The 91-year-old woman who got help with killing herself from her daughter and son-in-law did not have a terminal illness, and was not found incompetent, an unsealed grand jury indictment states.
Kim Roller, 70, and David Norton, 68, were indicted Jan. 8 and charged with manslaughter by aiding suicide, according to a Boulder County District Attorney’s Office press release. Kim Roller, the woman’s daughter, and Norton, the woman’s son-in-law, are accused of buying nitrogen gas and the accessories needed to help Kim Roller’s mother, Mildred “Milsy” Roller, kill herself.
Mildred Roller did not have a terminal illness, according to an autopsy reviewed by a grand jury. Under Colorado law, patients who request aid in dying must have fewer than six months to live.
Boulder County District Attorney’s Office investigators and Louisville police officers reviewed Mildred Roller’s autopsy and records from Erie Medical Center and Kaiser Permanente, and found that Mildred Roller had no diagnosis for a terminal illness and was never found incompetent, the indictment states.
Mildred Roller died of “asphyxia due to a bag over the head and displacement of oxygen by nitrogen gas,” Meredith Frank, a doctor in the Boulder County Coroner’s office, wrote in the autopsy opinion.
Under the End-of-Life Options Act, terminally ill Coloradans can request medication for the purpose of ending their life on their terms. Under the 2016 law, patients must have two physicians sign off on an assisted suicide, after determining the person is terminally ill, has less than six months to live and is mentally capable of making such a decision, according to the Colorado Department of Public Health & Environment.
No one has been prosecuted for manslaughter under the law in Boulder County since 2018, according to the DA’s office spokesperson Shannon Carbone.
The law also aims to prevent terminally ill patients from making decisions based on outside influence, by including a medical professional and a witness, the release states.
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After Mildred Roller tried to kill herself once with the nitrogen earlier in February, Norton reportedly bought a gas flow regulator and installed it on the tank, the indictment states.
One Balfour employee told police that Kim Roller called him to say that Mildred Roller killed herself. Another told police that both of Mildred Roller’s daughters, Kim Roller and her sister, were there when Mildred Roller died, the indictment states. Kim Roller told police that she was in the room, but her sister had left and that Norton waited outside, according to the indictment.
Transaction details show a credit card tied to Kim S. Roller was used to purchase the nitrogen tank, and that the phone number listed at the store is the same one Kim Roller gave to police, the indictment states.
Police reviewed numerous texts between Kim Roller and her sister, in which the sisters discuss Mildred Roller’s estate, their inheritances and plans to purchase equipment related to Final Exit Network resources, according to the indictment. Police also found three videos on Kim Roller’s phone showing Mildred Roller explaining her decision to kill herself.
Kim Roller can be heard in one of the recordings saying, “If I didn’t get that recorded, I’m going to kill myself. That was so perfect,” according to the indictment.
Mildred Roller’s savings account had approximately $655,540, the indictment states. Her will stipulates that her children receive her estate in equal shares upon her death.
Anyone experiencing a mental health crisis can call or text 988, 24/7, to reach the Colorado Mental Health Line, which is free and confidential.
This is a developing story and may be updated.
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