Remarks on the Judge's Role and Moral Certainty

First, I am a trial judge on D.C. Superior Court—a court of general jurisdiction. Thus, my personal experiences and approach are grounded in the intense and heart-rending world of live testimony and real human beings—not the rarefied appellate atmosphere of cold transcripts and brilliant analytical...

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Veröffentlicht in:Law, medicine & health care medicine & health care, 1991-03, Vol.19 (1-2), p.34-36
1. Verfasser: Kessler, Gladys
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container_title Law, medicine & health care
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creator Kessler, Gladys
description First, I am a trial judge on D.C. Superior Court—a court of general jurisdiction. Thus, my personal experiences and approach are grounded in the intense and heart-rending world of live testimony and real human beings—not the rarefied appellate atmosphere of cold transcripts and brilliant analytical arguments. To put some of my remarks in context, and to present a totally atypical situation which raises all the analytical issues of Cruzan , I would like to describe a real case—one that I actually tried—about 10 years ago, involving a committed patient at St. Elizabeths Hospital—a large local hospital for the mentally ill. I will call him Vladimir—he was a real person, not a faceless mental patient. Vladimir had escaped from the repressiveness and brutality of pre- Glastnost Russia—to the freedom of the West. Sometime after locating in America and working here, he became mentally ill and was hospitalized.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/j.1748-720X.1991.tb01791.x
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identifier ISSN: 1073-1105
ispartof Law, medicine & health care, 1991-03, Vol.19 (1-2), p.34-36
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source MEDLINE; PAIS Index; HeinOnline Law Journal Library
subjects Bioethics
Brain Neoplasms - complications
District of Columbia
Expert Testimony
Humans
Judges & magistrates
Judicial Role
Jurisprudence
Male
Medical ethics
Mental Disorders - complications
Mental Health
Mentally Ill Persons
Morality
Nursing
Personal Autonomy
Right to Die - legislation & jurisprudence
Role
Uncertainty
title Remarks on the Judge's Role and Moral Certainty
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