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Home / Bay of Plenty Times

Euthanasia case: Lecretia Seales may not live to hear verdict

By Tess Nichol
Reporter·NZ Herald·
1 Jun, 2015 12:15 AM2 mins to read

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Lawyers for Lecretia Seales contended that she and her doctor already have the right to make the decision under the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act. Photo / Supplied

Lawyers for Lecretia Seales contended that she and her doctor already have the right to make the decision under the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act. Photo / Supplied

The woman at the centre of a legal battle over her right to die might not live long enough to hear the verdict, her husband says.

Wellington lawyer Lecretia Seales, who has an inoperable brain tumour, was "talking less and less" as her condition worsened, her husband Matt Vickers posted on his blog.

"Lecretia is not well. Her eyes are closed most of the time. She is having trouble swallowing. She is talking less and less."

On Friday morning Ms Seales' paralysis spread to her entire body, leaving her "rigid as a plank," Mr Vickers wrote.

A hospital bed was delivered, with some difficulty, to the couples' home. This meant Ms Seales did not have to be moved to a hospice, which was against her wishes.

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"Lecretia's choice is imminent, and we don't know yet if she will get to make it," wrote Mr Vickers.

"She's been through a few things already that she would rather not have had to go through, but she has taken all of this in her stride and with as much grace and dignity as she can muster."

Mr Vickers said while he did not know whether his wife would choose to die if the court ruled she could, "for Lecretia, it was always having the choice that mattered, not the choice itself."

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