Woman investigated over husband’s use of assisted dying clinic wanted to argue case in court
Louise Shackleton says current law is traumatising families and she wanted jury to assess her innocence A woman who was under police investigation for accompanying her husband to an assisted dying clinic in Switzerland said she wished her case had gone to trial so she could have proved her (…)
Site référencé:
The Guardian
2854.jpg?width=140&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=0d46027d06f7bf0d372b6f90de2fcb3c, 2854.jpg?width=460&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=c01d29b4baa8d0504c84830a60a827ac, 2854.jpg?width=700&quality=85&auto=format&fit=max&s=ae9867587cfaeabd0230b3e04793d150
The Guardian
‘Disorder, fright and confusion’ : looking back at the devastating Wall Street crash of 1929
19/10/2025
David Harewood returns to Othello : ‘I don’t just want to open the door but kick it down for the people behind me’
19/10/2025
Historic town founded by Black Colombians fleeing slavery eyes second ‘independence’
19/10/2025
‘I felt my soul leave my body’ : 13 readers on the worst meal they ever cooked – from ‘ethanol risotto’ to gravy cake
19/10/2025
Developers encroach on 2,000-year-old Devon wetland citing ‘blockages’ to Labour’s housing plans
19/10/2025
‘I don’t really have sex to music, it’s a bit Tom Cruise’ : Miles Kane’s honest playlist
19/10/2025