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(5 Oct 2005) SHOTLIST 1. Wide of US Supreme Court 2. Cutaway of "pro-state" protesters in front of the Supreme Court 3. Various of "pro-state" protesters' signs 4. Woman in wheelchair backs up, pans to sign "civil rights not state rights" 5. Wide of protesters 6. SOUNDBITE: (English) Charlene Andrews, Terminally ill patient with breast cancer from Salem Oregon: "You know you have gone through all the treatments that are available to you, you know when death is upon you. I want to be able to die with some dignity and some compassion surrounding me." 7. Wide of speakers in front of the Supreme Court 8. SOUNDBITE: (English) Kathryn Tucker, Co-counsel representing terminally ill patient plaintiffs: "The nation is watching closely what's happened in Oregon. There are have now been seven years of experience with the Oregon statute and seven years reported by the State Department of health, looked at closely by the nation, and what the evidence is, is that there has not been any threat to the public interest posed in Oregon. This has brought an additional choice to dying patients who have a prolonged dying process and for whom this is a least worst alternative." 9. Cutaway of Jay Sekulow, Co-Counsel, American Centre for Law and Justice 10. SOUNDBITE: (English) Jay Sekulow, Co-Counsel, American Centre for Law and Justice: "It is interesting that under Oregon law these narcotics can be given out, they can be prescribed but they cannot be implemented by a physician. And I think that shows that the regulatory scheme that the government has in place is well in the confines of the constitution, and at the end of the day when the court ultimately gets there, even with the shifting personnel situation, I think they are going to find in favour of the United States." 11. Wide of Supreme Court 12. Pan from Supreme Court to speakers STORYLINE Supporters of Oregon's physician-assisted suicide law protested outside the United States Supreme Court in Washington on Wednesday, as justices inside pondered whether the federal government should have the power to block doctors from helping terminally ill patients end their lives. The demonstrators, including many terminally ill, made speeches and carried signs with slogans such as "My Life, My Death, My Decision". Inside, newly installed Chief Justice John Roberts on Wednesday sharply questioned a lawyer arguing for preservation of Oregon's physician-assisted suicide law, noting the federal government's tough regulation of addictive drugs. The case before the Supreme Court is Gonzales versus Oregon, 04-623. The 50-year-old Roberts, hearing his first major oral argument since succeeding William H. Rehnquist at the helm of the court, seemed sceptical of the Oregon law, and the outcome of this case was as unclear after the argument as before. At the outset, Roberts laid a barrage of questions on Oregon Senior Assistant Attorney General Robert Atkinson before he could finish his first sentence. "It's a tough case," noted Justice Anthony Kennedy, a moderate, who with Roberts and others got immersed in one of the most vexing cases of the court's term. Retiring Justice Sandra Day O'Connor seemed ready to back the law allowing dying patients to obtain lethal doses of medication from their doctors. Although O'Connor could provide the fifth vote in Oregon's favour, she will probably no longer be serving in the court when the case is decided. A 4-4 tie would be decided by a new justice. That justice could be President Bush's White House counsel Harriet Miers, whom the president nominated on Monday. Find out more about AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/HowWeWork Twitter: / ap_archive Facebook: / aparchives Instagram: / apnews You can license this story through AP Archive: http://www.aparchive.com/metadata/you...