Legislative History

2022

On December 15, 2022, Assembly members Herb Conaway, Mila Jasey and John Mckeon introduced Bill A4921, which waives the 15-day waiting period for medical aid in dying if the person is not likely to die during that time frame. The bill was referred to the Assembly Heath Committee. 

2020

On Wednesday, April 1, 2020, a New Jersey superior court granted a motion by state Attorney General Gurbir Grewal to dismiss the lawsuit filed in August 2019 seeking to overturn the New Jersey Medical Aid in Dying for the Terminally Ill Act. This ruling stands though plaintiffs have filed an appeal. Click here for the full case history and the most recent updates.

2019

New Jersey’s Medical Aid in Dying for the Terminally Ill Act authorizes medical aid in dying in the Garden State, marking the culmination of 7 years of on-the-ground organizing by Compassion & Choices and action by volunteer advocates. Governor Phil Murphy signed the law on April 12, 2019. The law became effective on August 1, 2019.

You can read our 2019 New Jersey and New York Campaign Report here.

2018

On March 12, 2018, the Assembly Judiciary Committee heard testimony on the bill. The committee voted 5-2 to approve the bill, with several committee members citing the testimony of our supporters and telling stories of their own life experiences with death and dying. On February 7, 2019, the bill was passed out of the Senate Health, Human Services and Senior Citizens Committee with a 6-3 vote.

Pre-2018

Since legislation to authorize medical aid in dying was first introduced in the New Jersey Legislature in 2012, Compassion & Choices has been dedicated to ensuring that this compassionate end-of-life option is available to the terminally ill residents of the Garden State.

Legal History

In 2019, New Jersey passed the Aid in Dying for the Terminally Ill Act, legalizing medical aid in dying for qualifying New Jersey residents. On August 8, 2019, just over a week after the law took effect, Dr. Yosef Glassman filed a Complaint and a Motion to Show Cause in Mercer County Superior Court. Dr. Glassman alleged that the law violated his free exercise rights, despite the fact that physician participation in medical aid in dying is entirely voluntary under the Act. Among his other allegations, Dr. Glassman further alleged that the New Jersey Constitution recognizes a fundamental right to protect or defend the lives of others, and that the state’s medical aid in dying law was in violation of that right. Two other plaintiffs later joined the case – a pharmacist and a terminally ill individual who opposed the law on religious or personal grounds.

On August 14, 2019, the first day terminally ill patients who qualified under the Act would have been able to obtain a prescription, a Mercer County Judge issued a temporary restraining order, blocking patients from accessing medical aid in dying. This order was overturned by the New Jersey Appellate Court in a decision issued on August 27, 2019, which held that the lower court “abused its discretion” when it suspended the law.

On April 1, 2020, following a motion by the state Attorney General Gurbir Grewal, a Mercer County Judge dismissed all claims with prejudice. The Superior Court’s ruling stated:

“The Court finds that Plaintiffs lack standing to bring a claim against the Act because its enforcement, and this Court’s determination, does not harm or affect them in any cognizable way … 

The language of Article I [of the New Jersey Constitution] does not establish a constitutional or fundamental right to protect or defend the lives of others…it would curtail the rights to privacy of capable terminally ill patients to determine the course of their own medical treatment … 

Here, the State has a legitimate interest, perhaps even a compelling interest, in establishing a safe and effective procedure for qualified terminally ill patients to experience a humane and dignified death … 

Plaintiffs do not have a reasonable probability of success on the merits of any of their claims … 

Accordingly, the Court dismisses the complaint with prejudice.”                                 

(See pages 13, 14, 17, 32, 37 of ruling here).

After the case was dismissed opponents submitted a Motion for Reconsideration. This motion was subsequently denied by the Court on May 22, 2020. On June 18, 2020, Plaintiffs filed a Notice of Appeal, which was rejected by the court. However, the court gave Plaintiffs time to correct their ruling, which was subsequently re-filed on July 13, 2020.

Compassion & Choices, along with Lynne Lieberman — a terminally-ill New Jersey resident — and Dr. Paul Bryman — a hospice and palliative care physician practicing in New Jersey — submitted an amicus brief on April 2, 2021, urging the Court of Appeal to affirm the lower court’s dismissal of the case. The amicus brief, arguing in favor of New Jersey’s medical aid-in-dying law, stated:

[Plaintiffs] call on this Court to upend well-established precedent by limiting an individual’s right to self-determine their end-of-life medical care and altering the traditional patient-physician relationship in obtaining informed consent. This notion contravenes New Jersey courts’ long-established recognition of an individual’s right to make their own end-of-life choices, even when those choices diverge from the advice of a physician. Appellants may disagree with the end-of-life choices granted by the Act, but those choices are the individual’s alone to make.

Compassion & Choices, Lynne Lieberman, and Dr. Glassman were accepted as amicus by the court on April 26, 2021. A decision in the appeal is forthcoming. Compassion & Choices remains vigilant against any and all efforts by the plaintiffs to overturn the lower court’s ruling and any other legal challenges to the law in the future.