I don't think MS was there at the end. but if you are suggesting he killed her, he didn't have to, she was dying.
"I don't think MS was there at the end. but if you are suggesting he killed her, he didn't have to, she was dying."
A hollow kind of victory (Michael Schiavo)
CFP ^ | March 31, 2005 | Judi McLeod
Posted on 03/31/2005 12:17:43 PM EST by MikeEdwards
What kind of victory is it to keep the loving parents of a dying woman from her deathbed?
What brand of warped joy could possibly come from that?
What comfort, no matter how bitter the feud, could ever come from seeing the tears of parents?
What confidence can be taken in knowing in the heart that the death culture, as promoted by a lawyer who hears voices in his head, now takes a giant step forward?
What ease can we find in judges with more power than Congress?
What good can possibly come from a society that withholds from a brain-damaged woman food and water?
It was 9:03 a.m., Thursday, March 31, 2005 when Terry Schindler Schiavo slipped awayjust two days after attorney George Felos told the world her death did not appear imminent to him.
In the end, it took 13 days for Terri to die.
According to Fr. Frank Pavone, approximately 10 minutes before Terris death, husband Michael Schiavo ordered her brother and sister out of her room.
Blood relatives were permitted back into the room just minutes after Terris death.
"Where is Michael?" was Fr. Pavones first question. Michael, who used a side door into the hospice the last two weeks, was nowhere in sight. . . . .
(Excerpt) Read more at http://www.canadafreepress.com
Fox News is now reporting the 10 or 15 minute gap story, saying the brother and sister were very upset and did not want to leave, but were ordered out of the room. Schiavo piece of @#$*&( was in there ALONE with her when she died. Any questions?