremediable suffering we would inevitably involve the
judiciary in deciding questions that are simply beyond its capacity. There is no court that can
answer the question of how much pain, or perception of pain by a third party, is necessary before
the suffering becomes intolerable and irremediable. The role of the courts is to serve neither as
physicians nor as theologians. In Glucksberg, Justice Stevens briefly discussed the United States
Supreme Court's changing attitude toward the death penalty, noting that "there is no absolute
requirement that a State treat all human life as having an equal right to preservation."55 Though
other jurisdictions may not value all life equally, that is not true in Michigan.56 In a state that
constitutionally prohibits putting to death the convicted perpetrator of even the most heinous of
crimes,57 courts are simply unsuited to make that decision with respect to the innocent. No
judge, no matter how learned, can assess the quality of human life and determine, as a matter of
law, that putting an end to suffering is justifiable in one case while in another case it is not. This
sort of subjective determination would be unavoidable if we begin, through judicial intervention,
to decide who shall live and who shall die.
Rather, the role of the courts is to apply the rule of law. As Chief Justice Burger once
eloquently explained:
It is often observed that hard cases make bad law. I suspect there is some
truth to that adage, for the "hard" cases always tempt judges to exceed the limits
of their authority . . . to reach a "desirable" result. Cardozo no doubt had this type
of case in mind when he wrote:
"The judge, even when he is free, is still not wholly free. He is not to
innovate at pleasure. He is not a knight-errant, roaming at will in pursuit of his
own ideal of beauty or of goodness. He is to draw his inspiration from
consecrated principles. He is not to yield to spasmodic sentiment, to vague and
unregulated benevolence. He is to exercise a discretion informed by tradition,
methodized by analogy, disciplined by system, and subordinated to 'the primordial
54
Kevorkian I, supra at 481-482; see also In re Certified Question (Marlinga v Kevorkian), 456
Mich 1223; 575 NW2d 550 (1998); Kevorkian v American Medical Ass'n, 237 Mich App 1; 602
NW2d 233 (1999); People ex rel Oakland Co Prosecuting Attorney v Kevorkian, 210 Mich App
601; 534 NW2d 172 (1995).
55
Glucksberg, supra at 738.
56
See, generally, Taylor, supra.
57
See Const 1963, art 4, § 46; Glucksberg, supra at 741 (Stevens, J., concurring) (emphasizing
the incompatibility of Washington's argument that life must be saved with the fact that it has the
death penalty).
-14-
necessity of order in the social life.' Wide enough in all conscience is the field of
discretion that remains." The Nature of the Judicial Process, 141 (1921).
What Cardozo tells us is beware the "good result," achieved by judicially
unauthorized or intellectually dishonest means on the appealing notion that the
desirable ends justify the improper judicial means. For there is always the danger
that the seeds of precedent sown by good men for the best of motives will yield a
rich harvest of unprincipled acts of others also aiming at "good ends."[58]
Simply put, the courts are not free to create new rights out of whole cloth. We will not do so
here.
(3) "A More Particularized Challenge"
The structure of the Glucksberg opinion reflects the complexity of the assisted suicide
issue, an issue certainly less complex than euthanasia. In Glucksberg, Chief Justice Rehnquist
wrote the opinion announcing the Court's decision. Justices O'Connor, Scalia, Kennedy, and
Thomas joined this opinion, constituting a solid five-person majority. Nevertheless, Glucksberg
consists of more than the majority opinion. Justice O'Connor wrote a concurrence, which
Justices Ginsburg and Breyer joined. At the same time, Justices Stevens, Souter, Ginsburg, and
Breyer each wrote their own concurring opinions. Thus, while the majority opinion in
Glucksberg is plainly identifiable, the nine individual justices' views on the assisted suicide issue
are far from uniform.
Defendant seizes on these concurrences in Glucksberg as evidence that the United States
Supreme Court would find a constitutional basis for assisted suicide if presented with "a more
particularized challenge." Defendant's assumption is that this is the perfect test case; this is the
"more particularized challenge"59 that will bring sweeping changes to constitutional law affecting
not only assisted suicide, but creating a right to commit euthanasia. As we have already outlined,
assisted suicide is not at issue here; rather, the fundamental question here is whether there is a
right to commit euthanasia. Defendant's observation that the concurring justices in Glucksberg
each expressed, in varying degrees, their reservations about the sweep of the majority opinion is
accurate. However, as is profoundly clear from each of their concurring opinions, there is not a
hint in any of the language that any of the concurring justices used that any of them would
recognize a right to commit euthanasia.
Justice O'Connor attempted to avoid dealing directly with the limits on a patient's right to
avoid suffering, writing:
58
See United Steelworkers of America, AFL-CIO-CLC v Weber, 443 US 193, 218-219; 99 S Ct
2721; 61 L Ed 2d 480 (1979) (Burger, C.J., dissenting).
59
Glucksberg, supra at 750 (Stevens, J., concurring).
-15-
[T]here is no need to address the question whether suffering patients have
a constitutionally cognizable interest in obtaining relief from the suffering that
they may experience in the last days of their lives. There is no dispute that dying
patients in Washington and New York can obtain palliative care, even when doing
so would hasten their deaths. The difficulty in defining terminal illness and the
risk that a dying patient's request for assistance in ending his or her life might not
be truly voluntary justifies the prohibitions on assisted suicide we uphold here.[60]
However, she also agreed with the majority that "there is no generalized right to 'commit
suicide,'"61 and that the "State's interests in protecting those who are not truly competent or facing
imminent death, or those whose decisions to hasten death would not truly be voluntary, are
sufficiently weighty to justify a prohibition against physician-assisted suicide."62
Justice Ginsburg's concurrence consisted of the single statement that she "concur[red] in
the Court's judgments . . . substantially for the reasons stated by Justice O'Connor . . . ."
Justice Breyer disagreed with the way the majority framed the issue on appeal as the right
to assisted suicide, instead preferring to examine whether a "'right to die with dignity'" existed.63
Despite reframing this issue, as "rough"64 as it was, Justice Breyer ultimately adopted a tack quite
close to that of Justice O'Connor, stating:
I do not believe . . . that this Court need or now should decide whether or
not such a right [to die with dignity] is "fundamental." That is because, in my
view, the avoidance of severe physical pain (connected with death) would have to
constitute an essential part of any successful claim and because . . .the laws before
us do not force a dying person to undergo that kind of pain. . . .
* * *
Were the legal circumstances different—for example, were state law to
prevent the provision of palliative care, including the administration of drugs as
needed to avoid pain at the end of life—then the law's impact upon serious and
otherwise unavoidable physical pain (accompanying death) would be more
directly at issue. And . . . the Court might have to revisit its conclusions in these
cases.[65]
60
Id. at 737-738 (O'Connor, J., concurring).
61
Id. at 736.
62
Id. at 737.
63
Id. at 790 (Breyer, J., concurring).
64
Id.
65
Id. at 791-792.
-16-
Thus, Justice Breyer's concurrence implies that he, too, believes that the state has a legally
cognizable interest in preventing death, even when it is desired, as long as the state does not bar
other efforts to alleviate suffering.
Justice Souter's concerns were somewhat different. He drew parallels between the right
to "bodily integrity" and patients' insistence that they not merely be drugged into a "stupor" to
make them unaware of their pain, but that they had a right to exercise their autonomy by dying, in
the process avoiding "helplessness" and "dependency."66 In this regard, he noted that a physician
is not just a "mechanic of the human body," but one who "ministers" to patients as whole
individuals.67 Justice Souter reflected on the complexity and necessity of the patient-physician
relationship in times of great suffering, refusing to minimize the individual interests at stake.68
Justice Souter did not close forever the doors to the Court regarding the assisted suicide issue.
However, in the end, he concluded that the legislature, not the Court, had the "institutional
competence" to address this issue.69
Nevertheless, Justice Souter emphasized time and again the risk that acknowledging a
right to assisted suicide would lead to legalized euthanasia. He clearly saw euthanasia as having
"dangers [that] are concededly within the State's authority to address."70 Justice Souter, in a
telling statement, also noted that "the barrier between assisted suicide and euthanasia could
become porous [if there were a right to assisted suicide], and the line between voluntary and
involuntary euthanasia as well."71 Thus, while Justice Souter was able to see many shades of
gray in the assisted suicide issue, he saw euthanasia as pure darkness.
Justice Stevens distinguished between challenging a statute as facially unconstitutional
and challenging the constitutionality of its application when framing the issues in the appeal,72
stating:
[J]ust as our conclusion that capital punishment is not always
unconstitutional did not preclude later decisions holding that it is sometimes
impermissibly cruel, so is it equally clear that a decision upholding a general
statutory prohibition of assisted suicide does not mean that every possible
application of the statute would be valid. A State, like Washington, that has
authorized the death penalty, and thereby has concluded that the sanctity of human
life does not require that it always be preserved, must acknowledge that there are
66
See id. at 777-779 (Souter, J., concurring).
67
Id. at 779.
68
Id. at 782.
69
Id. at 789.
70
Id. at 755.
71
Id. at 785.
72
Id. at 739-740 (Stevens, J., concurring).
-17-
situations in which an interest in hastening death is legitimate. Indeed, not only
is that interest sometimes legitimate, I am also convinced that there are times
when it is entitled to constitutional protection.[73]
Of all the justices, Justice Stevens' view in this and other passages came the closest to reflecting
on the notion that a possible constitutional right to commit euthanasia might exist. However, we
cannot forget that Justice Stevens, in fact, concurred in the majority's opinion. He readily
acknowledged the majority's conclusion that there were principled reasons for "refusing to
recognize an open-ended constitutional right to commit suicide," including assistance in
committing suicide.74 He also found persuasive John Donne's famous statement that "'No man is
an island,'" commenting:
The State has an interest in preserving and fostering the benefits that every
human being may provide to the community—a community that thrives on the
exchange of ideas, expressions of affection, shared memories, and humorous
incidents, as well as on the material contributions that its members create and
support. The value to others of a person's life is far too precious to allow the
individual to claim a constitutional entitlement to complete autonomy in making a
decision to end that life.[75]
Further, Justice Stevens clearly expressed his views in the context of the right to end the life of a
person for whom death is relatively imminent. In fact, after delineating the state's legitimate
interests in preventing assisted suicide, Justice Stevens not only declined to say "as a categorical
matter that these state interests are invalid," he made the statement with respect to "the entire
class of terminally ill, mentally competent patients."76 More importantly, nowhere in his
concurrence did Justice Stevens consider whether a right to commit euthanasia exists. Even if in
the future Justice Stevens would hold that the United States Constitution grants a right to
physician-assisted suicide, it appears that he would limit the right to the terminally ill and would
not extend it to euthanasia.
These five concurring justices held in common a concern that the states neither bar
adequate treatment for pain and suffering in the name of prohibiting assisted suicide nor force
patients to receive unwanted medical treatment. Here, defendant asserts that "no pain medication
would suffice" and that "there was no other beneficial medical alternative that would have aided
Thomas Youk." Defendant's own words take him well beyond the possible purview of the
concurring justices in Glucksberg.
73
Id. at 741-742.
74
Id. at 740, 741.
75
Id. at 741 (emphasis added).
76
Id. at 750 (emphasis added).
-18-
(4) The "Dutch Cure"
Finally, defendant urges us to recognize that his prosecution "for helping Thomas Youk
put an end to his suffering at the request of Mr. Youk" is unconstitutional on its face. He arrives
at this position by asserting, first, that Youk had a constitutional right to be free from intolerable
pain and, second, that defendant's provision of "Constitutionally guaranteed medical services"
allows him to assert Youk's rights.
There is no authority whatsoever for the proposition that a right to be free from
intolerable and irremediable suffering, if it exists, somehow migrates to an "individual," such as
defendant, who provides assistance to a patient who is suffering interminably. The thin reed on
which defendant apparently relies is Justice Stevens' concurrence in Glucksberg:
There may be little distinction between the intent of a terminally ill patient
who decides to remove her life support and one who seeks the assistance of a
doctor in ending her life; in both situations, the patient is seeking to hasten a
certain, impending death. The doctor's intent might also be the same in
prescribing lethal medication as it is in terminating life support. A doctor who
fails to administer medical treatment to one who is dying from a disease could be
doing so with an intent to harm or kill that patient. Conversely, a doctor who
prescribes lethal medication does not necessarily intend the patient's death—rather
that doctor may seek simply to ease the patient's suffering and to comply with her
wishes. The illusory character of any differences in intent or causation is
confirmed by the fact that the American Medical Association unequivocally
endorses the practice of terminal sedation—the administration of sufficient
dosages of pain-killing medication to terminally ill patients to protect them from
excruciating pain even when it is clear that the time of death will be advanced.
The purpose of terminal sedation is to ease the suffering of the patient and comply
with her wishes, and the actual cause of death is the administration of heavy doses
of lethal sedatives. The same intent and causation may exist when a doctor
complies with a patient's request for lethal medication to hasten her death.[77]
We first note Justice Stevens' equivocal language: "[t]here may be little distinction" between the
intent of a terminally ill patient who decides to remove life support and one who seeks the
assistance of a doctor to end her life; a doctor "may seek simply to ease the patient's suffering;"
"[t]he same intent and causation may exist when a doctor complies with a patient's request for
lethal medication . . . ." Such language is worlds away from a justification for euthanasia.
Second, we note that Justice Stevens' references are entirely within the context of a doctor
treating a patient. Defendant is not licensed to practice medicine in Michigan. Therefore there
was not, and could not be, a doctor-patient relationship between defendant and Youk.
77
Glucksberg, supra at 750-751.
-19-
Defendant's argument can only be construed to mean that an individual can, if requested by
another person, kill that person.
This is the mercy killing argument—the argument for the "Dutch cure"—taken beyond
the position of even its most extreme advocates. Under defendant's theory, if one who is not a
doctor became convinced that one's dear friend was suffering from a painful, incurable disease
and that the friend wished to die, one could at the request of that friend shoot him between the
eyes with a .45 caliber pistol and not be guilty of murder. Indeed, under defendant's theory, the
same result might well be obtained if one's friend were severely depressed, or perhaps simply
unhappy with his lot in life. This is the slippery slope with a vengeance and we will not take a
single step down it, into the abyss.
G. Conclusion
We conclude by noting that the jury, no doubt influenced by the gritty realism of the
videotapes defendant made as well as his flat statement of culpability in the 60 Minutes
interview, convicted defendant of second-degree murder as well as delivery of a controlled
substance. Defendant has on the record before us compared himself to Margaret Sanger, Susan
B. Anthony, and Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., all of whom risked imprisonment for their beliefs.
How history will view defendant is a matter this Court can neither predict nor decide. Perhaps in
the brave new world of defendant's "enlightened" society, acts such as the one he committed in
this case will be excused. Still, we find it difficult to hypothesize a rule of law under which this
might be so.
We deal here, however, with the application of the law as it currently exists to the facts of
this case. While defendant has carefully skirted the label of murder in his past actions, he cannot
do so now. Justice Levin once stated that "[defendant] is not a murderer."78 Here, defendant in
essence convicted himself of a murder he surely committed. We will not now reverse that
conviction on due process grounds. The trial court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to
dismiss the charges.
IV. Defense Counsel
A. Facts And Arguments
Before trial, defendant retained Gorosh to serve as his defense attorney. However, at the
December 9, 1998, preliminary examination, defendant indicated that he was waiving his right to
represent himself "[a]t this hearing[.]" Consequently, Gorosh and attorney Lisa Dwyer79 entered
their appearances in the trial court on defendant's behalf. Later, however, at a proceeding in the
trial court's chambers, there was some indication that defendant might seek to proceed in propria
78
See Kevorkian I, supra at 514 (Levin, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part).
79
How or why Dwyer also became defendant's attorney is not clear from the record.
-20-
persona. Indeed, on March 19, 1999, Gorosh informed the trial court that he believed defendant
intended to "say he's going to conduct the trial in its entirety on his own in pro per."
In any event, while defendant did file one motion on his own behalf, it is apparent that
Gorosh and Dwyer represented defendant at all times through the first day of trial on March 22,
1999. On that day, both Gorosh and Dwyer placed their appearances on the record on behalf of
defendant. However, Gorosh then stated to the trial court that defendant "does want to represent
himself in the trial in its entirety." In response to the trial court's questioning, defendant first
stated that he was dissatisfied with Gorosh and Dwyer, prompting a colloquy in which he
completely revised this statement:
The Court: And do you have any reason for this dissatisfaction?
[Defendant]: There's no dissatisfaction. This is what I planned all along.
The Court: You planned all along to represent yourself?
[Defendant]: To represent myself, yes.
The Court: And so you have no independent dissatisfaction with your
attorney?
[Defendant]: None.
After clearing up this point, the trial court explained to defendant that he could spend the rest of
his life in prison and that a criminal trial is a formal, complex, and dynamic proceeding. Further,
the trial court noted, the rules of evidence applied, as well as "certain decorum and certain ways
in which there are presentations made to the jury and certain things that you can say and you can't
say." The trial court asked defendant whether there was a specific reason that he wished to
represent himself and he answered, "Yes."
The Court: What is that, sir?
[Defendant]: There are certain points I could bring out better than any
attorney. Certain questions I can ask that are more pertinent.
The trial court informed defendant that, with respect to jury selection, opening statements, and
closing statements, he would be bound by the rules of the court and that there would be a
permanent record that might be used in other proceedings. The trial court stated that counsel
could be present at the table with defendant in order to consult with, but that such advisors "can't
get up and speak."
[Defendant]: No, I said as advisors, consultation and advice. That's what I
meant.
The Court: And that's what you wish to do?
-21-
[Defendant]: Yes.
The Court: You're aware of all of these dangers?
[Defendant]: Very much so.
The Court: You understand we're talking about something that could carry
a sentence of life imprisonment without any possibility of parole?
[Defendant]: Yes.
The Court: And do you understand that you may not disrupt or
inconvenience the Court?
[Defendant]: I'm here by my own invitation. I'll act like the guest I am.
The Court: And that means you will follow my orders and procedures?
[Defendant]: As a guest.
The Court: Well, it's more than a guest. You're here as a defendant, sir.
[Defendant]: But as a guest, propriety will be observed.
The Court: Has anyone promised you or threatened you in any way that
makes you want to do this?
[Defendant]: No, not at all. It's my own free will.
In light of this exchange, the trial court determined that defendant had unequivocally, knowingly,
intelligently, and voluntarily waived his right to counsel. Defendant then represented himself
during jury voir dire and gave his own opening statement. On March 23, 1999, the second day of
trial, before any witnesses were presented, the trial court again asked defendant if he still wished
to proceed in propria persona. Defendant indicated that he still wished to represent himself, and
did so by examining and cross-examining the witnesses. During a conference on the record in
chambers on that day, the trial court again pointed out the difficulties of self-representation, to
which defendant replied:
I don't want you to agonize, I really don't. Do what you know is right, do
it forcefully and definitely. It won't offend me and if you think I'm making
mistakes or I don't know what I'm doing, I'll do the best I can with my advisers
here. I made this choice. I don't blame anybody else, and I don't want you to
agonize over it. And I don't want you to jeopardize your position.
The trial court again raised the specter of punishment with defendant:
-22-
The Court: . . . I just want you to understand that if you're convicted of
this offense it's the rest of your life.
[Defendant]: I go to jail. I go to jail, yes. I go to jail.
The Court: Mandatory.
[Defendant]: If I'm convicted, Your Honor, we get a shot at the Supreme
Court. Not that they'll accept it, but we get a shot at it with what they want, a
particularized case. They said that, we got their quotes. They want a
particularized case. Four of them said we want to revisit this issue again. Now
two or three years may be too quick, but when you've got someone starving to
death in prison who you know is not a criminal and you know what he's doing is
not a crime, maybe they'll look at it—maybe.
But if not, who cares. In 15, 20 years, they'll say well, he was right. He's
dead now, but he was right. I've got to do what I know now is right and I can't let
the law, which is often immoral, block me. If Margaret Sanger did that, if Susan
B. Anthony did that—look at Martin—look at all these people. I'm not saying I'm
like them, but they certainly—I'm certainly going to act like them. I mean, I know
this is not a crime. So do you. Everybody with sense does. Your religion may
say it's a sin, but that doesn't make it a crime. All these people broke the law and
went to jail. I am willing to do the same.
But the Supreme Court has got to decide this on the Ninth Amendment
where there is no equivocation, there is no stretching due process. They've got to
do that. And if they do and break all these laws down, then we can have a better
society, an honest society. I'm willing to risk that. Because at age of 71, I cannot
go on living a hypocritical life when I can't do what I know is right, and the world
knows I'm right. Everybody does. Every nation the majority is for what I'm
doing. How come it's illegal? That's why I'm doing this.
On March 25, 1999, the third day of trial, defendant rested and gave his closing argument, during
which he stated several times that he was acting as his own attorney. The trial court instructed
the jury that defendant had a constitutional right to represent himself and that they, the jurors,
must not give any negative consideration to defendant's decision to do so.
The following morning, while the jury was deliberating, defendant told the trial court that
he would "take your well-advised comments and withdraw in favor of my two attorneys' advice."
Gorosh, Dwyer, and defendant's appellate counsel represented him at sentencing. Subsequently,
defendant moved for a new trial, alleging that he had been denied the effective assistance of
counsel. The trial court denied this motion.
On appeal, defendant asserts that the trial court erred in denying his motion for a new trial
because the assistance that Gorosh provided fell below the constitutional standards required for
-23-
effective assistance of counsel. Defendant also asserts that the trial court erred in denying his
motion for a new trial based on the doctrine of "serious mistake of counsel."
-24-
B. Standard Of Review And Legal Standard
We review a trial court's decision regarding a motion for a new trial for an abuse of
discretion.80 However, with respect to the underlying question whether Gorosh was ineffective,
our review is de novo.81
As this Court explained in People v Knapp:82
To establish a claim of ineffective assistance of counsel, a defendant must
show that counsel's performance fell below an objective standard of
reasonableness and that, but for defense counsel's errors, there was a reasonable
probability that the result of the proceeding would have been different. People v
Stanaway, 446 Mich 643, 687-688; 521 NW2d 557 (1994). A defendant must
affirmatively demonstrate that counsel's performance was objectively
unreasonable and so prejudicial as to deprive him of a fair trial. People v Pickens,
446 Mich 298, 303; 521 NW2d 797 (1994). The defendant must also overcome
the presumption that the challenged action might be considered sound trial
strategy. People v Tommolino, 187 Mich App 14, 17; 466 NW2d 315 (1991),
citing Strickland v Washington, 466 US 668; 104 S Ct 2052; 80 L Ed 2d 674
(1984).
C. Gorosh's Representation Before March 22, 1999
(1) Overview
Defendant's briefs on appeal contain a litany of complaints aimed at Gorosh. At various
places, defendant argues that Gorosh did not provide him with "appropriate advice or advocacy;"
that Gorosh was "not qualified" to handle his defense; that Gorosh lacked "personal competence
to handle the case;" that Gorosh "completely shut out" Dwyer; that Gorosh "prepared no
defense;" that Gorosh "withheld advice during the trial in hope of causing [defendant] to feel
helpless and turn over all aspects of the case to Gorosh;" that Gorosh "put his own interests ahead
of those of his client;" that Gorosh "sat idly by as inappropriate comments were made in the
presence of the jury;" that Gorosh "allowed the relationships among co-counsel to deteriorate to
such a point that it was impossible for them to provide effective assistance to [defendant];" that
Gorosh "allowed his relationship with his client . . . to deteriorate to such a point that it was
impossible to provide effective assistance;" that Gorosh "did not maintain adequate
communication" with defendant; and that Gorosh's behavior in the courtroom was "totally
inappropriate." Indeed, at one point, defendant actually suggests that Gorosh did not allow
Dwyer to sit next to defendant at trial "so that she could provide advice." Further, defendant
80
People v Leonard, 224 Mich App 569, 580; 569 NW2d 663 (1997).
81
People v Toma, 462 Mich 281, 310; 613 NW2d 694 (2000).
82
People v Knapp, 244 Mich App 361, 385-386; 624 NW2d 227 (2001).
-25-
alleges that Gorosh threatened to tell the trial court that Dwyer's pretrial motion to quash the
murder count was "ridiculous."83
Lost in this corrosive barrage of verbiage is the simple fact that on March 22, 1999, the
relationship between defendant and Gorosh changed completely. Before March 22, Gorosh and
Dwyer represented defendant as trial counsel; from March 22 through March 25, defendant
represented himself with Gorosh and Dwyer serving as standby counsel. With respect to the
period before March 22, as nearly as we are able to determine, defendant claims that Gorosh was
ineffective because he moved to quash the assisted suicide charge and because he was
unqualified and incompetent.
(2) The Motion To Quash The Assisted Suicide Charge
There is no question that Gorosh represented defendant when the defense filed a pretrial
motion to dismiss the assisted suicide charge. Had the jury been presented with the assisted
suicide charge and decided to convict him of that charge rather then murder, then defendant
would have had a prison term no longer than four years and a fine not exceeding $2,000. By
removing this charge, the jury was forced to consider convicting him of first- or second-degree
murder, both of which carry much stiffer prison terms.84
In denying defendant's motion for a new trial regarding this claim, the trial court stated:
Defendant argues ineffective assistance of counsel due to trial counsel's
alleged error in moving to dismiss the assisted suicide charge despite the urgings
from co-counsel as well as others, to refrain from making such a motion.
Defendant's argument is without merit, evidencing neither harm to Defendant nor
a claim for ineffective assistance of counsel. The Court, in fact, denied counsel's
motion to dismiss the assisted suicide charge in the Court's Opinion and Order
dated March 9, 1999 and further, the People dismissed said charge on their own
motion.
We fully agree with the trial court. Even if Gorosh performed deficiently by bringing the motion,
defendant cannot demonstrate that doing so caused him any prejudice. The trial court itself
protected what defendant now contends was an essential component of his defense by denying
the motion. Moreover, on March 12, 1999, the prosecutor declined to proceed on the assisted
suicide charge, pursuing only the charges of first-degree murder and delivering a controlled
substance. Gorosh had no influence over the prosecutor's decision to take this action. There is
no possibility that, but for Gorosh's decision to move to dismiss the assisted suicide charge, the
outcome would have been different in this case.
83
Defendant relies on Dwyer's affidavit as support for this allegation. We have reviewed that
affidavit and can find no such support.
84
See MCL 750.316 (mandatory life imprisonment for first-degree murder); MCL 750.317 (life
in prison or any term of years for second-degree murder).
-26-
Further, Gorosh's decision to seek dismissal of the assisted suicide charge may have been
a matter of trial strategy. During the motion hearing, Gorosh argued for dismissal of the firstdegree murder charge and, in the alternative, the assisted suicide charge. Gorosh presented a
lengthy and coherent argument that the first-degree murder charge should be dismissed because
defendant's conduct fell within the "participation language" in the assisted suicide statute. In the
alternative, he explained that if the participation language did not encompass the facts of this
case, the assisted suicide charge should be dismissed. Gorosh pursued dismissal of the murder
charge, which clearly was a good strategy that would have benefited defendant had it succeeded.
The request to dismiss the assisted suicide charge was merely an alternative Gorosh crafted, at
least in part, because of the possibility that the trial court would allow the prosecutor to proceed
on the murder charge; in fact, Gorosh stated as much during the motion hearing. This Court does
not substitute its judgment for counsel's judgment regarding trial strategy.85 That the strategy
Gorosh chose ultimately failed does not constitute ineffective assistance of counsel.86
Although defendant relies on Dwyer's affidavit averring that she urged Gorosh not to file
the motion, Dwyer herself signed the pleading immediately below Gorosh's signature. Defendant
also filed his own motion to dismiss all the charges against him, including the assisted suicide
charge. This was, evidently, a strategy to which every member of the defense acceded.
Defendant cannot now claim that this strategy denied him his right to effective assistance of
counsel. To allow him to do so, to use the well-worn adage, would permit him to "harbor error
as an appellate parachute."87
(3) Gorosh's Qualifications And Competence
Defendant also claims that Gorosh was not qualified to handle his defense. In making
this argument, defendant relies on the affidavits from Dwyer and Michael Schwartz, a former
partner at the law firm where Gorosh was employed. According to Schwartz, Gorosh had been
practicing for only three years, had limited experience, and had never tried a homicide case. As
defendant put it, "Gorosh was running the show, despite his lack of competence to do so alone."
This claim does not warrant a new trial on the basis of ineffective assistance of counsel.
Inexperience alone is not enough to conclude that a defense counsel acted deficiently or in a
manner that prejudiced the defendant. As the comment following MRPC 1.1 notes:
A lawyer need not necessarily have special training or prior experience to
handle legal problems of a type with which the lawyer is unfamiliar. A newly
admitted lawyer can be as competent as a practitioner with long experience. . . .
Competent representation can also be provided through the association of a lawyer
of established competence in the field in question.
85
See People v Stewart (On Remand), 219 Mich App 38, 42; 555 NW2d 715 (1996).
86
Id.
87
People v Carter, 462 Mich 206, 214; 612 NW2d 144 (2000).
-27-
Indeed, Gorosh was, before this trial, associated with a law firm and lawyers who had substantial
experience with this defendant and the similar prosecutions instituted against him. Further,
defendant never brought any dissatisfaction with Gorosh to the trial court's attention, nor did he
seek to end his relationship with Gorosh until after his sentencing. On the first day of trial after
defendant indicated that he wished to represent himself, the trial court asked him whether he was
dissatisfied with counsel. Defendant stated, "There's no dissatisfaction." In fact, defendant said
that he had "planned" to proceed in propria persona "all along." The trial court again asked
defendant whether he was dissatisfied with counsel and he responded that he was not, but that
there were certain points that he could bring out better than an attorney. Further, during jury
deliberations, defendant again chose to have Gorosh represent him during sentencing. Moreover,
defendant has failed to demonstrate that, but for Gorosh's alleged deficiencies, the outcome of the
trial would have been different.
D. Gorosh's Representation After March 22, 1999
(1) Overview
Defendant argues that Gorosh's performance during the trial itself was so deficient and
prejudicial that it constituted ineffective assistance of counsel, asserting that Gorosh was
unprepared, withheld advice, ignored his wishes, "shut out" Dwyer, and was concerned only with
his own reputation. Inherent in this argument is the assumption that we should evaluate Gorosh's
performance as standby counsel in accordance with the same legal standards that we would use
in connection with the evaluation of full-blown trial counsel. This assumption is unwarranted.
However, even if we were to apply the standards in the line of cases following Pickens to
evaluate Gorosh's performance as standby counsel, we would still conclude that defendant was
afforded the representation the constitution guarantees.
(2) The Right To Self-Representation
The United States Constitution,88 the Michigan Constitution,89 and MCL 763.1 each
guarantee a criminal defendant the right to represent himself.90 As the United States Supreme
Court noted in Faretta v California,91 the right of self-representation is deeply rooted in English
legal history:
In the long history of British criminal jurisprudence, there was only one
tribunal that ever adopted a practice of forcing counsel upon an unwilling
defendant in a criminal proceeding. The tribunal was the Star Chamber. That
88
US Const, Am VI.
89
Const 1963, art 1, § 13.
90
See Martinez v Court of Appeal of California, Fourth Appellate Dist, 528 US 152, 154; 120 S
Ct 684; 145 L Ed 2d 597 (2000); People v Adkins (After Remand), 452 Mich 702, 720; 551
NW2d 108 (1996).
91
Faretta v California, 422 US 806, 821-823; 95 S Ct 2525; 45 L Ed 2d 562 (1975).
-28-
curious institution, which flourished in the late 16th and early 17th centuries, was
of mixed executive and judicial character, and characteristically departed from
common-law traditions. For those reasons, and because it specialized in trying
"political" offenses, the Star Chamber has for centuries symbolized disregard of
basic individual rights. The Star Chamber Court not merely allowed but required
defendants to have counsel. The defendant's answer to an indictment was not
accepted unless it was signed by counsel. When counsel refused to sign the
answer, for whatever reason, the defendant was considered to have confessed.
Stephen commented on this procedure: "There is something specially repugnant
to justice in using rules of practice in such a manner as to debar a prisoner from
defending himself, especially when the professed object of the rules so used is to
provide for his defense." The Star Chamber was swept away in 1641 by the
revolutionary fever of the Long Parliament. The notion of obligatory counsel
disappeared with it.[92]
In upholding a criminal defendant's right to represent himself, the Court recognized that there
was a tension between the right to self-representation and the right to assistance of counsel:
There can be no blinking the fact that the right of an accused to conduct
his own defense seems to cut against the grain of this Court's decisions holding
that the Constitution requires that no accused can be convicted and imprisoned
unless he has been accorded the right to the assistance of counsel. For it is surely
true that the basic thesis of those decisions is that the help of a lawyer is essential
to assure the defendant a fair trial. And a strong argument can surely be made that
the whole thrust of those decisions must inevitably lead to the conclusion that a
State may constitutionally impose a lawyer upon even an unwilling defendant.
But it is one thing to hold that every defendant, rich or poor, has the right
to the assistance of counsel, and quite another to say that a State may compel a
defendant to accept a lawyer he does not want. The value of state-appointed
counsel was not unappreciated by the Founders, yet the notion of compulsory
counsel was utterly foreign to them. And whatever else may be said of those who
wrote the Bill of Rights, surely there can be no doubt that they understood the
inestimable worth of free choice.[93]
Here, defendant made a free choice to represent himself. He clearly and unequivocally waived
his right to counsel. Indeed, defendant does not claim that he somehow retained his right to
counsel at trial or that the trial court failed to comply with the necessary requirements regarding a
proper waiver. As the Court also noted in Faretta, a defendant who exercises the free choice to
represent himself faces certain consequences:
92
Citation omitted.
93
Id. at 832-834 (citations omitted).
-29-
The right of self-representation is not a license to abuse the dignity of the
courtroom. Neither is it a license not to comply with relevant rules of procedural
and substantive law. Thus, whatever else may or may not be open to him on
appeal, a defendant who elects to represent himself cannot thereafter complain
that the quality of his own defense amounted to a denial of "effective assistance of
counsel."[94]
Therefore, defendant cannot now suggest that his free choice to represent himself, standing alone,
denied him effective assistance of counsel. As the trial court accurately put it, defendant cannot
use his waiver of trial counsel as both a sword and a shield in order to achieve the outcome he
desires.
(3) "Hybrid" Representation
Defendant suggests, however, that he actually proceeded with a type of "hybrid"
representation. This argument is wholly unconvincing. In denying defendant's motion for a new
trial, the trial court stated that it had denied defendant's request to proceed with a hybrid defense.
In his brief, defendant even acknowledges that the trial court denied this request. Further,
contrary to defendant's suggestion, there is no constitutional right to a hybrid defense and, thus, a
trial court is not required to order hybrid representation.95
Defendant, however, argues that "hybrid representation can be and has been allowed in
appropriate situations." In support of this assertion, he cites two Michigan cases, People v
Ramsey96 and People v Griffen.97 In Ramsey, this Court cited Faretta for the proposition that
"'standby counsel' may be appropriate to assist a defendant who represents himself."98 Again
referring to Faretta, as well as Chief Justice Burger's concurrence in Mayberry v Pennsylvania,99
this Court went on to say that "these cases do not stand for the proposition that a defendant has a
right to share trial defense responsibilities with an attorney."100 Only in a footnote did this Court
suggest that hybrid representation "might be appropriate in some cases[.]"101 Even then, this
Court still noted that "the administrative difficulties inherent in such a scheme are apparent."102
Though making this vague and definitely hedged statement, this Court in Ramsey still affirmed
94
Id. at 835, n 46.
95
See McKaskle v Wiggins, 465 US 168, 183; 104 S Ct 944; 79 L Ed 2d 122 (1984).
96
People v Ramsey, 89 Mich App 260; 280 NW2d 840 (1979).
97
People v Griffen, 36 Mich App 368; 194 NW2d 104 (1971), overruled on other grounds in
People v Reed, 393 Mich 342, 351; 224 NW2d 867 (1975).
98
Ramsey, supra at 263.
99
Mayberry v Pennsylvania, 400 US 455, 467-468; 91 S Ct 499; 27 L Ed 2d 532 (1971).
100
Ramsey, supra at 263.
101
Id. at 263, n 1 (emphasis added).
102
Id.
-30-
the trial court's decision to deny the defendant a form of hybrid representation. This dictum in
Ramsey provides no basis for us to conclude that the trial court erred here in denying defendant's
request for hybrid representation.
The very short discussion of representation in Griffen provides no more support for
defendant's argument. In Griffen, the
[d]efendant requested that his assigned counsel be dismissed. This request was
granted but at the judge's request, counsel remained to help defendant, if needed.
Counsel conducted the voir dire examination of the jury and cross-examined some
witnesses. Defendant's claim of reversible error because he was denied his right
to proceed in propria persona is not sustained on this record.[103]
Thus, Griffen stands for the negative proposition that allowing hybrid representation does not
compromise a defendant's right to proceed in propria persona. It certainly does not stand for the
affirmative proposition that a failure to allow hybrid representation constitutes error requiring
reversal.
Defendant fares no better in citing federal precedent. He refers us to United States v
Hill104 and to United States v Tutino.105 In Hill, the United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth
Circuit interpreted numerous federal opinions as "not foreclos[ing] a trial judge from allowing
hybrid representation in appropriate cases; rather, they indicate no right to hybrid representation
exists."106 In Tutino, the court wrote that "[t]he decision to grant or deny 'hybrid representation' lies
solely within the discretion of the trial court." Tutino, which explicitly noted "that a criminal
defendant has no constitutional or statutory right to represent himself as co-counsel with his own
attorney," plainly did not reach the holding defendant wishes us to reach in this case.107 Whatever
"appropriate" circumstances might explain a trial court's decision to allow a defendant to proceed
with hybrid representation, defendant has failed to demonstrate that they existed here.
(4) Standby Counsel
Defendant also claims that he was denied the effective assistance of counsel when Gorosh
functioned as standby counsel. A defendant who asserts his right to self-representation has no
absolute entitlement to standby counsel.108 As the Michigan Supreme Court explained in People
v Dennany,109 "[A] defendant has a constitutional entitlement to represent himself or to be
103
Griffen, supra at 372.
104
United States v Hill, 526 F2d 1019 (CA 10, 1975).
105
United States v Tutino, 883 F2d 1125, 1141 (CA 2, 1989).
106
Hill, supra at 1024 (emphasis added).
107
Tutino, supra at 1141.
108
See People v Davis, 216 Mich App 47, 55-56; 549 NW2d 1 (1996).
109
See People v Dennany, 445 Mich 412, 442; 519 NW2d 128 (1994).
-31-
represented by counsel—but not both." Consequently, the Court held in Dennany that Const
1963, art 1, § 13 "permits the use of standby counsel as a matter of grace, but not as a matter of
right."110
The defendant in McKaskle v Wiggins111 placed the proper role of standby counsel
squarely in front of the United States Supreme Court. In McKaskle, defendant Carl Wiggins
vacillated between asserting his right to represent himself and his right to assistance of counsel at
both of his trials.112 On appeal, Wiggins claimed that his standby counsel impinged on his right
to present his own defense, as Faretta guaranteed.113 As Justice O'Connor put it, Wiggins
contended that his right to represent himself "was impaired by the distracting, intrusive, and
unsolicited participation of counsel throughout the trial."114
The Court agreed with Wiggins' underlying premise that a defendant who represents
himself "must be allowed to control the organization and content of his own defense, to make
motions, to argue points of law, to participate in voir dire, to question witnesses, and to address
the court and the jury at appropriate points in the trial."115 However, the Court concluded that
Wiggins had been "accorded all of these rights."116 Further, the Court noted that the right to selfrepresentation "must impose some limits on the extent of standby counsel's unsolicited
participation."117 Consequently, the Court held that a defendant who represents himself "is
entitled to preserve actual control over the case he chooses to present to the jury" and that
"participation by standby counsel without the defendant's consent should not be allowed to
destroy the jury's perception that the defendant is representing himself."118
Applying its holding to the facts of the case, the Court noted that the performance of
Wiggins' standby counsel "should not serve as a model for future trials," but the Court
nevertheless determined that standby counsel's participation at trial "fell short of infringing on
Wiggins' [Faretta] rights."119 In essence, the Court held that while the standby counsel may have
been rather assertive and somewhat obnoxious, he did not do too much.
110
Id. at 443.
111
McKaskle, supra.
112
Id. at 170-173.
113
Id. at 173.
114
Id. at 176.
115
Id. at 174.
116
Id.
117
Id. at 177.
118
Id. at 178.
119
Id. at 186.
-32-
Here, defendant asserts the opposite. He claims that Gorosh did too little. Defendant
placed himself in the unenviable position of suggesting that, in light of his own inadequacies in
representing himself at trial, Gorosh should have done more to help him. McKaskle stands for
the proposition that a defendant who represents himself is entitled to maintain actual control over
the case, which standby counsel cannot destroy by altering the jury's perception that the
defendant is representing himself. In other words, "the right to appear pro se can lose much of its
importance if only the lawyers in the courtroom know that the right is being exercised."120
Conceptually, it is difficult to conceive of a situation in which a reticent, rather than an assertive,
standby counsel could wander into either of these two protected areas. In the absence of a right
to standby counsel or even a right to hybrid representation, McKaskle provides an intellectual
foundation for the proposition that a defendant who chooses to represent himself does so at his
own peril. With no constitutional right to an attorney, a defendant proceeding in propria persona
has no basis to claim that the attorney must abide by constitutional standards.
Two federal opinions support this view. In United States v Schmidt,121 the defendant
claimed that the attorney appointed to serve as standby counsel at trial was "so deficient and
prejudicial to her that it constituted ineffective assistance of counsel."122 This was a mirror
image of the argument in McKaskle; the defendant in Schmidt asserted that her attorney did too
little rather than too much. The Schmidt court rejected this argument for three reasons. First, the
defendant had waived her right to counsel when she asserted her right to represent herself.123
Second, the defendant did not have the right to hybrid counsel.124 Rather, "[a]bsent a
constitutional right to standby counsel, a defendant generally cannot prove standby counsel was
ineffective."125 As the court remarked:
As might be expected, a standby counsel's duties are considerably more
limited than the obligations of retained or appointed counsel. . . . Although [the
defendant's standby counsel's] role expanded as the case continued, he did not
play the same role that defense counsel normally would in preparing the strategy
for a criminal defense. Perhaps in a case where standby counsel held that title in
name only and, in fact, acted as the defendant's lawyer throughout the
proceedings, we would consider a claim of ineffective assistance of standby
counsel. This is not such case. Because [the defendant] proceeded pro se, she
may not now assign blame for her conviction to standby counsel.[126]
120
Id. at 179.
121
United States v Schmidt, 105 F3d 82 (CA 2, 1997).
122
Id. at 89.
123
Id. at 90.
124
Id., citing United States v Cochrane, 985 F2d 1027, 1029 & n 1 (CA 9, 1993), and United States
v Windsor, 981 F2d 943, 947 (CA 7, 1992).
125
Schmidt, supra at 90.
126
Id. (emphasis added).
-33-
Third, the court concluded that even if the traditional test for evaluating ineffective assistance of
counsel claims was applied, the defendant's standby attorney passed the constitutional threshold
for performance and there was no evidence of prejudice.127
The more recent decision in United States v Morrison128 interpreted Schmidt:
As we held in Schmidt, without a constitutional right to standby counsel, a
defendant is not entitled to relief for the ineffectiveness of standby counsel. While
we stated in Schmidt that we might entertain a claim for ineffective assistance of
standby counsel if standby counsel "held that title in name only and, in fact, acted as
the defendant's lawyer throughout the proceedings," the record indicates that
Morrison retained control of his own defense throughout the proceedings, so that his
standby counsel was in reality, as well as in name, only that.
Going one small step beyond Schmidt, the court in Morrison concluded that this rule of law did
not require the additional, and therefore superfluous, process of determining whether standby
counsel was effective.
We find this reasoning in Schmidt and Morrison persuasive. From March 22 through
March 25, defendant represented himself. During this time, Gorosh was his standby counsel in
reality as well as in name. Because defendant chose to represent himself during this period, he
may not now assign blame for his conviction to Gorosh. Further, Gorosh did nothing to interfere
with defendant's right to control the case or to alter the jury's perception that defendant was
representing himself. In short, during this period, Gorosh was not acting as counsel within the
meaning of the Sixth Amendment or Const 1963, art 1, § 13 and, therefore, cannot be held to the
standards of effective assistance required of trial counsel. In any event, Gorosh's performance as
standby counsel did not fall below an objective standard of reasonableness and defendant has
made no showing that, but for Gorosh's alleged errors, the result of the proceedings would have
been different.
E. The "Serious Mistake" Doctrine
Defendant claims that he is entitled to a new trial under the common-law "serious
mistake" standard for evaluating ineffective assistance of counsel claims. Substantively, he
claims that Gorosh's failures, described in his traditional ineffective assistance of counsel
argument, also constituted a violation of this serious mistake doctrine. The cases defendant
cites129 as announcing this serious mistake doctrine rely on People v Garcia.130 In Garcia,131 the
Michigan Supreme Court relied on the statement in People v Degraffenreid132 that
127
Id. at 90-91.
128
United States v Morrison, 153 F3d 34, 55 (CA 2, 1998) (citations omitted).
129
See People v Sealy, 136 Mich App 168, 175-176; 356 NW2d 614 (1984), People v Smith, 108
Mich App 338, 343; 310 NW2d 235 (1981), and People v Lotter, 103 Mich App 386, 389; 302
NW2d 879 (1981).
-34-
[a] claim that an adequate lawyer made a serious mistake does not raise the
constitutional issue of the right to counsel; it does not involve the concept of
"effective assistance of counsel," it should not be measured against the sham trial
standard which circumscribes the constitutional right.
Thus, the Court in Garcia held that
even where assistance of counsel satisfies the constitutional requirements,
defendant is still entitled to a fair trial. Defendant can be denied this right if his
attorney makes a serious mistake. But a court should not grant a new trial unless
it finds that but for this mistake defendant would have had a reasonably likely
chance of acquittal.[133]
Subsequently, the United States Supreme Court set forth the federal standard for determining
whether a defendant received the effective assistance of counsel in Strickland, supra, which the
Michigan Supreme Court adopted in Pickens.134 Having moved away from the "sham trial" test
previously used to analyze effective assistance of counsel claims, which was the basis for the
comment in Degraffenreid regarding an attorney's serious mistake,135 the Pickens Court
reexamined Garcia:
Our Court of Appeals . . . has interpreted this Court's decision in Garcia as
requiring the reversal of a conviction even if defense counsel's ineffective
assistance did not prejudice the defendant. While we recognize that the opinion is
less than a model of clarity and might be so interpreted, such a procedure is not
mandated by federal law. Garcia essentially relied on Sixth and Fourteenth
Amendment jurisprudence, and did not formulate the standard from the intentions,
history, or common law undergirding the Michigan Constitution. Garcia,
therefore, does not stand for the proposition that the Michigan Constitution was
intended to grant stronger protections than federal authority with regard to the
standards applied to the issue of ineffective assistance of counsel.[136]
Thus, in Pickens, the Michigan Supreme Court put to rest any notion that there is an alternative,
common-law test for effective assistance of counsel. Again, defendant has failed to provide any
persuasive authority to disprove this clear decision in Pickens, which excuses us from engaging
(…continued)
130
People v Garcia, 398 Mich 250, 266; 247 NW2d 547 (1976).
131
Id.
132
People v Degraffenreid, 19 Mich App 702, 717; 173 NW2d 317 (1969).
133
Garcia, supra at 266.
134
Pickens, supra at 326-327.
135
Degraffenreid, supra at 717.
136
Pickens, supra at 312-313.
-35-
in an exhaustive search of our own.137 As the First Circuit Court of Appeals so aptly put it, "It is
not enough merely to mention a possible argument in the most skeletal way, leaving the court to
do counsel's work, create the ossature for the argument, and put flesh on its bones."138 Moreover,
even if there were such a standard for an attorney's conduct, the same flaws in defendant's
reasoning concerning Gorosh's performance apply in this context, especially because he wholly
relies on his arguments concerning ineffective assistance to outline what he considers serious
mistakes. Thus, there is no merit to this issue.
V. Defendant's Closing Statement
A. Facts And Argument
Defendant gave his own closing argument to the jury on March 25, 1999. Although he
did not testify at the trial, at several points in his closing argument defendant injected what would
appear to be first-person testimony:
[Defendant]: Next time he [the prosecutor] uses the word "kill" or
"murder" please ask yourselves, please—why? Did you ever ask him why I did
that, why I did this act he calls killing? He says just to murder Thomas Youk
that's all, to kill him . . . . Next time he [sic] you hear him utter kill, say why, and
when.
Why then? Why on the 17th of September? Why not a month earlier or
three years earlier? Ask him why not earlier didn't he call me to kill him. Those
are unanswerable questions. He can't answer those. Why did Tom Youk call
name [sic] on the 15th of [sic] 16th? Why did he call me? Because he had—
[Prosecutor]: Well, objection, Judge. He can't testify now. He can't tell
the facts now. That portion's over.
The Court: You have something in evidence. We don't know whether he's
going to talk about what's in evidence.
* * *
[Defendant]: I staged the whole thing. Really. I'm not much of a
producer or a director in movies. We—I wanted to protect the family from
possible charges—
[Prosecutor]: Objection, objection. Again, he's testifying. He can't put
facts into—
137
See Mitcham, supra.
138
United States v Zannino, 895 F2d 1, 17 (CA 1, 1990).
-36-
[Defendant]: I'm trying to show why I did it.
* * *
[Prosecutor]: He cannot put facts before the jury which might not have
been proven before or through testimony or other evidence. He cannot testify
now.
* * *
[Defendant]: There were no witnesses there. Now can I say why?
[Prosecutor]: I'm objecting.
The Court: Well, sir, it depends on how you phrase it.
[Defendant]: There were no witnesses there because I didn't want anyone
else—
[Prosecutor]: Objection.
[Defendant]:—implicated.
[Prosecutor]: Objection.
[Defendant]: Well, that's—can I say why?
[Prosecutor]: Judge, you know, he could have gotten on—you know, he
didn't—
* * *
[Prosecutor]:—He didn't—he can't testify now. He cannot testify now.
[Defendant]: Why—why I took so much time with the needle down here.
Can I say that?
The Court: You can comment about what is in evidence. You can
comment about what is on the tape.
[Defendant]: I took my time down here in this one vein, trying to get a
small vein, trying to keep—
[Prosecutor]: Your Honor, I'm going to object again. He's now testifying.
He's putting new facts before the jury. He can't do that.
[Defendant]: Okay. The covering up of the needle sticks was to try to
keep this—
-37-
[Prosecutor]: Objection.
[Defendant]: Well, you talked about the needle sticks.
[Prosecutor]: You can't say—Judge, he's giving reasons for these things.
That has to come through testimony. It can't be presented through his closing
argument to the jury.
The Court: You may make argument about what they saw, but you can't
introduce something new. Okay?
[Defendant]: After they saw the slip of paper on the floor with my name
on it, this became known. It became known. Why didn't I come forward
immediately after I did it? It became known only after they discovered my name
on it and then I know—everyone knew it would become known. It wasn't done
for staging, it wasn't done to show. It wasn't videotaped for that purpose. And
why was a narration, which he brings up? Can I give reasons for the narration?
[Prosecutor]: I object.
* * *
[Defendant]: That's the implication given by the prosecutors and other—
other antagonists, implying that it's very cursory, that I don't really know these
patients, I don't know anything about them. No doctor who's got integrity and is
competent would proceed without definitive medical information on the patient.
The only point is they don't have that information. I do.
[Prosecutor]: Well, objection. The jury doesn't have that, either. Again,
I'm going to object to him putting in facts that didn't come in during trial.
The Court: Let's see if we can break this down. You may comment about
anything that's in evidence. You may not comment about anything he said. You
just can't introduce something.
The next day, while the jury was deliberating, defendant moved for a mistrial on the basis of the
prosecutor's comments. The trial court denied the motion.
Defendant now contends that the prosecutor, while objecting to his closing arguments,
several times improperly referred to defendant's decision to exercise his right to remain silent.
Although defendant later moved for a mistrial, he failed to object to the prosecutor's comments at
the time the prosecutor made them. According to Gorosh, this was a calculated decision not "to
disrupt the flow of closing" and an effort "to get a copy of the transcript" of the prosecutor's
comments to be used for the motion for a mistrial.
-38-
B. Preservation And Standard Of Review
Defendant failed to preserve this issue for appeal by objecting to the prosecutor's
allegedly improper comments in a timely fashion.139 Accordingly, our review is limited to
determining whether the comments were plain error that affected defendant's substantial rights.140
C. Right Not To Testify
Neither a prosecutor nor the trial court may comment on a defendant's decision to
exercise his constitutional right not to testify.141 Published state precedent does not address the
precise situation presented in this case. The cases that defendant cites are distinguishable
because they do not involve a defendant who proceeded in propria persona. However, People v
Marcus Jones142 is instructive.
In Marcus Jones, while the prosecutor was giving his closing argument to the jury, the
prosecutor described a piece of trial testimony, prompting the defendant to interject, "'They didn't
say that.'"143 The trial court admonished the defendant, stating, "'If you want to testify, sir, your
chance to do that is over with you [sic]. You can't sit there—listen Mister—you had an
opportunity to testify. You can't testify now.'"144 Defense counsel then objected, prompting the
trial court to ask: "'Objection to what? He's out now speaking, [defense counsel] [sic]. He had
that opportunity. The jury knows that. He can't have it both ways, sir.'"145
Though this Court reversed the defendant's conviction in an unpublished opinion per
curiam, issued July 10, 1992 (Docket No. 127207), the Michigan Supreme Court, in lieu of
granting leave to appeal, peremptorily vacated the judgment of this Court and remanded the
matter to this Court for reconsideration.146 After acknowledging that "neither the prosecutor nor
the trial court may comment on the defendant's exercise of his constitutional right not to testify,"
the Supreme Court nevertheless concluded that the trial court's remarks were a proper response to
the defendant's interruption. Further, the Court noted, "[t]hough awkwardly phrased, the judge's
statements were consistent with his obligation to maintain orderly proceedings and proper
139
See People v Schutte, 240 Mich App 713, 720; 613 NW2d 370 (2000).
140
See People v Carines, 460 Mich 750, 761-762; 597 NW2d 130 (1999).
141
See Griffin v California, 380 US 609, 615; 85 S Ct 1229; 14 L Ed 2d 106 (1965); People v
Fields, 450 Mich 94, 108-109; 538 NW2d 356 (1995).
142
People v Marcus Jones, 442 Mich 893; 499 NW2d 344 (1993).
143
Id. at 893.
144
Id.
145
Id. at 894.
146
Id. at 893.
-39-
decorum in the courtroom."147 Finally, the Court concluded that the defendant was not entitled to
a new trial, having not been denied a fair trial in the first instance.148
The Mississippi Supreme Court reached a similar conclusion in Larry Jones v State.149
The defendant in Larry Jones did not testify during trial, but chose to argue the sentencing phase
of his capital murder prosecution.150 During his argument, the defendant referred to facts that
were not in evidence.151 Consequently, the prosecutor objected in the presence of the jury:
That's testifying and there's no way to contradict that and it's not fair,
Judge, if he doesn't take the stand and let the State cross examine him on this but
to stand up here and to be able to do something that the State does not have a right
to cross examine him on is not proper . . . . The State didn't have a right to call
him, Judge. We couldn't put him on the stand.[152]
The Mississippi Supreme Court acknowledged that defendants must make a difficult choice
between arguing their own case and invoking the right not to testify.153 However, the court
remarked that
[a] criminal defendant who takes advantage of his right to argue his case to the jury
must not be permitted to say all the things he might have testified to had he chosen
to call himself as a witness. When he does so, he will be deemed to have waived the
right not to have his failure to take the stand commented upon.[154]
Though the court noted that a defendant representing himself still had to follow the court rules, it
nevertheless indicated that trial courts should give these defendants some "leeway" in arguing
their case.155 However, the court cautioned:
[I]n those instances where a defendant, arguing pro se, clearly goes beyond
the evidence in the record on a material point, as he did in this case, he must
accept as a consequence the prosecution's comment on his failure to swear to the
testimony. The defendant's remarks in this case cannot be dismissed as a failure
to grasp "legal niceties." They are unsworn testimony, and as such, constitute a
147
Id.
148
Id.
149
Larry Jones v State, 381 So 2d 983 (Miss, 1980).
150
See id. at 993.
151
Id. at 997.
152
Id. at 998.
153
Id. at 993.
154
Id.
155
Id. at 993-994.
-40-
partial waiver of the constitutional privilege against self-incrimination and the
prohibition against a district attorney from commenting on his not taking the
stand.
We do not say that every defendant who argues pro se loses the privilege
against prosecutorial comment on his failure to testify. Only when the defendant's
remarks go beyond the evidence does he waive this privilege.[156]
Thus, as did the Michigan Supreme Court in Marcus Jones, the Mississippi Supreme Court in
Larry Jones concluded that there was no error requiring reversal because the "defendant's own
statements which were exculpatory and self-serving in nature, not under oath and not supported by
the record," prompted the prosecutor to make the comment at issue.157
The Missouri Supreme Court used a variation of this "proper response" rationale in State
v Brannson158 to reject the defendant's contention that the prosecutor's objections and remarks
improperly referred to his decision not to testify though proceeding in propria persona.
Describing the context in which the references to the defendant's decision not to testify arose, the
Brannson court explained:
This is not a case in which a defendant sits mute at counsel table and the
prosecution points up the defendant's failure to testify. On the contrary, this is a
case in which defendant undertook his own defense and during his protracted trial
participation effectively injected himself into the mainstream of the evidence. He
attempted not only to argue the various points in issue but in the presentation of
evidence through his lengthy interrogation of the State's witnesses, sought
repeatedly to state as facts items not otherwise in evidence and in certain instances
to establish as fact matters of which the witnesses had no knowledge. Clearly these
were points which defendant considered vital to his case and on which he was
apparently otherwise unable or unwilling to obtain proof. In effect he was
attempting in that manner to testify to these otherwise unproved "facts." The
objections of the prosecutor to those attempts of defendant, some of which were
successful, some not, accurately pointed out what defendant was trying to do—and
lodged the objections in those terms (e.g., defendant "is attempting to testify to that."
"He's trying to testify." "Defendant is again trying to testify."). The objections went
to the form of the questions and in several instances were sustained. . . . [T]his is
not a case in which defendant failed or refused to testify and in which comment was
made on that fact. Indeed it is the opposite. Defendant sought in the jury's presence
156
Id. at 994.
157
Id. at 993.
158
State v Brannson, 679 SW2d 246 (Mo, 1984).
-41-
to state as evidence matters not in proof and in so doing he sought to testify without
having been sworn and the prosecutor objected for that reason in those terms.[159]
The Brannson court then described a rule that was easy to apply:
The orthodox standard prohibiting comment by the prosecution on the
failure of the accused to testify is applicable when the accused is silent, but when the
accused conducts his own defense and attempts—innocently or otherwise—to
testify or to inject facts not in evidence into the case, a different problem arises. For
then it is defendant's "attempt to testify" to which objection is made.[160]
In the absence of a "direct and unequivocal" reference to the defendant's right not to testify, the
court held that there was no error requiring reversal.
Here, the prosecutor's objection to defendant's failure to testify fits squarely within the
reasoning of both Jones cases and Brannson. Defendant's decision to testify to the jury during
closing arguments rather than commenting on the evidence admitted at trial prompted the
prosecutor's response. Defendant's comments can only be characterized as repeated and
improper attempts to present the jury with facts not in evidence. The prosecutor's comments
were properly focused on preventing defendant from continuing down this wrong path. The
prosecutor's comments certainly were not the sort of "direct and unequivocal" reference the court
in Brannson would have found plain error requiring reversal. To defendant's benefit, the trial
court also instructed the jury that every defendant has an absolute right not to testify, that the
jurors must not consider the fact that defendant did not testify, and that this fact must not affect
their verdict in any way. In sum, given the circumstances of this case, we conclude that
defendant has failed to demonstrate a plain error requiring reversal. We note that our conclusion
does not hinge, as did the Mississippi Supreme Court's decision in Larry Jones, on the notion
that the defendant partially waived his constitutional privilege against self-incrimination when
his remarks went beyond the evidence. We simply conclude that the prosecutor's objections and
comments did not constitute direct and unequivocal references to defendant's failure to testify.
Rather, they merely amounted to objections to defendant's repeated and improper attempts to
inject facts not in evidence into his closing statement.
VI. Testimony of Terrence And Melody Youk
A. Facts And Argument
Before trial, the prosecutor moved to preclude defendant from asserting the defenses of
consent and euthanasia and from introducing any irrelevant testimony regarding Youk's medical
condition, pain and suffering, and quality of life, and to prevent a jury nullification argument. In
its opinion and order, the trial court granted the prosecutor's motions, but allowed evidence of
159
Id. at 249 (citations omitted).
160
Id. at 250.
-42-
Youk's pain and suffering and quality of life where such evidence related to the assisted suicide
charge that was still pending at that time. When the prosecutor decided not to pursue the assisted
suicide charge, defendant asked the trial court to reconsider its decision to exclude evidence of
Youk's pain and suffering, among other things. The trial court denied this motion.
When defendant submitted his witness list, however, it included Melody and Terrence
Youk. The trial court instructed defendant that he needed to make an offer of proof concerning
the two witnesses. On the second day of trial, defendant made an offer of proof indicating that
Terrence Youk would testify that defendant did not intend to murder Thomas Youk. With regard
to Melody Youk, defendant indicated that her testimony was relevant to Thomas Youk's
background and his own intent.
The trial court made a special record regarding defendant's offer of proof. Melody Youk
testified that when she met with defendant, she explained Youk's condition, and she indicated
that they understood that defendant may be able to "assist [them] in relieving his pain and
suffering." According to Melody Youk, in a subsequent conversation, she, Terrence Youk, and
defendant discussed what defendant could do "to bring an end to this situation."
Defendant argued that Melody Youk's testimony was relevant to establish Thomas Youk's
state of mind and defendant's perception. In response, the prosecutor argued that Melody Youk's
testimony related to consent and euthanasia, which were not recognized defenses to murder, and
that Melody Youk's testimony did not concern defendant's state of mind. The trial court then
allowed defendant to question Melody Youk further. She testified that she never told defendant
that her intent was to have defendant kill Youk and that they never discussed the words "kill or
murder." Defendant again argued that Melody Youk's testimony was relevant to show that he did
not intend to kill Youk.
Following arguments of the parties, the trial court ruled that Melody Youk's testimony
was not appropriate. The trial court stated that defendant was attempting to introduce evidence
of a mercy killing, which is not cognizable under state laws, and that his proffered evidence
related to the law and a legal argument or debate, which do not go before a jury. The trial court
also stated that the fact that Melody Youk did not want defendant to "do something" was not
relevant to defendant's state of mind. The trial court reiterated that any consent to defendant's
action was irrelevant.
With regard to Terrence Youk's testimony, defendant argued that he had a constitutional
right to kill a patient. The trial court ultimately ruled that Terrence Youk's proposed testimony
was hearsay and irrelevant. The issue was again raised during defendant's motion for bond
pending appeal and the trial court again ruled that the offer of proofs indicated that the witnesses
would only testify concerning euthanasia and consent, which were not legally cognizable
defenses.
Defendant now argues that the trial court erred in barring him from calling Terrence and
Melody Youk to testify at trial. Defendant contends that Terrence and Melody Youk were res
gestae witnesses because they were listed on the police report and were familiar with certain
circumstances surrounding Youk's death. Further, defendant asserts, Terrence and Melody Youk
-43-
could have testified about Youk's death, the effect of his disease, his daily life conditions, and his
consent, as well as rebutting the prosecutor's argument that defendant's purpose was to seek
publicity and to advance his own agenda.
B. Standard Of Review
The trial court has discretion when considering whether to admit evidence.161 Thus, we
review the trial court's decision to exclude this evidence for an abuse of that discretion.162
C. Res Gestae Witnesses
Defendant states that because Terrence and Melody Youk were res gestae witnesses, "the
Prosecutor himself was obligated to call [them] to the stand." In making this claim, defendant
apparently relies on MCL 767.40a163 as it appeared before the Legislature amended it in 1986,164
as well as the cases interpreting that former version of the statute. However, under the current
version of the statute, the prosecutor no longer has a duty to produce res gestae witnesses.165
Instead, the prosecutor has a continuing duty to advise the defense of all res gestae witnesses that
the prosecution intends to produce at trial.166 "Put in other terms, the prosecutor's duty to
produce res gestae witnesses was replaced with the duty to provide notice of known witnesses
and to give reasonable assistance in the locating of witnesses if a defendant requests such
assistance."167 Thus, even if Terrence and Melody Youk could be considered res gestae
witnesses, the prosecutor had no duty to produce them to testify.
D. Relevance
We have a separate, and further, rationale for affirming the trial court's decision to
exclude this evidence. As the trial court noted repeatedly, the two witnesses simply had no
relevant testimony to offer to the jury. "'Relevant evidence' means evidence having any tendency
to make the existence of any fact that is of consequence to the determination of the action more
probable or less probable than it would be without the evidence."168 A variety of factors,
161
People v Starr, 457 Mich 490, 494; 577 NW2d 673 (1998).
162
Id.
163
1941 PA 336.
164
1986 PA 46.
165
See People v Burwick, 450 Mich 281, 298; 537 NW2d 813 (1995).
166
See People v Snider, 239 Mich App 393, 423; 608 NW2d 502 (2000).
167
Id.
168
MRE 401.
-44-
including the elements of the charged crimes, the theories of admissibility, and the defenses
asserted all help determine whether any particular piece of evidence is relevant.169
The testimony Terrence and Melody Youk would have provided to the jury concerned
Youk's medical condition, pain, suffering, and the conditions of his daily life, as well as his
consent. By proffering such evidence, defendant sought to justify killing Youk. In fact, although
defendant claims that he proffered their testimony for other reasons, the crux of his claims
consistently relate to consent and euthanasia. Simply put, consent and euthanasia are not
recognized defenses to murder. As the trial court noted, "[a] trial court may exclude from the
jury testimony concerning a defense that has not been recognized by the Legislature as a defense
to the charged crime."170 Thus, Terrence and Melody Youk's testimony was inconsequential to
the determination of this case.
Within this issue, defendant also suggests that he was prejudiced because the prosecutor
discussed "lack of consent" and defendant's political and personal agenda. Defendant asserts that
the testimony of Terrence and Melody Youk could have contradicted those claims. This
argument is entirely unpersuasive. The trial court allowed defendant to argue that Youk
consented to defendant's actions. Further, the jury saw the videotape of Youk consenting to
defendant's actions. Similarly, defendant himself stated on the videotape and during his closing
argument to the jury that his motive in killing Youk was to relieve Youk's pain and suffering and
to bring the issue of euthanasia to the forefront. Accordingly, we conclude that the trial court did
not abuse its discretion in precluding Terrence and Melody Youk from testifying.
Affirmed.
/s/ William C. Whitbeck
/s/ Joel P. Hoekstra
/s/ Henry William Saad
169
People v Brooks, 453 Mich 511, 517-518; 557 NW2d 106 (1996), quoting People v Mills, 450
Mich 61, 67-68; 537 NW2d 909 (1995).
170
People v Demers, 195 Mich App 205, 207; 489 NW2d 173 (1992).
-45-
Some case metadata and case summaries were written with the help of AI, which can produce inaccuracies. You should read the full case before relying on it for legal research purposes.
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.