Geoffrey Fieger, lawyer, on the trial and his estrangement with Kevorkian:
"I couldn't watch it. He's a friend, but you've got to be careful about self-destructive people, because if you stand next to them, you get hurt yourself." [Newsweek, 4/26/99]
John Skrzynski, assistant Oakland Co. prosecutor:
"He's been made a celebrity by everyone, but in that courtroom he was a man, and he was accountable to the law just as surely as you are and as surely as I am." [Detroit Free Press, 4/14/99]
Marianne Potter, Thomas Youk's hospice nurse:
"I'm so pleased he got the sentence any other murderer would have gotten, I wasn't even concerned about the years they were going to end up giving him, just that they gave him something." [Detroit Free Press, 4/14/99]
Kathryn Tucker, lawyer, Compassion in Dying:
"We've always seen him as a back-alley provider who should be put out of business." [Detroit News, 4/14/99]
Derek Humphry, co-founder,
Hemlock Society:
"This is a tragedy for an honorable man...."[Press Release, 4/13/99]
Jack Lessenberry, journalist, describing the scene at Kevorkian's home last October:
"True, the flute stand was propped up on a cardboard box labeled 'Death Evidence' in telltale police yellow tape, and the attached garage filled with wheelchairs whose owners no longer had any use for them. But otherwise it was a fairly normal scene." [Hour Detroit, July 1999]
Carol Cleigh, spokesperson for disability rights group
Not Dead Yet, after days of demonstrating outside the court house:
"I'm crying and laughing at the same time. We have worked so hard for this... We've been fighting an organized lobby for our own lives. We finally got justice... They made him a folk hero and we were just a bunch of crazies. Well, we're not crazy!" [Oakland Press, 4/14/99]
Detroit News, editorial:
"It gives us no great satisfaction to say it, but Jack Kevorkian got what he deserved. The only question that remains is: Why did it take so long?" [4/14/99]