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'It certainly gives impetus to any one who wants more money to assist their loved one who has money with their suicide. I think the implications are enormous.'
The court ruled in favor of Linda and Megan Schunk, the wife and daughter of the late Edward Schunk of Stanley, Wis. He died from a self-inflicted shotgun wound in January 2006 while he was suffering from non-Hodgkin's Lymphoma at age 63.
Under Schunk's will, his wife and teenager daughter were to inherit 80 acres of land, a $100,000 life insurance policy, equipment from his logging company and other money. Edward Schunk also had six older children with different women who were left little or nothing in the estate, valued at $488,000 in 2006, according to court records.
Five of those children challenged the will in court, arguing his wife and daughter helped him commit suicide and therefore should be ineligible to inherit under the law.
The two admitted they drove him home from the hospital on a one-day pass the day he committed suicide but they denied assisting. The other children alleged the two knew he wanted to commit suicide, drove him to a cabin on the property, helped him inside, gave him a loaded shotgun and left
The Supreme Court will decide Monday whether it will take Davis' case. If it doesn't, he likely will be executed, despite evidence of his innocence.
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