An Arizona doctor and her nurse sister died at a Swiss suicide clinic on February 11 – with the physician transferring her $1 million home into a trust weeks before they took their lives.
Lila Ammouri and Susan Frazier’s date of death was shared with DailyMail.com Wednesday by a Swiss government source. The mole explained: ‘The two American ladies died on February 11.
‘It has been reported that they died later than this but this is not correct. It was the Friday in the Canton Basel-Landschaft by a legal assisted suicide.
‘They died the same day and the timings were close, if not at the same time.’ The sisters deaths were confirmed by the US consulate on February 18. Their brother Cal, 60, who lives in New York said he only learned of his siblings’ passing when contacted by The Independent earlier this week.
Ammouri, a 54 year-old palliative care doctor and Grazier, a 49 year-old registered nurse, are believed to have died at Pegasos. It is a Basel-based assisted suicide clinic. Unlike its better-known Swiss rival Dignitas, Pegasos does not require patients to be terminally-ill, or suffer from a life-limiting illness.
Meanwhile, DailyMail.com has also discovered an unusual property maneuver made by Ammouri in the weeks leading up to her death.
She placed million dollar Cave Creek home in an intrafamily trust on January 25.
Suzan Frazier, left, and her sister Lili Ammouri, right, died by assisted suicide in Basel, Switzerland, with their deaths confirmed on February 18
Ammouri had put her $1 million Cave Creek home in an intrafamily trust on January 25, less than two weeks before the sisters trip to Switzerland
The arrangement, also known as a living trust, allows family members, friends or even business partners to receive the property after her death without having to go through the legal process of probate to prove they’re the rightful heirs to an estate.
The trust would have allowed Ammouri to specify who would receive the home, free of estate taxes, or split up the value of the property to multiple people. It remains unclear who was named as a recipient in the trust.
According to public records, Ammouri purchased the home in 2014 for $549,000. The single-family home features three bathrooms, 2.5 bathrooms and a pool in a spacious backyard. It has doubled in value since she purchased it.
Ammouri’s only known living relative, her brother, Cal Ammouri, 60, of New York, said he was torn apart after learning of his sisters death when contacted Tuesday.
‘This is the most terrible thing that’s ever happened to me,’ Cal told DailyMail.com ‘ I’m an only child now. I don’t understand any of it.’
The trust allows the home to be transferred to family without the conventional legal process of proving they’re the heirs to the property
According to public records, Ammouri purchased the home in 2014 for $549,000. The single-family home features three bathrooms, 2.5 bathrooms
The home also has a large pool in a spacious backyard
Ammouri and Frazier traveled Phoenix to Basel, Switzerland via Chicago on February 3, with the U.S. Consulate confirming their deaths on February 18.
The city is home to Pegasos, an assisted suicide facility which helps patients who aren’t terminally-ill to take their own lives for an $11,000 fee.
Dr. David Bilgari, a longtime friend of the sisters, said no one had heard from the duo since February 9, four days after they arrived in Switzerland, and that some of their final texts seemed to have been sent by someone else.
Prior to that, Bilgari told Fox 10 that co-workers had been texting them and felt that the person responding was not actually one of the sisters.
‘Some of the text communications they had, we are certain they were not from them,’ Biglari said. ‘They were most likely fabricated with someone else.’
A spokesman for the Basel-Landschaft Public Prosecutor’s Office confirmed to The Independent that the sisters had died by suicide ‘within the legal framework’.
It is unclear how or where the sisters’ died. Assisted suicide is legal in Switzerland, with Basel being home to a assisted suicide organization called Pegasos, which offers help with associated suicides to people who are not terminally-ill, as long as they are over the age of 18.
According to Pegasos, anyone who uses their services must have a third party who is known to the individual be able available to identify them to the authorities after they die.
If the sisters did use Pegasos service, it is unknow who would have been with them to identify them as Pegasos suggests patients who can’t provide a third party join Exit International, another assisted suicide company that deals only with terminally ill patients, to figured out how they can be identified after death.
Basel is home to an assisted suicide service called Pegasos, whose website is pictured. Unlike the more famous Dignitas clinic, patients do not have to be terminally-ill or severely disabled to end their lives there
Their brother Cal, who spoke shortly with his sisters before their trip, did not mention that they were traveling with anyone else.
Frazier’s employer, Aetna Health in Phoenix, raised the alarm after she failed to return to work on February 15.
Cal says his siblings appeared healthy and happy, and has not given any indication as to whether they were suffering any illness that could have driven them to suicide.
The company says it accepts application for people all over the world and has no required waiting period for assisted suicide
Pegasos says it accepts applications from patients the world over, but insists it refers anyone who is suffering from depression to counselling services.
Its website states: ‘Pegasos believes that for a person to be in the headspace of considering ending their lives, their quality of life must be qualitatively poor.
‘Pegasos accepts that some people who are not technically ‘sick’ may want to apply for a VAD. But this does not mean the person is ‘well’. (Assisted suicide patient) Professor David Goodall was one of these people.
‘He was not sick but his eye sight was failing him, as was his mobility. Old age is rarely kind. The decision to end one’s life is an intensely personal one. Pegasos makes every effort to understand fully the unique circumstances of everyone who makes contact with us.’
Dignitas is the most famous suicide clinic, but is based in a different Canton (county) to where the sisters took their lives. It only offers an $8,000 assisted suicide to people who are terminally-ill, or who live with a disability that severely limits their quality of life.
The U.S. Consulate in Switzerland did not immediately respond to DailyMail.com’s request for comment.
The sisters were found dead in Basel, Switzerland, (pictured) on February 18, three days after they were due back to return to work in Arizona
It is currently unknown which assisted suicide service the sisters used, but Pegasos, a nonprofit in the field, has a facility in Basel (pictured)
Other clinics across Switzerland also offer similar services, with patients given a solution of barbiturates dissolved in water, which guarantees a painless death after being consumed.
Visitors to the clinics must undergo stringent checks before being allowed to avail of their services.
Pegasos, in particular, which has English speakers on staff, requires looking for assisted suicides to be members of the organizations and pay fees that exceed $11,000.
Pegasos has no required waiting period for assisted suicide but does require consultations and paperwork be completed first.
Patients are given the option of intravenous infusion or a small drink that provide a lethal overdose that will lull them to sleep and result in death.
Cal, of New York, said is unclear why his sisters chose to end their lives, and that U.S. consular services have kept him in the dark.
‘This is the most terrible thing that’s ever happened to me,’ Cal told DailyMail.com ‘ I’m an only child now. I don’t understand any of it.’
Suicide is legal at Switzerland’s famous Dignitas clinic, with visitors required to undergo a series of checks before being allowed to end their lives.
According to Cal and long-time friends of the women, the sisters were do back at work at Aetna Health Insurance on February 15 but never showed up.
The grieving brother said that both sisters appeared happy, with Lila owning a home in Phoenix and enjoying her job helping patients with serious illnesses and pain and Susan recently getting a promotion.
‘Why would you leave your jobs, your home, your loved ones, just abandon everything,’ Cal asked. ‘I just want some answers.’
Michael Lutz, a spokesperson for the Basel-Landschaft Public Prosecutor’s Office, told The Independent that the sisters death did not immediately result in a criminal investigation since it was strictly performed through legal means.
The Phoenix Police Department, who were contacted by friends and family to investigate the incident, said they could not open a case since it was outside their jurisdiction.
The sister’s death was confirmed by the U.S. Consulate in Switzerland on February 18, weeks after friends and loved ones took to the Internet to spread awareness over their disappearance.
Like Cal, Bilgari mentioned that both sisters were happy and it was not like them to suddenly go missing.
Bilgari did not immediately respond to DailyMail.com’s request for comment.
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