International Task Force
on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide
GEORGE EXOO
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"I
make it look like they died in their sleep" (Guardian,
London, 5/12/08) Background about Exoo:
"The Minister Makes House Calls" The Minister Makes House Calls "People are extremely grateful that I am present and that I am a
minister" To all appearances, they seemed so ordinary. Other guests at the
posh Atlantic Coast Hotel in Westport, County Mayo, recall Rosemary Toole-Gilhooley (1)
and her two male companions as three middle-aged people having a good time. They partied
in the Harbour Master Bar for four hours, before retiring to one of the hotel's 85 rooms
for the night. (2) "They were laughing and joking from the minute they came in. It
was as if they knew each other very well. They ordered rounds of Jack Daniel's with Coke
and seemed to be having a good old conversation," one hotel guest said. "The
three of them got into the spirit of things and sang along
. Rose was tapping her
feet, smiling and at one stage she did a little dance at the table on her way to the
loo."(3) Another hotel guest who observed the merry threesome as they sang and
danced said, "It sends a shiver down my spine to think that it was her last night
alive. I'm shocked now to think that she had planned everything and the two guys with her
knew she was going to die."(4) Two days later, Toole-Gilhooley 's body was discovered in an
apartment in a wealthy Dublin neighborhood. Her head was covered with a plastic bag.
Tubing led from the bag to a container of helium gas. A search began for two West Virginia men, identified as George Exoo,
a Unitarian minister, and his gay partner, Thomas McGurrin. They and Ireland's first known
assisted suicide became international news. Very, very lonely Rosemary Toole-Gilhooley had been married twice and was separated
from her second husband. She had no children. According to her father, 91-year-old Owen
Toole, she frequently talked to people from all around the world about suicide. In an
e-mail message to a right-to-die list serve, she wrote that assisted suicide should be
available for the mentally ill because "brain torture is worse than any physical
torture." (5) According to Libby Wilson, a retired doctor who heads the Scottish
pro-euthanasia group called Friends at the End (FATE), Toole-Gilhooley had been forced to
give up her job at the Investment Bank of Ireland several months earlier because of severe
depression. Toole-Gilhooley had asked Wilson to help her commit suicide, but
Wilson refused since her organization limits support of assisted suicide to those who are
physically ill. Wilson was aware, however, that Toole-Gilhooley had obtained a copy of the
suicide manual, Final Exit. Furthermore, five days before Toole-Gilhooley 's
death, Wilson knew of plans for the assisted suicide but she did not inform anyone of
Toole-Gilhooley 's impending death because she considered their phone conversations and
e-mails to be confidential doctor-patient communication. Asked why Toole-Gilhooley, who had done so much research and
certainly knew how to kill herself, was seeking help from others, Wilson said, "I
think she was very, very lonely. She did not want to be alone." (6) Time to go Toole-Gilhooley paid all expenses for the men's trip, but she didn't
meet Exoo and McGurrin in person until three days before her death when she greeted them
at the Dublin airport. However, she had been in contact with Exoo by phone and e-mail ever
since they had been put in touch through a "concrete referral" from a woman Exoo
described as "really well grounded."(7) At the airport, Toole-Gilhooley rented a car. Then, she and the men
spent two leisurely days, traveling through the Irish countryside, purportedly giving
McGurrin the opportunity to get in touch with his ancestral roots in Westport, County
Mayo. Their jaunt ended with the night of partying at the Atlantic Coast Hotel. It appears that the unhurried pace ended when they went from the
hotel to the rented apartment that had been chosen to serve as the backdrop for
Toole-Gilhooley 's death. Exoo and McGurrin had brought equipment to use for the assisted
suicide. Toole-Gilhooley had obtained canisters of helium gas and drugs. "They were
Irish pills and she had ground them up. She had tons of the stuff," Exoo said.(8) The men acknowledge that they helped set up a mechanism that would
cut off Toole-Gilhooley 's oxygen supply. In addition to setting up the suicide kit, they
admit guiding her through five practice sessions with it, but they claim they only watched
as Toole-Gilhooley took pills with vodka and then placed a plastic bag over her head. Exoo described the final moments during which Toole-Gilhooley
swallowed the crushed pills, covered her head with a plastic bag and breathed helium.
"She had not a second's hesitation,"(9) he said. In other interviews, however,
he acknowledged prodding her to get on with her death. During the process, Toole-Gilhooley
decided to pause to smoke a cigarette. Exoo saw this as a problem and told her, "OK,
Rosemary, time to put the cigarette down if you don't mind."(10) She complied and the process continued. (Exoo's admission that he told Toole-Gilhooley to put out the
cigarette and don the plastic bag could result in legal problems for him, as could his
knowing provision of the equipment designed for assisted suicide. Section 2 of the Irish
Criminal Law (Suicide) Act 1983, states that anyone who "aids, abets, counsels or
procures the suicide of another" is guilty of an offence punishable up to 14 years'
imprisonment. ) After waiting for a short time to make certain that she was dead,
Exoo and McGurrin returned the rental car to the Dublin airport and flew to Amsterdam
where they claim that they received a message from Toole-Gilhooley. Message from the grave? According to Exoo, he and McGurrin received a "sign" from
Toole-Gilhooley while they were in Amsterdam. "We always ask people to give us a sign
when they reach the other side successfully. And they come within 24 hours of the person
passing. She said her sign would be a bunch of roses. The very next night we were walking
down the street in Amsterdam, and a guy brushed by us and he was carrying four bunches of
red roses. I think that's reasonable evidence."(11) McGurrin corrected Exoo's recollection, saying it was "more like
six" bunches of flowers.(12) He didn't say whether six bunches of flowers indicated a
higher satisfaction score than a mere four would have. In addition to the roses-from-Rosemary story, Exoo points to other
reasons to illustrate that his actions were above reproach. He sees no problem with the fact that she had been lonely and
depressed. Asked if he felt that he was fully qualified to decide if Toole-Gilhooley was
of sound enough mind to choose her death, Exoo, who has no medical or psychological
training, said, "Sure, I don't have any problems with that."(13) He said, "Sometimes they say, 'I don't like the taste (of the
pills),' and that's an indication of second thoughts; but she didn't have a moment's
hesitation. She gulped that stuff down." (14) In addition, he questioned her to make certain she was acting
rationally. "I said to her, 'Are you really sure you want to do this? You're so
cheerful.' She replied, 'Yes, I really have enjoyed these two days with you, but I will be
miserable.' She had no doubt in her mind about her exit. She suffered from serious
depression."(15) He explains that many times he obtains medical records, but he
doesn't always insist on it because most of the time a person's medical condition is
obvious.(16) He admits that he has also assisted "a certain percentage of people who
are younger, who have illnesses that are debilitating," but not life threatening, or
individuals who have "multiple chemical sensitivities."(17) He also said that, just before she died, Toole-Gilhooley had a
45-minute phone conversation with a doctor from the United States who works with him.
Without reviewing any medical records or even seeing Toole-Gilhooley in person, the
unnamed doctor assured Exoo that Toole-Gilhooley was an appropriate candidate for assisted
suicide.(18) Exoo contends he should not be charged with any crime in connection
with Toole-Gilhooley 's death. "They won't arrest me. I'm American." Not long after his involvement in Toole-Gilhooley 's death had been
confirmed, Exoo, speaking of himself, pompously declared, "If George has to go before
the authorities in Ireland, he will go with a free and open conscience."(19) But, as word reached him that Irish authorities and legal experts
from the United States were actually building a case to extradite him, he said, "I
don't think this matter will go any further. They won't arrest me. I'm American."(20)
Reflecting further on the possibility that he could be brought to trial, he said any case
against him would be "a very bad case to try, given the fact that I am first of all a
clergyman, secondly that she called me there, and thirdly because her family approved in
advance."(21) (Toole-Gilhooley 's father vehemently denies having approved his
daughter's death. Referring to Exoo, Owen Toole said, "He's a bloody liar."(22)) Exoo also claims that he didn't know assisted suicide was illegal in
Ireland.(23) And, he makes another assertion as to why he should not be held legally
accountable for Toole-Gilhooley 's death. "I am more responding to the laws of the
heart and what I believe are the laws of God and the laws that invoke people to end
suffering," he said.(24) He told one reporter that he does generally try to follow the
guidelines of what is legal in the United States(25) but that the law of the heart takes
precedence. Of course, no state not even Oregon permits the activities in
which Exoo has been engaged. In fact, in many ways he bears strong similarities to Jack Kevorkian.
"Call me the local Jack Kevorkian" Exoo, like Kevorkian, seems to take personal delight in assisted
suicide, calling it "a beautiful thing" which "becomes a very intense
spiritual event." He has said, "In every instance I've been involved in, it's
been an incredibly fine experience."(26) Since being linked with Toole-Gilhooley 's death, Exoo has tried to
emphasize his under-the-radar method of death delivery. "I'm not interested in being
another Jack Kevorkian," he told a reporter.(27) However, he had previously been
viewed as a little known Kevorkian wannabe who sought publicity where he could get it. In 1997, then describing himself as the "Chaplain in Dying"
for Hemlock of Western Pennsylvania and West Virginia, he told a Pittsburgh newspaper,
"You could call me the local Jack Kevorkian if you want. I take that as a
compliment."(28) At that time, he was relying on Derek Humphry's book, Final Exit,
and sometimes called Humphry for advice. If the preferred drugs weren't available, he said
he would check the PDR (Physician's Desk Reference on prescription medications) and
"look for things that say, 'Warning. Warning. This may be fatal when taken with
alcohol.'"(29) Since then, he has used various devices or veterinary drugs to assist
deaths.(30) In 1999, Exoo was among the presenters at a select conference of right-to-die
activists, assembled from around the world in Seattle, Washington. Participants at the
"Self-Deliverance: New Technology Conference" shared inventions and devices
intended to be so easy and effective to use that no government could stop suicide,
assisted or unassisted. Exoo demonstrated the DeBreather, a device intended to prevent the
panic reflex that occurs during suicide by asphyxiation.(31) Like Jack Kevorkian, Exoo has claimed responsibility for more than
100 assisted suicide deaths. However, unlike Kevorkian, who fears flying and insisted that
his victims travel to him, Exoo has traveled extensively to carry out assisted suicides.
His death junkets -- some of which have been to destinations in France, Singapore,
Switzerland, and Italy(32) -- are paid for by those who are soon-to-be-deceased. As he
told the London Times, he will travel anywhere and guarantees that he won't
"botch it."(33) McGurrin says he accompanies Exoo on many of his suicide trips
"because George needs a traveling companion. I worry about him because he falls
asleep at the wheel."(34) Sporadic career As was the case with Jack Kevorkian, Exoo had a sporadic career
before hitting the headlines with his assisted suicide activities. Fifty-nine-year-old George Exoo was born in Cleveland. He was raised
a Methodist, graduated from Boston's Emerson College in 1964, earned a graduate degree
from Harvard Divinity School, and studied toward a doctoral degree in music history at the
University of California-Berkeley. After being ordained a Unitarian minister in 1973, he
led congregations in South Carolina.(35) While in South Carolina he received a grant to study how Interstate
26 rest areas were used for homosexual sex. He released his findings to pressure the state
to install condom machines at the rest stops. Instead the information led to a police
crackdown on rest stop sexual activity. In the wake of the controversy, Exoo left South Carolina to help
establish a hospice at a Hare Krishna community in West Virginia. It was there that he met
McGurrin, a Krishna monk. (McGurrin now identifies himself as a Buddhist Unitarian.) The two moved to Pittsburgh where Exoo supported himself with income
from the care of a disabled man and with his salary as WQED Radio's Church Man.(36) The
pair now live in Beckley, a town of about 17,000 people located in the coal fields of
southern West Virginia. According to published reports, Exoo's main source of income is the
$375 a month he receives from his 24-member Unitarian congregation and from money he
receives from those whose deaths he assists through his "Compassionate
Chaplaincy" organization. Exoo says his congregation also provides support for the
work of Compassionate Chaplaincy.(37) Compassionate Chaplaincy Compassionate Chaplaincy, which operates out of Exoo and McGurrin's
home, is a non-profit 501 (c) (3) organization whose materials bear the slogan, "We
listen with the heart."(38) Its services, listed at the group's web site, include
"Assurance of Success": Self-deliverers cringe at the prospect of botching the job. We all know the horror
stories
The Chaplaincy offers unique client services to the dying. Chaplain, George Exoo, a
Unitarian-Universalist minister for a quarter century life Hemlock member -- guides
the incurably and terminally ill to the Other Side
Exoo makes house calls. Drawing on philosophical wisdom of the world's religions and
the practical wisdom of Derek Humphry, he prepares people for death and stays with them as
they self-deliver. Thus death becomes a serene, well-managed shift from this world to the
next.(39) The site makes it clear that clients are expected to provide travel
expense and makes a pitch for donations for the "work of the ministry."(40) Compassionate Chaplaincy's promotional flyer asks, "Do you need
help in dying well?" It also suggests to potential corpses, "If you would like
to have personal and expert assistance in planning your death, based on the most
advanced "how-to" information, contact the COMPASSIONATE CHAPLAINCY by
letter or phone." The ad notes that the organization provides house calls, gives
"more than just 'tea and sympathy,'" and "provides a personal and honest
consulting service that has no equal."(41) In addition to listing Exoo as its chaplain, the business card for
the group names McGurrin as its counselor.(42) However, the extent of his counseling
services appears to be somewhat limited. He says that, while he does "meditate and
get into a meditative state with clients," the counseling and praying is left to
Exoo.(43) Tea and scenery in West Virginia In early March, soon after returning to West Virginia, Exoo was out
huckstering his services. In a presentation before the general annual meeting of the
Funeral Consumer Alliance of Greenbrier Valley, Exoo explained that his position was one
of openness to help anyone die who is totally clear about his or her intent to do so to
relieve suffering. As part of his pitch he demonstrated a plastic bag and tube assembly as
one mother for inducing a quick and painless death with helium. (44) However, a few weeks later, Irish police announced plans to travel to
West Virginia to finalize their investigation of Exoo, a step that is necessary before
making a decision about charging him. In spite of the fact that he had spoken extensively
with the media, Exoo will not be so forthcoming with authorities. He said his attorney has
advised him that, when the Irish police come to see him, he should invite them in for tea,
tell them about the beautiful scenery in West Virginia but not talk about the case. As for continuing to assist suicides, Exoo said he plans to be more
cautious. He fears he might be "set up" by someone and could get in trouble with
the law, so he is considering lie detector tests for those who request his services to
insure that "they are not plants." "It is horrible," he said,
"but we might have to do that."(45) By late September 2002, Exoo seemed to believe that he was out of the
woods as far as Toole-Gilhooley 's death. He said he had not heard anything from either
Irish authorities or police in the United States. "They have not done anything,"
he told the Irish Examiner. "I think it's kind of dead in the water."
(46) He added that his conscience remains clear over Toole-Gilhooley 's
death. "People are extremely grateful that I am present and that I am a
minister," he said. (47) But Exoo may have spoken too soon. On Tuesday, October 8, 2002
Ireland's RTE television announced that Irish police would travel to West Virginia the
following week to question Exoo as "part of a process that could lead to Exoo's
extradition to Ireland" where he could face charges for assisted suicide. (48) Under
Irish law, assisted suicide carries a penalty of up to 14 years in prison. The attorney representing Exoo and McGurrin has instructed them to
exercise their Fifth Amendment rights and refuse to answer any questions. In January 2003, Irish authorities announced that they were planning
to begin extradition proceedings (49) Endnotes 1. Toole's full name was Rosemary Elizabeth Toole Gilhooly, but she used the name Rosemary Toole. 2. Toole had rented the room earlier in the day at a cost of EUR 164 a person. When her body was discovered, the hotel receipt was found in her purse. (Damien Lane, "Rose's Last Night," The Mirror, February 5, 2002.) 3. Ibid. 4. Ibid. 5. Message from Rosemary Toole to right_to_die@efn.org, August 26, 2001. 6. Joe Humphreys, "Tragic choice of woman who most feared a failed suicide bid," The Irish Times, February 3, 2002. 7. Tara Tuckwiller, "Beckley minister sat with Irish woman during suicide," Charleston Gazette Online, February 2, 2002. 8. "Suicide helpers have no regrets," Sunday Independent, (Ireland), February 3, 2002. 9. Kathy Donaghy, "I don't regret helping woman to die, says preacher," Irish Independent, February 6, 2002. 10. Henry MacDonald, "Rosemary, it's now time to go," The Observer, February 3, 2002. 11. Ibid. 12. Patrick Smith, "Minister says he gave 'spiritual direction' to suicide woman," The Irish Times, February 3, 2002. 13. Supra note 7. 14. Supra note 9. 15. Supra note 2. 16. Jennifer Bundy, "Police in Ireland Investigate His Role in Death of a 49-Year-Old Woman," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 17, 2002. 17. Supra note 7. 18. "Minister defends role in Irish woman's suicide," Charleston Gazette Online, February 4, 2002. 19. Supra note 12. 20. John Breslin, "Evidence builds against suicide case minister," Irish Examiner, February 5, 2002. 21. "Exoo says any prosecution unlikely to succeed," RTE News, February 3, 2002 and supra note 3. 22. Mark Sage, "I did not approve suicide," PA News, February 4, 2002 and Caoimhe Young, "Dad: No suicide blessing," The Mirror, February 5, 2002. 23. "US pastor who helped Irish suicide says he followed 'laws of God,'" Agence France Presse, February 4, 2002. (Ignorance of the law is not a defense to the crime of assisted suicide. However, even if it were, his claim of ignorance is ludicrous. As a longtime Hemlock member and participant at right-to-die conferences he would be well aware of the fact that assisted suicide is illegal in Ireland. 24. Ibid. 25. Jennifer Bundy, "Minister's companion likes to get to know those he helps to die," Associated Press, February 4, 2002. 26. Greg Stone, "Suicide Ruling Won't Change Public's Attitude, Minister Says," Charleston Gazette, June 27, 1997. 27. Supra note 25. 28. Sharon Voss, "Last rights: Providing help to those who end the suffering," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, May 25, 1997. 29. Ibid. 30. Gay Alcorn, "The slow death of euthanasia," The Age (Melbourne, Australia), December 18, 1999. 31. Carol Ostrom, "Conference displays new devices in search for a way to die," Seattle Times, November 19, 1999. 32. Carol Ostrom, "Aided-suicide activists fed up," Seattle Times, May 20, 2001; Michael O'Farrell, "Right-to-die pair who advised on woman's suicide may never be charged over her death," Irish Examiner, February 4, 2002; supra note 25; Roland Watson and Daniel McGrory, "Web's minister of death 'beyond the law,'" London Times, February 18, 2002. 33. Roland Watson and Daniel McGrory, "Web's Minister of death 'beyond the law,'" London Times, February 18, 2002. 34. Supra note 25. 35. The Unitarian-Universalist Association (UUA) stopped recommending him for ministerial positions in November 2001, although Exoo can still serve as a UUA minister. Exoo contends that the split occurred when the UUA wanted him to include a doctor on the board of Compassionate Chaplaincy. However, John Hurley, director of information for UUA in Boston said Exoo resigned because there were charges against him. "In light of those charges, he chose to resign," said Hurley who would not reveal the nature of the charges nor whether they were of a civil or criminal nature. (Bev Davis, "Church officials: Exoo action not on their behalf," The Register Herald (Beckley, WV), February 8, 2002.) 36. As the "Church Man," Exoo evaluated church services, offering on-air critiques of music, architecture and sermons in area churches. 37. Jennifer Bundy, "Police in Ireland Investigate His Role in Death of a 49-Year-Old Woman," Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, February 17, 2002. 38. Slogan from business card, web site, and from "Heart Voices, the Newsletter of Compassionate Chaplaincy." On file with author. 39. Compassionate Chaplaincy web site (http://www.city-net.com/~compchap/) accessed April 26, 2001. The web site also describes Exoo as "the planet's only paid church critic" and claims that "Presbyterians, Episcopalians and Roman Catholics have hired him as a consultant on congregational growth." Since shortly after Toole's death the web site has been inaccessible. 40. Ibid. 41. Compassionate Chaplaincy promotion flyer, distributed in 2001, on file with author. 42. Compassionate Chaplaincy business card on file with author. 43. Supra note 25. 44. Minutes for annual general meeting of Funeral Consumer Alliance of Greenbrier Valley held March 5 2002 in Lewisburg at new Greenbrier County Visitor Center. http://www.funerals.org/greenbrier/minutes.htm, last accessed Oct. 11, 2002. 45. Supra note 33. 46. John Breslin, "I won't face trial, says 'assisted suicide' cleric," Irish Examiner, Sept. 9, 2002. 47. Ibid. 48. Tara Tuckwiller, "Irish police to interview minister," Charleston Gazette, Oct. 11, 2002. 49. Henry McDonald, "Minister to be extradited over assisted suicide," Observer (England), Jan. 26, 2003. .. Rita L. Marker, an attorney, is executive director of the International Task Force on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide.
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