Ontario government reportedly tracked 428 cases of possible illegal euthanasia but never notified police
Ontario
euthanasia regulators have reportedly traced 428 cases of possible legal violations but failed to mention a single case to law enforcement.
The Ontario Office of the Chief Coroner has counted 428 cases of non-compliance with Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) regulations since 2017, "ranging from broken safeguards to patients who were euthanized who may not have been capable of consent" based on a piece of leaked information published on Nov. 11 by the
New Atlantis.
Dirk Huyer, head of the Ontario Office of the Chief Coroner stated in the documents that they "see a pattern of not following legislation, a pattern of not following regulation, and frankly, we can't just continue to do education to those folks if they're directly repeating stuff that we've brought to their attention."
When MAID was first introduced in 2016, it was originally only accessible to those who were terminally ill, and those murdering the patients had to follow a sequence of steps before supervising the deadly drugs.
Trudeau administration extended euthanasia practice to Canadians who suffer from chronic illnesses
Later in 2021, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau's administration extended the dangerous practice to be accessible to those who are not at risk of death but suffering from chronic illnesses. (Related:
Anti-euthanasia group vows to keep fighting Trudeau government's plan to include mentally ill people in ASSISTED SUICIDE program.)
The
New Atlantis report mentioned documentation from 2018 which shows that Huyer, despite acknowledging regulations are regularly disregarded, still supported MAID. "Everybody has scrutiny on all of these cases. From an oversight point of view, trying to understand when it happens and how it happens, we're probably the most robust in Canada," Huyer said.
Nonetheless, in the summer of 2017, just a year after MAID was legalized, Huyer co-authored a paper that discussed the
high incidence of non-compliance among euthanasia providers, a trend that only appears to have persisted.
"The MAID regulations require clinicians to notify the pharmacist of the purpose of the MAID medications before they are dispensed," the paper stated, adding that only 61 percent of the doctors followed the rule.
Several doctors moreover ignored the 10-day waiting period between requesting MAID and receiving the drug. Doctors contended that they accelerated the process because of "persistent requests" or an "inconvenient timing of the death in relation to other familial life events."
By 2018, the problem had evolved into what Huyer depicted as "a pattern of not following legislation," provoking him to enforce a recent system "to respond to concerns that arise about potential compliance issues."
Nevertheless, in 2023, his office brought up concerns for a sector of all euthanasia "providers" in Ontario and concerns involving providing MAID to dementia patients and individuals with cognitive impairment.
In 2023 alone, the office discovered 178 compliance problems, an average of one every second day. The total number of compliance problems stands at 428 right now.
Meanwhile, Alex Schadenberg, the executive director of the Ontario-based Euthanasia Prevention Coalition, said in a recent interview with the
Catholic News Agency that the number of
cases reported to the Ontario College of Physicians "hasn't even resulted in an effective 'slap on the wrist.'"
Schadenberg stated it was "a cover-up of mammoth proportions" that demanded a full investigation into the noncompliance with the law particularly since the Ontario Coroner admits that certain physicians have persisted in noncompliance even after receiving an 'email' or a warning about their noncompliance."
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Watch the video below about euthanasia for the extermination of vaccine-injured Canadians.
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More related stories:
Canada attempting to expand EUTHANASIA program to allow assisted suicide of the mentally ill.
Netherlands is approving EUTHANASIA for people with autism, intellectual disabilities and mental illnesses.
Euthanasia legalized in Australia: State of Victoria will allow assisted suicide beginning mid 2019.
Sources include:
LifesSiteNews.com
Catholic News Agency.com