The current law on assisted suicide could lead to a “botched” death and must be changed, the philosopher and independent peer Mary Warnock told the Commission on Assisted Dying in central London last week. Baroness Warnock said that guidelines issued by the director of public prosecutions for England and Wales, Keir Starmer, were “particularly bad” and created confusion and uncertainty. She was giving evidence to the unofficial commission chaired by the former Labour lord chancellor Charles Falconer. She argued that only medical professionals and not lay people should assist in a suicide.