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Talvikki

Talvikki

Elementalist
Nov 18, 2021
844
Director of Sarco Suicide Capsule Dies by Assisted Suicide After Swiss Authorities Accused Him of Murder

Florian Willet (47), director of the Swiss suicide capsule Sarco, has died by assisted suicide. He passed away in early May in Germany. Willet had been suffering from severe mental health issues after Swiss authorities accused him of murder following the first use of the Sarco and detained him for months in prison.

His death was announced Sunday evening by Philip Nitschke, director of Exit International and the inventor of the Sarco. Nitschke strongly criticized Swiss authorities for their treatment of Willet. The director was denied contact with the outside world for ten weeks. After his release, he suffered an acute psychotic episode. "I believe his time in prison triggered this," Nitschke said. "The Swiss justice system knew this was not a murder case. Yet they held him for ten weeks. Their actions were unconscionable."

Nitschke, who lives in the Netherlands and developed the Sarco there, possesses a psychiatric report stating that Willet suffered from an "acute polymorphic psychotic disorder" caused by "the stress of pre-trial detention and related legal proceedings." According to Nitschke, the report does not indicate any prior mental health issues. The report was compiled in January, weeks after Willet's release.


Final Moments
Florian Willet was arrested by Swiss police in September last year, shortly after a 64-year-old American woman independently entered the suicide capsule in a forest near Schaffhausen, pressed the button, and died. The woman had long expressed a wish to die. Her death was caused by nitrogen gas filling the capsule. Willet was the only witness to her final moments and stood outside the Sarco when she passed away. Switzerland was chosen for the Sarco's deployment because assisted suicide is permitted there under certain conditions.

After Willet reported the woman's death to the police, he was arrested. Nitschke said: "The expectation was that he would simply be questioned and then allowed to go home. Instead, twenty police cars showed up, he was locked up, and even his two lawyers were jailed. He was then completely unjustly accused of murder (vorsätzliche Tötung). He had almost no information and was denied contact with the outside world—only his lawyer. It was extremely stressful."


No Autopsy Report
Willet was suspected of "intentional killing"—a charge between murder and manslaughter—based on a "phone note" made by the prosecutor on the evening of the American woman's death. The prosecutor allegedly heard from a forensic examiner that there were signs of strangulation on the woman's neck. But over time, this suspicion grew increasingly vague. To this day, no lawyer has seen an autopsy report. Yet Willet was held for weeks based solely on this serious suspicion.

During Willet's detention, it emerged that there were video recordings—with audio—of the woman entering the Sarco and dying. De Volkskrant, which obtained the footage, conducted an extensive analysis and found no evidence of violence. The video shows the woman entering the capsule herself and pressing the button. Willet stands nearby, communicating with her and with Nitschke, who was monitoring via camera. At the end, Willet says: "She really looks dead."

Swiss authorities waited two and a half months before downgrading the strangulation suspicion to "less urgent." They have not explained why.


A Broken Man
According to Nitschke, Willet became "severely traumatized" in custody. "When he was released in December," Nitschke said, "he was a completely different person." Willet's best friend also said she no longer recognized him. In a media statement, she described him as previously *"extremely stable, cheerful, and deeply committed to justice."

"Pre-trial detention broke him," she said. "This kind, positive man became fearful, paranoid, and distrustful—even of his closest friends. He lived in his own world, drifting further away from everyone."

After his release, Willet was twice admitted to a psychiatric clinic. In early January, he was found badly injured beneath his balcony. His best friend reported him missing in recent weeks. Only recently did she learn from Swiss authorities that he had died in Germany.

Nitschke said he had been in regular contact with Willet in recent months. "But it was very difficult to truly reach him. He was deeply damaged. I suspect prison medical staff saw this too, which is why he was suddenly released. They likely realized they had a problem. He was abruptly put back on the street without warning."

The Swiss Public Prosecutor's Office was unavailable for comment on Sunday.


Right to Self-Determination
Willet died on May 5 in Cologne with the help of a specialized organization, according to Exit International. Assisted suicide has been legal in Germany for a few years.

In an obituary, Nitschke wrote that Willet was a passionate advocate for the right to self-determination. "Florian wanted to make a difference," he said. "He wanted to help a terminally ill woman find a peaceful death. He thought only of her—his own well-being came second, far behind. Everyone deserves a Florian by their side in their final moments. But he paid the ultimate price—his life—for his compassion."


Remembering Florian Willet – Obituary
https://www.exitinternational.net/remembering-florian-obituary/
 
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F

Forveleth

I knew I forgot to do something when I was 15...
Mar 26, 2024
2,244
Swiss prisons have a reputation for being rather nice (considering) and places focused on rehabilitation. I am shocked he was treated in such a way that broke him so badly. This makes me suspicious that someone had an agenda against him.

What a horrible thing to happen to someone who was just trying to help a suffering person find peace. I am at least glad he also got to end his suffering. 🕯️

Thanks for sharing this article.
 
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FuneralCry

FuneralCry

Just wanting some peace
Sep 24, 2020
43,534
It's so horrific how they make the right to die into a crime with the suffering and torture of existing seen as to force and prolong no matter what, more than anything I wish I was never forced to exist in this anti-suicide prison world where humans are tortured and have to suffer so much denied the option to cease existing painlessly, rest in peace.
 
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SilentSadness

SilentSadness

Sleepy.
Feb 28, 2023
1,407
Not surprising at all unfortunately.The government in most countries is obviously above the law and since their aim is to maximise suffering of course they will torture innocent people for no reason. I hope the people responsible are held accountable and the person is at peace now.
 
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O

outrider567

Visionary
Apr 5, 2022
2,863
Director of Sarco Suicide Capsule Dies by Assisted Suicide After Swiss Authorities Accused Him of Murder

Florian Willet (47), director of the Swiss suicide capsule Sarco, has died by assisted suicide. He passed away in early May in Germany. Willet had been suffering from severe mental health issues after Swiss authorities accused him of murder following the first use of the Sarco and detained him for months in prison.

His death was announced Sunday evening by Philip Nitschke, director of Exit International and the inventor of the Sarco. Nitschke strongly criticized Swiss authorities for their treatment of Willet. The director was denied contact with the outside world for ten weeks. After his release, he suffered an acute psychotic episode. "I believe his time in prison triggered this," Nitschke said. "The Swiss justice system knew this was not a murder case. Yet they held him for ten weeks. Their actions were unconscionable."

Nitschke, who lives in the Netherlands and developed the Sarco there, possesses a psychiatric report stating that Willet suffered from an "acute polymorphic psychotic disorder" caused by "the stress of pre-trial detention and related legal proceedings." According to Nitschke, the report does not indicate any prior mental health issues. The report was compiled in January, weeks after Willet's release.


Final Moments
Florian Willet was arrested by Swiss police in September last year, shortly after a 64-year-old American woman independently entered the suicide capsule in a forest near Schaffhausen, pressed the button, and died. The woman had long expressed a wish to die. Her death was caused by nitrogen gas filling the capsule. Willet was the only witness to her final moments and stood outside the Sarco when she passed away. Switzerland was chosen for the Sarco's deployment because assisted suicide is permitted there under certain conditions.

After Willet reported the woman's death to the police, he was arrested. Nitschke said: "The expectation was that he would simply be questioned and then allowed to go home. Instead, twenty police cars showed up, he was locked up, and even his two lawyers were jailed. He was then completely unjustly accused of murder (vorsätzliche Tötung). He had almost no information and was denied contact with the outside world—only his lawyer. It was extremely stressful."


No Autopsy Report
Willet was suspected of "intentional killing"—a charge between murder and manslaughter—based on a "phone note" made by the prosecutor on the evening of the American woman's death. The prosecutor allegedly heard from a forensic examiner that there were signs of strangulation on the woman's neck. But over time, this suspicion grew increasingly vague. To this day, no lawyer has seen an autopsy report. Yet Willet was held for weeks based solely on this serious suspicion.

During Willet's detention, it emerged that there were video recordings—with audio—of the woman entering the Sarco and dying. De Volkskrant, which obtained the footage, conducted an extensive analysis and found no evidence of violence. The video shows the woman entering the capsule herself and pressing the button. Willet stands nearby, communicating with her and with Nitschke, who was monitoring via camera. At the end, Willet says: "She really looks dead."

Swiss authorities waited two and a half months before downgrading the strangulation suspicion to "less urgent." They have not explained why.


A Broken Man
According to Nitschke, Willet became "severely traumatized" in custody. "When he was released in December," Nitschke said, "he was a completely different person." Willet's best friend also said she no longer recognized him. In a media statement, she described him as previously *"extremely stable, cheerful, and deeply committed to justice."

"Pre-trial detention broke him," she said. "This kind, positive man became fearful, paranoid, and distrustful—even of his closest friends. He lived in his own world, drifting further away from everyone."

After his release, Willet was twice admitted to a psychiatric clinic. In early January, he was found badly injured beneath his balcony. His best friend reported him missing in recent weeks. Only recently did she learn from Swiss authorities that he had died in Germany.

Nitschke said he had been in regular contact with Willet in recent months. "But it was very difficult to truly reach him. He was deeply damaged. I suspect prison medical staff saw this too, which is why he was suddenly released. They likely realized they had a problem. He was abruptly put back on the street without warning."

The Swiss Public Prosecutor's Office was unavailable for comment on Sunday.


Right to Self-Determination
Willet died on May 5 in Cologne with the help of a specialized organization, according to Exit International. Assisted suicide has been legal in Germany for a few years.

In an obituary, Nitschke wrote that Willet was a passionate advocate for the right to self-determination. "Florian wanted to make a difference," he said. "He wanted to help a terminally ill woman find a peaceful death. He thought only of her—his own well-being came second, far behind. Everyone deserves a Florian by their side in their final moments. But he paid the ultimate price—his life—for his compassion."


Remembering Florian Willet – Obituary
https://www.exitinternational.net/remembering-florian-obituary/
Damn those Swiss police
 
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Whale_bones

Whale_bones

A gift to summon the spring
Feb 11, 2020
481
I hope the people responsible are held accountable and the person is at peace now.

I don't feel like there will be any justice for him, sadly, because it was people in positions of power who did this. I feel like certain members of the Swiss government wanted to take a harsh stance against any self-determination that isn't signed off by a medical professional. Maybe they thought allowing a non-medical route would put their current right-to-die laws, (which are significantly more advanced than most countries) in jeopardy.

However, that doesn't give them any right to take out the consequences on an innocent person- a person who was strongly in favor of justice himself and who cared about reducing the suffering of others.

The strangulation "suspicion" was clearly based on no evidence and, in fact, contradicted by the evidence, so I highly doubt anyone thought that was what actually happened. I DO hope the people who didn't speak up and stop this lose sleep at night and realize why it is never justified to throw away the life of an innocent person for political or policy-related aims.

Edit: I found this article which goes more into depth on what I was thinking.

"'I doubt whether courts would label euthanasia activism like that of the Sarco inventors as selfish behavior.'

Rütsche sees the aggressive actions of the prosecution mainly as something to serve the outside world: 'The authorities felt pressure to act against this form of assisted suicide. Because otherwise, Switzerland's reputation would suffer.'"
 
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opheliaoveragain

opheliaoveragain

Global Mod
Jun 2, 2024
2,076
thank you for sharing this. 🫶
 
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bankai

bankai

Enlightened
Mar 16, 2025
1,824
I know the title is sad. But it's also powerful. In the end, the authorities can't really punish someone who's willing to take their own life, I guess.It's comforting in a way.
 
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leloyon

leloyon

I'll see you in the Wired.
Feb 4, 2023
1,405
Torn between my hatred for EXIT and my hatred for cops...
Ah, fuck it. I still hate Philip but if this guy really wasn't at fault, then I hope he rests in peace. I can relate a lot to what was described.
 
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CTB Dream

CTB Dream

Injury damage disabl hard talk no argu make fun et
Sep 17, 2022
2,795
this wrld rly awfl this wrld rly awfl see how hpn wat nobd undrstd pain sffr nobd undrstd ctb, this all awfl wrld ppl sffr sffr no do any hlp no mthd no any keep frc pain sffr do awfl prisn ,ya hpnay no mthd no thing ya ppl say no want lif awfl speces keep frc lif
 
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idk3

idk3

Student
Sep 10, 2023
163
In the early days of 2025, Florian 'fell' from the third floor of his Zurich apartment building.

He did serious damage.

He would spend the best part of the following three months undergoing surgery and in rehab in Switzerland.
It would be especially sad if Florian, who put another woman's own well being ahead of his own to ensure she had a peaceful death, couldn't even go out humanely himself.

RIP
 
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The Actual Devil

The Actual Devil

I Go By Many Names: Can You Say 10? ⛧
May 4, 2025
357
RIP Florian
Also:

ACAB
 
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J&L383

Enlightened
Jul 18, 2023
1,110
😥🕊️
 
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polm

Member
May 3, 2025
98
So very sad.
RIP 🕯️
 
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Let Me Go

Member
Jan 12, 2024
27
This is heartbreaking. He was a good man. RIP.
 
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Unbearable Mr. Bear

Unbearable Mr. Bear

Sometimes, all you need is a hug...
May 9, 2025
706
Critics fear the device's modern design glamorises suicide
You know what really glamorises suicide? Human suffering. Maybe they should do something about that instead, huh?

No, really, has anyone seen the purple capsule thing and thought: "OH, before I wanted to live, but now dying seems so...so...✨GlAmUrOuS✨"

Maybe if they made it shaped like an ugly box everyone would be okay with its existence? HAH! We wish...
 
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noname223

Archangel
Aug 18, 2020
5,942
This is a real tragedy and a big injustice. I followed some of these allegations in a Swiss newspaper. But there come question to my mind reading it.

So he was completely healthy in September? Then had a psychotic episode and killed himself with the help of an assisted suicide organization in May just 8 months later? I had the same diagnosis and many experience major depression afterwards. The people who helped him will very likely get into legal trouble. The same trouble he was in actually.
One could argue the whole lawsuit broke him irreversibly. But I read the cases of people who helped mentally ill people to die. They had a very long history of suicidality. And despite that the doctors got jail time. I cannot imagine the people who helped him won't get into legal trouble. I live in Germany I know the assisted suicide laws. And there were reports that people get jailed for helping mentally ill people to die. It would be way too easy to depict him as person who was in a temporary crisis. I wonder whether it was easier for him to get accepted for assisted suicide because of his connections. It would be just a loop if the lives of more people would be destroyed.

In the end I (or we) don't know the details of the case. It was a very informative post though.
 
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ninonino1

Member
Mar 31, 2023
35
It sounds like med damage to me. Med damage is maybe the worst thing a person can go through. It completely alters your state of being and existence isn't just miserable and sad like it is for many people here; it becomes torture sometimes comparable to being in a medieval dungeon literally tortured - only difference is it can go on for years.
 
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TAW122

TAW122

Emissary of the right to die.
Aug 30, 2018
7,018
It is such a sad story and shameful that even in a very progressive country with regards to the right to die, this person was treated like a criminal and even dragged through the psychological turmoil and ordeal through the Swiss legal system. It seems like the authorities wanted to make an example out of him, but in the eyes of pro-choicers and even those who support the right to die, he did nothing wrong. It saddens me that things like that show that the world is headed in the regressive direction of bodily autonomy especially when it came to the right to die. With regards to the person who got assisted CTB, I'm relieved to know that he himself has found peace from unwanted continued suffering.
 
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2muchpain2

2muchpain2

Member
Feb 27, 2025
29
It's terrible that people won't allow people who want to die to just die.
 
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Defenestration

Defenestration

I want to have the courage to defenestrate myself
Oct 25, 2020
1,450
😭😭😭😭😭😭😭
J'ai donné de l'argent pour lui... et
J'ai fait cette photo que je lui ai envoyée en X
 

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Defenestration

Defenestration

I want to have the courage to defenestrate myself
Oct 25, 2020
1,450
Déchiré entre ma haine pour EXIT et ma haine pour les flics...
Ah, merde. Je déteste toujours Philip, mais si ce type n'était vraiment pas fautif, j'espère qu'il repose en paix. Je comprends tout à fait ce qui a été décrit.
Why do you hate exit?
 
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Lookingtoflyfree

Lookingtoflyfree

Specialist
Jan 11, 2024
375
Absolutely horrified at this news. I felt some level of calmness knowing solutions like Sarco exist, but the brutality in how we hurt people who are trying to help others - it's too much some days.
 
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theboy

theboy

Illuminated
Jul 15, 2022
3,238
What???
This is ironic
RIP, Willet
 
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opro111

Member
Jun 19, 2025
25
Director of Sarco Suicide Capsule Dies by Assisted Suicide After Swiss Authorities Accused Him of Murder

Florian Willet (47), director of the Swiss suicide capsule Sarco, has died by assisted suicide. He passed away in early May in Germany. Willet had been suffering from severe mental health issues after Swiss authorities accused him of murder following the first use of the Sarco and detained him for months in prison.

His death was announced Sunday evening by Philip Nitschke, director of Exit International and the inventor of the Sarco. Nitschke strongly criticized Swiss authorities for their treatment of Willet. The director was denied contact with the outside world for ten weeks. After his release, he suffered an acute psychotic episode. "I believe his time in prison triggered this," Nitschke said. "The Swiss justice system knew this was not a murder case. Yet they held him for ten weeks. Their actions were unconscionable."

Nitschke, who lives in the Netherlands and developed the Sarco there, possesses a psychiatric report stating that Willet suffered from an "acute polymorphic psychotic disorder" caused by "the stress of pre-trial detention and related legal proceedings." According to Nitschke, the report does not indicate any prior mental health issues. The report was compiled in January, weeks after Willet's release.


Final Moments
Florian Willet was arrested by Swiss police in September last year, shortly after a 64-year-old American woman independently entered the suicide capsule in a forest near Schaffhausen, pressed the button, and died. The woman had long expressed a wish to die. Her death was caused by nitrogen gas filling the capsule. Willet was the only witness to her final moments and stood outside the Sarco when she passed away. Switzerland was chosen for the Sarco's deployment because assisted suicide is permitted there under certain conditions.

After Willet reported the woman's death to the police, he was arrested. Nitschke said: "The expectation was that he would simply be questioned and then allowed to go home. Instead, twenty police cars showed up, he was locked up, and even his two lawyers were jailed. He was then completely unjustly accused of murder (vorsätzliche Tötung). He had almost no information and was denied contact with the outside world—only his lawyer. It was extremely stressful."


No Autopsy Report
Willet was suspected of "intentional killing"—a charge between murder and manslaughter—based on a "phone note" made by the prosecutor on the evening of the American woman's death. The prosecutor allegedly heard from a forensic examiner that there were signs of strangulation on the woman's neck. But over time, this suspicion grew increasingly vague. To this day, no lawyer has seen an autopsy report. Yet Willet was held for weeks based solely on this serious suspicion.

During Willet's detention, it emerged that there were video recordings—with audio—of the woman entering the Sarco and dying. De Volkskrant, which obtained the footage, conducted an extensive analysis and found no evidence of violence. The video shows the woman entering the capsule herself and pressing the button. Willet stands nearby, communicating with her and with Nitschke, who was monitoring via camera. At the end, Willet says: "She really looks dead."

Swiss authorities waited two and a half months before downgrading the strangulation suspicion to "less urgent." They have not explained why.


A Broken Man
According to Nitschke, Willet became "severely traumatized" in custody. "When he was released in December," Nitschke said, "he was a completely different person." Willet's best friend also said she no longer recognized him. In a media statement, she described him as previously *"extremely stable, cheerful, and deeply committed to justice."

"Pre-trial detention broke him," she said. "This kind, positive man became fearful, paranoid, and distrustful—even of his closest friends. He lived in his own world, drifting further away from everyone."

After his release, Willet was twice admitted to a psychiatric clinic. In early January, he was found badly injured beneath his balcony. His best friend reported him missing in recent weeks. Only recently did she learn from Swiss authorities that he had died in Germany.

Nitschke said he had been in regular contact with Willet in recent months. "But it was very difficult to truly reach him. He was deeply damaged. I suspect prison medical staff saw this too, which is why he was suddenly released. They likely realized they had a problem. He was abruptly put back on the street without warning."

The Swiss Public Prosecutor's Office was unavailable for comment on Sunday.


Right to Self-Determination
Willet died on May 5 in Cologne with the help of a specialized organization, according to Exit International. Assisted suicide has been legal in Germany for a few years.

In an obituary, Nitschke wrote that Willet was a passionate advocate for the right to self-determination. "Florian wanted to make a difference," he said. "He wanted to help a terminally ill woman find a peaceful death. He thought only of her—his own well-being came second, far behind. Everyone deserves a Florian by their side in their final moments. But he paid the ultimate price—his life—for his compassion."


Remembering Florian Willet – Obituary
https://www.exitinternational.net/remembering-florian-obituary/
This is so incredibly heartbreaking. I cried reading the online tribute website: https://www.online-tribute.com/FlorianWillet
 
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