Take a look at this interesting ruling, released earlier this week: Georgia’s highest court has concluded that a state law restricting assisted suicides violated free speech rights, a ruling that destroyed a long-running criminal case against members of a suicide group and could reshape the state’s end-of-life policy. The Georgia Supreme Court’s unanimous ruling struck down the 1994 law, which bans people from publicly advertising suicide. It was adopted by lawmakers hoping to prevent right-to-die supporters from offering their services in the state. The ruling means that four members of the Final Exit Network who were charged in February 2009 with helping a 58-year-old cancer patient die won’t have to stand trial. The group, which was once based in Georgia, was at the center…