“I'm not afraid of death; I just don't want to be there when
it happens.”
I am writing about the subjects in
this article because I saw a fictional story on the television where a wife
murdered her husband (who was dying of brain cancer) so that she could have his
body frozen, with the hope that in the future, the two of them could be
together again once there is a cure for cancer.
At that point, she hoped to have his body defrosted and brought back to
life so that they can be together again, perhaps forever. Although it was a
television drama, the idea of life after death by way of being frozen for some
unknown reason intrigued me.
I thought to myself, “Can they
really do that?” Would I do that? What if they thaw you out and turn you into
some sort of future servant, or food source (e.g., Soylent Green), science
experiment, or throw you in a coliseum so that future gladiators can attack
you, or lions? As you can probably tell, I probably watch too many science
fiction and gladiator movies. But, I digress.
Apparently, there are people and scientists
who think it can be done and that it is going to be something very commonly
done in the near future.
As weird and bizarre
as having your body frozen to be later brought back to life may first sound,
many people are currently having their bodies cryonically preserved. HowStuffWorks.com defines cryonics as “the
practice of preserving human bodies in extremely cold temperatures with the
hope of reviving them sometime in the future.”
Scientists claim that they can freeze people who are legally dead but
not totally dead. Someone is declared
legally dead when the heart stops beating, but this does not mean that all
brain function has ceased. They believe
that if they freeze the body while there is still some brain function, the body
can later be brought back to life.
In order to have this
procedure done, you would have to join a cryonics facility (cryobank) and pay
an annual membership which is somewhere around $400 a year according to
HowStuffWorks.com. Once you have been
pronounced legally dead, the team immediately retrieves your body and takes it
back to the facility where the freezing process begins. The body is then stored in a liquid nitrogen
filled tank (after paying up to $150,000 for the procedure) which many times
doesn’t even get you a private tank.
According to an article by Mental Floss, the
first person to have this done was Dr. James Bedford. Bedford was a
professor at the University
of California who had his
body frozen in 1967. Among the most well
known to have this procedure done, is perhaps the famous baseball player Ted
Williams. His son, John-Henry Williams, was also cryogenically frozen after his
death.
There is also a
possible tragic tale of a woman named Dora Kent who allegedly died of pneumonia
says the publication Mental Floss. Her
body was immediately taken to a “life extension foundation,” where the
procedure was performed without the presence of a doctor for freezing. When her body was later examined by a medical
examiner, not only was her body headless, but also the examiner suspected that
she was still alive as the process of freezing began. Oops.
HowStuffWorks.com
states that critics of the practice claim that these cryobanks are simply
stealing money by promising people something they will never be able to
deliver. Another huge problem is that
the process of freezing a body is so tedious, that if it is not done at the
right speed and temperature, the cells can turn into ice and then shatter,
making it all for nothing. The source
also reports that many of these facilities opened, but were forced to close
down due to the cost of the process.
Only a few facilities remain, with one of the most prominent being the
Alcor Life Extension Foundation (located in Arizona ) with 59 preserved bodies and 650
current members.
Rationalwiki.org
claims that scientists who practice cryonics are collecting large sums of money
with the apparent hope of delivering a goal that is at a “science-fiction
level.” There is apparently no evidence
to support any of their beliefs that they will be able to revive these bodies,
but they are conveniently collecting annual membership fees while the people
are alive and large sums of money for the actual procedure to take place. There is also no guarantee that even if the
technology is somehow developed to revive these frozen people, that the
foundation will still be around or have the finances to bring them back to life. Benbest.com claims that the large fees pay
for the cost of preparing the bodies and to cover the costs of the storage.
This seems a bit sketchy as a long term project since scientists have no idea
if, when, and how they will ever be able to revive the bodies. How can they
possibly know how much to charge? It’s like when a general contractor quotes
you a price to build a house, nine times out of ten you end up paying more than
what was originally contemplated----only with a cryobank you will be dead and
not get a refund.
Benbest.com claims
that it is not necessary to be rich in order to be preserved. But paying dues upwards of $400 a year simply
to be a member of a foundation and then paying up to $150,000 for the procedure
doesn’t seem very attainable by the average person. Most people do not even make what the
procedure cost in several years of work.
The source also claims that the scientists involved with cryonics are
poorly paid and that many volunteer simply for the greater good of their grand
experiment. They also admit that they
have no idea how much reanimation will cost or the complexity of such a
project.
Other critics claim
that it is immoral to pay outrageous amounts of money for cryonics when there
are millions of people starving in the world.
Benbest.com again defends cryonics by saying that paying for cryonics is
the same as trying to find a cure for Cancer or AIDS---only you are frozen the
entire time the search for the cure for the disease goes on.
Biochemist Professor
Ken Storey criticizes the practice saying that there is little hope of it ever
being successful. According to BBC
Science, Storey reports that it is common knowledge in science that organs need
to be frozen at different temperatures in order for them to remain intact and
functioning. The source reports another
potential problem pointed out by Cryobiologist Dr. Dayong Gao, from the
University of Washington, says that safely removing the bodies from
liquid-nitrogen filled tanks is virtually impossible. He also notes that the body could shatter
when being thawed. The Alcor Foundation
itself recognizes and admits that in over 50% of its cases, legal death occurs
way before a representative from the foundation is able to arrive, causing
extreme damage to the cells in the body.
Religion is another
major critic of cryonics. Many believe
that death is natural and that trying to come back to life for a second shot is,
well, just unnatural. Alcor tries to
combat this belief in its website. It
claims that religion has nothing to do with the decision and that medicine
itself was invented to help people live longer and healthier. In essence they
are saying that God would want us to try and cure disease and live as long as
we can even if we have to die first.
Although Alcor claims to take no stance when it comes to religion, it
does admit that the majority of its members are atheists and that Alcor is not
affiliated with any religion.
When it comes to
looking at a legal perspective of cryonics, Alcor’s website discuss the
potential problems it may face even though there are currently no state or
federal laws that specifically address entire bodies that are frozen after
death. They admit that due to the
increasing interest in the subject, there is a very good possibility that laws
will begin to emerge regarding the regulation of cryonics.
The death and
preservation of Ted Williams did bring up some legal issues. According to the East Valley Tribune, three
family members of the baseball legend filed a lawsuit claiming that Alcor took
possession of and froze the body without the correct legal documentation. Ted’s son, John-Henry Williams, had the body
frozen after his father died of leukemia.
The family members claim that they repeatedly requested the
documentation from Alcor, and that the foundation failed to produce anything. The lawsuit was allegedly dropped by the
Plaintiffs in exchange for a sum of $645,000 to be paid immediately and split
between the three family members.
Apparently, money in their pockets somehow managed to diminish and have
a sedating effect on their outrage.
It is not only entire
bodies that are being frozen for later retrieval; there has been quite a lot of
litigation regarding freezing such things as the following: sperm, eggs, and
embryos. According to attorney Cynthia E. Fructhman, there is actually an
entire area of law called ART (assisted reproduction technology) wherein
lawyers assist clients to help clients obtain gametes (sperm and eggs) and make
embryos so that they can form families that they would not otherwise be able to
have.
Not surprisingly, as
with just about anything involving people, there has been litigation that stems
from disagreements concerning cryopreservation. Fruchtman describes different
scenarios. In one, a woman retrieved sperm postmortem from her fiancé and had
it cryopreserved. At the time she did this, the fiancés family did not object
to her taking this action. After approximately a year and a half the woman
decided to withdraw the sperm from the cryobank. The cryobank insisted that she
had to get consent from her dead fiancé’s next of kin. When she tried to do
this, the family told her that they were no longer comfortable with the idea
and did not agree to sign the consent. The woman is now stuck with the awkward
decision of having to sue the cryobank and/or her child’s future grandparents
in order to get her dead fiancé’s sperm released to her. Imagine going to a family reunion in that case
scenario?
In another scenario, a
couple with frozen embryos obtained a divorce. The court did not make any
provisions for the embryos in the divorce decree. The issue that now arises is
must the cryobank refuse to release the embryos to one of the depositors
without the consent of the other, or does the cryobank have to insist on a
court order before releasing the embryos to any of the depositors? According to Fruchtman, there are no clear
answers to the above situations.
For those of you who
would like to read some interesting cases that discuss the role of cryobanks as
it relates to reproductive tissue, I highly recommend reading the following
cases: York v. Jones, 717 F. Supp. 421 (E.D. Va. 1989) and Johnson v.
Superior Court, 124 Cal. Rptr. 2d 650 (Ct. App. 2002). According to Fruchtman, these are the only
reported decisions to date that discuss the legal position of a cryobank that
deals with reproductive tissue. The
issue of cryonics becomes far more complicated in those states, such as Georgia , Louisiana ,
Missouri , and Texas that find that embryos are human
beings which are entitled to the same legal protection afforded to all persons.
In Tennessee ,
the highest appellate court has concluded that embryos are not strictly persons
or property. Rather, they should be considered to be an interim category that
entitles them to special protection because of their potential to become life. Davis
v. Davis, 842 S. W.2d 588 (Tenn.
1992) cert. denied, sub nom. Stowe v. Davis, 507 U.S. 911 (1993).
Interesting conceptually, well-intentioned, and thoughtful on the part of the
court, but what kind of legal mess are labels such as an “interim category” and
“special protection” going to eventually lead to? Only the creativity of trial
lawyers and the divergent opinions, philosophies, agendas, politics, and biases
of appellate courts throughout the country are going to give us the answers as
new cases make their way through the court systems.
One probate court in Texas had a rather
bizarre case where eleven frozen embryos where held by a fertility clinic and
both the mother and father were murdered. The parents left no will giving
instructions regarding what was to be done with the embryos in the event they
both died. Their only heir was a two
year old son. The court ruled that the embryos must be maintained by the
fertility clinic until the two year old boy turns eighteen, at which time he
will acquire all rights to their disposition and he can decide what he wants to
do with them. See Report and Recommendation of Master in Chancery. In the
Estate of Yenenesh Abayneh Desta, Deceased, No. PR 12-2856-1. Probate Court
No. 1 Dallas County (Feb. 23, 2014). So in essence,
when he turns eighteen, he could possibly have eleven siblings or none at
all---it all depends on him.
Needless to say, the
litigation games have already begun and a whole new universe of possibilities
and scenarios to fight over ownership of frozen “property,” “persons,” or
“interim categories” has resulted in decisions that reach different results
just depending on what state you happen to live, or die for that matter.
The future is now.
What seemed like science fiction only a few years ago is now an entire spectrum
of law that remains unsettled. As for
me, I prefer to treat life as a one-time only very special gift and enjoy the
most of it while I can. I do not like the idea of jumping off of a cliff and
trying to figure out how to build a parachute on the way down. This is exactly
what is happening at these cryobanks because they may be able to freeze you and
charge you a lot of money for it while you are alive, but what happens when the
time comes to finally thaw out?
~Leonardo G. Renaud