Assisted dying campaigner Paul Lamb ‘finally at peace’ as he dies aged 65

The father-of-two’s carer Francesca Hepworth said he is ‘finally at peace’ after suffering with chronic pain as a result of a car crash in 1990.
Paul Lamb
PA Archive
Laura Parnaby18 June 2021

Assisted dying campaigner Paul Lamb, who was left paralysed after a car accident, has died at the age of 65.

Humanists UK announced that the father-of-two from Leeds who took on several legal challenges including one at the Supreme Court died in hospital on Tuesday.

Mr Lamb’s carer Francesca Hepworth has said she is “shocked” by his death, but expressed relief that he is “finally at peace” after suffering from chronic pain as a result of the car crash in 1990.

The former builder and greyhound racer was left with no function from the neck down aside from limited movement in his right arm and required 24-hour care.

Ms Hepworth said: “Paul’s death has been a shock to us all, but I’m glad he is finally at peace.

I'm proud to have known him, and been able to call such a brave and courageous man my friend. I am going to miss him.

Francesca Hepworth

“For years, Paul grappled with his condition and faced increasing pain, discomfort, and distress.

“I know Paul was resolute in his belief that nobody should be forced to suffer, and determined to keep fighting to change the law on assisted dying.

“I only regret that he now won’t be able to see such a choice realised, if the law were to change.

“I’m proud to have known him, and been able to call such a brave and courageous man my friend. I am going to miss him.”

Humanist UK’s chief executive Andrew Copson said Mr Lamb will leave a “fierce legacy of campaigning”.

He said: “Paul Lamb was a tireless advocate for the right to die who dedicated his life to championing choice for those with terminal or incurable illnesses.

“He leaves behind a fierce legacy of campaigning, which we are determined to continue in his honour.”

Right to die court case
PA Media

Mr Lamb said the law in England Wales and Northern Ireland, where assisting a suicide is a crime punishable by up to 14 years in prison, “condemns me to a life of constant pain, and removes the small part of my life that I could still have some say over – how I want to die”.

He was the patron for Humanists UK and spearheaded a legal bid aimed at changing the law in 2014 at the Supreme Court.

Mr Lamb took on the case from fellow activist Tony Nicklinson, who began the campaign at the High Court in 2012 and died days after losing this bid.

Along with Mr Nicklinson’s widow Jane Mr Lamb lost the case but secured an agreement from some judges at the UK’s highest court that Parliament should be given the opportunity to reconsider the law.

MPs voted against the Assisted Dying Bill in 2015, though this would not have helped Mr Lamb as it only applied to the terminally ill.

Following the Supreme Court ruling, Mr Lamb said: “I cannot understand, in a civilised society like ours, why I should be forced to suffer when millions of people around the world already have the choice I asked for.

Lamb vows to continue right-to-die battle
PA Archive

“Throughout my case, all I have been told is how sympathetic others are to my situation. But I have never wanted anyone to pity me.

“All I have ever wanted is for my choice to be respected and given equal validity under the law, like everyone else’s.

“Instead this decision, if it is the final word on the matter, condemns me to a life of constant pain, and removes the small part of my life that I could still have some say over – how I want to die.”

In 2020, the Court of Appeal refused him permission to bring a fresh case, ruling that assisted dying was “pre-eminently a matter for Parliament, and not the Courts”.

Mr Lamb said he was “devastated” by this ruling which left him in a “powerless position” and wrote to Justice Secretary Robert Buckland calling for an inquiry into assisted dying in November.

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