Posted on 10/13/2003 1:46:51 PM PDT by My Favorite Headache
The Terri fight takes to Hannity and Colmes tonight. New exclusive video and a heated discussion to be on the show tonight. Since Jeb Bush has not done a damn thing to stop the drawn out execution of Terri Schindler.
Terri on Hannity and Combes tonight with Randall Terry, also some new video of Terri which will cause major problems for Michael and Felos.
Please get the word out - this is urgent!!!
If you can dig up where this scumbag lives, I'll do my best to spread it around as much as possible.
Remember the Underground Railroad saved escaped slaves when our federal gov't condemned them .
The memorandum argues that removing the feeding tube without first determining, by medically accepted means, whether Terri Schiavo can eat and drink on her own, and without first giving her any rehabilitative therapy that would help her do that, deprives her of her life without due process of law.
Thank you for your interest in this matter.
Sincerely,
Lauren O'Connor,
Aide to Governor Bush
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT,
MIDDLE DISTRICT OF FLORIDA
TAMPA DIVISION
Civil Action No. 8:03-CV-1860-T-26-TGW
THERESA MARIE SCHINDLER SCHIAVO, Incapacitated, by her
Parents and Next Friends, ROBERT and MARY SCHINDLER,
Plaintiff,
v.
MICHAEL SCHIAVO, individually and in his capacity as guardian of the Personof THERESA MARIE SCHINDLER SCHIAVO, Incapacitate,
Defendant.
/ MEMORANDUM OF AMICUS CURIAE JEB BUSH, GOVERNOR OF THE STATE OF FLORIDA, IN SUPPORT OF PLAINTIFF'S MOTION FOR PRELIMINARY INJUNCTION
Amicus curiae Jeb Bush, Governor of the State of Florida, submits this memorandum in support of plaintiff Theresa Schiavo's motion for preliminary injunction. In light of the seriousness of this matter, and the inability to remedy an improper outcome, the Governor has a strong interest in ensuring that Terri Schiavo's fundamental right to life is not deprived without due process of law, and that it is properly balanced with her right to privacy and liberty. The Governor has a constitutional duty to take care that the laws be executed faithfully. Art. IV § 1, Fla. Const. The Governor has a sworn duty to defend the Constitution of the State of Florida. In addition, the Governor feels compelled to give voice to the thousands of Floridians who have communicated to him their concern over this case.
The Governor submits this memorandum to ensure that the Court consider the critical distinction between removing artificial life support and the deliberate killing of a human being by starvation and dehydration. These are two different actions. The first is performed according to state law and is allowed under Florida's constitutional right to privacy. The second is prohibited by the right to life enshrined in the Florida and federal Constitutions. The Governor submits that removal of the feeding tube without first determining by medically accepted means whether the plaintiff can ingest food and water on her own, with or without rehabilitative therapy, constitutes the deprivation of her life without due process of law.
Factual Background
The parents of plaintiff Theresa Schiavo ("Terri"), an incapacitated person, brought this action on her behalf under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 for declaratory and injunctive relief and compensatory and punitive damages for violation of her constitutional rights. Terri's gastronomy tube, through which she is nourished and hydrated, will be removed by her guardian, defendant Michael Schiavo, on October 15, 2003, in accord with a specific instruction from the guardianship court of the Sixth Judicial Circuit in Pinellas County,Florida. The guardianship court by separate order also forbade any therapy prior to the tube removal that could enable Terri to safely eat by mouth again.
At issue are the state court orders permitting the guardian to withdraw a life-prolonging procedure under Section 765.401(3), Florida Statutes (2003). "Life-prolonging procedure" is defined as "any medical procedure, treatment,or intervention, including artificially provided sustenance and hydration,which sustains, restores, or supplants a spontaneous vital function."Section 765.101(10), Florida Statutes (2003). As set forth below, the definition does not incorporate oral eating and drinking. In this case, the life-prolonging procedure to be withdrawn is the provision of nutrition and hydration to Terri Schiavo by a gastronomy tube. State courts have found that the guardian proved Terri's wishes by clear and convincing evidence:that Terri would not have wanted a life-prolonging procedure, that is, "supporting tubes," to be used to sustain her life. Schindler v.Schiavo (In re Guardianship of Schiavo), 780 So. 2d 176, 180 (Fla. 2d DCA 2001)(Schiavo I). For purposes of this memorandum, amicus curiae does not take issue with that holding. [1]
Argument
Terri does not have a terminal illness, is not brain dead, and is not comatose. Other than some future intervening illness or accident, it is only lack of food and water that would cause her death. She is in a persistent vegetative state ("PVS"), which in itself will not cause her death. Florida law defines PVS separately from terminal illness, and employs the term as a separate concept in the procedural requirements to withdraw life-prolonging procedures. Section 765.101(17), Florida Statutes (2003) (defining "terminal condition" and including an expectation of death as a result of the condition); Section 765.101(12), Florida Statutes (2003)(defining "persistent vegetative state" and omitting any expectation of death as a result of the condition); Section 744.305(2), Florida Statutes (2003) (requiring one of three conditions before a surrogate can exercise the incompetent patient's right to forego treatment: that the patient have an "end-stage condition," or be in a persistent vegetative state, "or the patient's physical condition is terminal." (Emphasis added.) PVS is clearly not the same as a terminal illness. However, the state court inexplicably concluded that Terri is "terminal." Schindler v. Schiavo (In re Guardianship of Schiavo), 792 So. 2d 551, 560 (Fla. 2d DCA 2001) (Schiavo II)
The fact that she is unable to give herself nourishment is not a symptom of a dying body; it is the result of severe injury and disability.
Amicus curiae takes issue with the apparent assumptions by the state courts that Terri's wish to be without such artificial means of support is the same as a wish to die, and that withdrawing her feeding tube is the same as allowing her to die. Rather, there are two separate and distinct actions here, only one of which has been shown by clear and convincing evidence to be Terri's wishes. The first is the withdrawal of the feeding tube under Section 765.401(3), Florida Statutes, which does not necessarily result in death by starvation and dehydration. The second is the withholding of natural oral feeding, which would proximately cause her death.
The first action, that is, withdrawing her feeding tube, protects her fundamental liberty and privacy interests by enforcing her wishes as to her medical treatment, as found by the state court to be proven. Cruzan v.Director, Missouri Department of Health, 497 U.S. 261, 277-278, 110 S.Ct. 2841, 2851 (1990); Browning v. Herbert, 568 So. 2d 4, 10-11 (Fla. 1990);Corbett v. D'Allessandro, 487 So. 2d 368, 372 (Fla. 2d DCA 1986); John F.Kennedy Memorial Hosp., Inc. v. Bludworth, 452 So. 2d 921, 923 (Fla. 1984).
[2] The second action would terminate her fundamental right to life under the Florida and federal Constitutions without any evidence - let alone clear and convincing evidence - that she favors oral starvation and hydration. [3] 3> U.S. Const. amend. XIV, §1; Art. I, § 9, Fla. Const.; Art. I § 2, Fla. Const. Indeed, Terri's parents testify that Terri would choose to feed herself. Plaintiff's Memorandum of Law 10. In these circumstances, a strong judicial presumption arises in favor of preserving life.
Schiavo I, 780 So.2d at 179 ("A court's default position must favor life.")
Terri's right to life is violated by the state when the state, acting as her guardian, [4] assumes that her wish to live without artificial sustenance is the same as a wish not to be fed at all. The state has an "unqualified interest in life. In striking the balance between a patient's right to refuse treatment or her right to privacy and the state's interest in life, we may not arbitrarily discount either side of the equation to reach a result we find desirable." Cruzan v. Harmon, 760 S.W.2d. 408, 422
(198 , upheld, Cruzan, 497 U.S. 261, 110 S.Ct. 2841; accord, Krischer v. McIver, 697 So. 2d 97, 103 (Fla. 1997).
Where, as here, the state is charged with effectuating the ward's wishes under her privacy rights, and yet retains its "unqualified interest" in life, the state is obligated to balance the two rights, and carefully parse the clear and convincing evidence pertaining to each act or omission that could lead to her death including in this case (1) the removal of life-prolonging procedures and (2) denial of oral sustenance. Further, the state is acting as her guardian and so must not only preserve the ward's exercise of her privacy rights (which must be positively invoked and proved by clear and convincing evidence) but also her exercise of her right to life. The state must refrain from erroneously and arbitrarily extending the ward's exercise of her privacy right over her right to life as an excuse to deny her life-saving treatment.
According to the Supreme Court of Florida, "[A] logical and recognized distinction" exists "between the right to refuse medical treatment and assisted suicide." Krischer, 697 So. 2d at 100, 102. Florida respects the liberty interest of those who would prospectively refuse life-prolonging procedures, but "imposes criminal responsibility on those who assist others in committing suicide." Id.; Section 782.08, Florida Statutes (1971); State v. Adams, 683 So. 2d 517 (Fla. 2d DCA 1996) (stating elements of crime of assisting self-murder and noting that Section 782.08, Florida Statutes (1971), codified a similar common law crime).
As Terri's death may beproximately caused not by the removal of life-prolonging procedures, but the denial of oral sustenance, forbidding the provision of oral sustenance would create an unnecessary conflict with Florida statutory law by implying that physicians may cooperate with a person's alleged express wish not to feed herself and tread on the separation of powers doctrine. Cf. Krischer, 697 So. 2d at 104 n.5
("[O]f the three branches of government, the judiciary is the least capable of receiving public input and resolving broad public policy questions based on a societal consensus.") Denying oral sustenance would also unnecessarily and without legal warrant extend the state privacy right to incorporate the right to terminate one's life through means beyond declining life-prolonging procedures. Cf. Id. at 104-05 (Overton, J., concurring) (skeptical that the Florida Constitution recognizes an absolute right to terminate one's life and noting that no such federal right exists).
Terri may well wish to live without such artificial means of support, if it is possible to do so. At least one court makes a distinction between those two intents. A New York appellate court, distinguishing suicide from the removal of artificial feeding tubes, found that "suicide requires a specific intent to die which has generally been found lacking in patients who refuse artificial life-sustaining medical treatment . . . . Instead, a person's desire to have artificial life-support systems terminated evinces only an intent to live free of unwanted mechanical devices and permit the processes of nature to run their course." Delio v. Westchester County Medical Center, 129 A.D.2d 1, 24 (N.Y. 2d App. Div. 1987) (emphasis added) (citationsomitted). Accord Satz v. Perlmutter, 362 So. 2d 160, 162 (4th DCA 197 approved 362 So. 2d 160 (Fla. 1980) (distinguishing a desire for suicide from a desire to terminate artificial respiration).
No court has determined that she does not wish to live. Her parents allege that she does.
Plaintiff's Memorandum of Law at 10.
Terri has not lost the right to be fed naturally. Terri's guardian proceeded under Chapter 765, Florida Statutes, to withdraw a life-prolonging procedure, as defined in that Chapter. Sections 765.401(3), 765.101(10), Florida Statutes (2003). The trial court, acting as Terri's guardian and at the request of Terri's guardian, ordered the removal of a life-prolonging procedure specifically included in the definition of the term, that is, the feeding tube. Schiavo I at 179; Schindler v. Schiavo (In re Guardianship ofSchiavo), 792 So. 2d 551, 560 (Fla. 2d DCA 2001) (Schiavo II); Schindler v. Schiavo (In re Guardianship of Schiavo), 851 So. 2d 182, 185 (Fla. 2d DCA 2003) (Schiavo IV).
However, natural oral feeding is not a life-prolonging procedure under Florida law. It is not expressly included in the definition, and does not meet the basic criteria of the term. Hand feeding is not a "medical procedure, treatment, or intervention"; it is not medical in nature at all. Just as nursing a baby or hand feeding an elderly arthritis-sufferer or a quadriplegic person is not "medical" intervention, so hand feeding a severely disabled woman is not a "medical" intervention. Rather, it is basic care of one human being by another, with nothing artificial or medical about it. [5]
5> Thus Terri did not lose, and could not have lost, the right to be normally fed in the guardian's action to terminate life-prolonging procedures under Section 765.401.
It may not be possible for Terri to live without a feeding tube. This will not be known unless a court allows a test to determine whether Terri's swallowing reflex is sufficient to sustain her if fed orally. It should also be possible to test whether Terri might benefit from rehabilitative therapy administered by experts in speech therapy and speech pathology. And it may be possible to rehabilitate Terri with such therapy to wean her from the feeding tube in advance of its court-ordered removal, to a point that she would be able to orally ingest sufficient nutrition to live without artificial means. Terri has a right to such tests, and to such attempted rehabilitation, if warranted by the test results.
Similarly, Terri has not lost the right to any treatment and rehabilitation needed for her to eat orally again. Terri was adjudicated incapacitated by the state guardianship court years ago. An incapacitated person retains certain enumerated rights under Section 744.3215, Florida Statutes (2003).
That section clearly and separately delineates which rights are retained bythe ward (Section 744.3215(1)); which rights may be removed by the court(Section 744.3215(2)); which rights may be delegated to the guardian (Section 744.3215(3)); and which rights the guardian may not exercise without first obtaining specific authority from the court (Section744.3215(4)).
The right to receive necessary services and rehabilitation is a retained right. Section 744.3215(1)(i), Florida Statutes (2003).
While many rights may be delegated to a guardian, the right to receive necessaryservices and rehabilitation may not. Similarly, the right to receive necessary services and rehabilitation may not be removed by the court.
The clear language, ordering and context of the statute indicates that the ward retains that right for the duration of the guardianship; there is no provision for waiving, removing, or delegating retained rights in the statute. Services to rehabilitate Terri's swallowing musculature are necessary (without them, she will surely die) and so fall within that retained right. The guardianship court recently prohibited the provision of such therapy requested by Terri's parents. Such prohibition is impermissible in the context of the Section 765.401 action to terminate life-prolonging procedures, and is an impermissible deprivation of Terri's retained rights under Florida's guardianship law and her right to life under the Florida and federal Constitutions.
The distinction between tube removal and failure to rehabilitate eating ability prior to the removal has not been made in previous cases regarding patients in a persistent vegetative state, perhaps because assumptions have been made that persons in a PVS would not be able to benefit from such treatment. The Florida Legislature codified a definition of PVS in this context: "a permanent and irreversible condition of unconsciousness in which there is: (a) The absence of voluntary action or cognitive behavior of any kind. (b) An inability to communicate or interact purposefully with the environment." Section 765.101(12), Florida Statutes (2003). [6]
> However, PVS is not always clearly identifiable, and is often misdiagnosed. [7] < 7> Medical experts can legitimately differ as to a diagnosis of PVS, as they did in this case. Schiavo IV at 184. It follows that medical experts can also differ as to the level or amount of 'vegetative-ness', and as to the chance of success of rehabilitative treatment, not to cure the patient of PVS, and not to restore the patient to full cognitive functioning, but merely to ensure that the patient can take food in a natural manner and live without artificial life support. Terri's parents have cast doubt on the quality of her PVS diagnosis and on the level of Terri's cognitive impairment, alleging that Terri's PVS might be of a level or type in a spectrum of PVS that might be amenable to rehabilitation.
Plaintiff's Motion for Preliminary Injunction, paragraphs 3, 7. Where such doubt exists, her rights should be preserved by determining whether rehabilitation would benefit her, and by attempting such rehabilitation if beneficial, prior to removal of the feeding tube.
Neither oral feeding, nor the tests and therapy to accomplish oral feeding,would violate Terri's wishes. Only her wish to be free of artificial life support has been proven by clear and convincing evidence, not a wish to die.
There is a fine balance between Terri's right to privacy and her right to life, which are co-equal in our constitutions. To err on one side is to prolong her existence, perhaps against her wishes. To err on the other is an irrevocable act that affords no remediation. While Terri may not be able to eat orally again, there is enough doubt as to her potential for that limited rehabilitation that to do otherwise deprives her of her life withoutdue process. If the guardian and the courts refuse to entertain such an option, they are arbitrarily and capriciously depriving Terri of her constitutional right to life.
The support - caring even where there is no curing - affirms human solidarity in both directions: care-giver and care-receiver. It is a human virtue to care for those who cannot care for themselves, and in that act of caring we affirm that it is a human person we care for - not some mere physiological process. [8]
WHEREFORE, the Governor, as amicus curiae, respectfully submits to the Court that in ruling on Plaintiff's Motion for Preliminary Injunction give careful consideration to the distinction between removing artificial life support and the deliberate killing of a human being by starvation and dehydration.
Respectfully submitted,
_____________________________ RAQUEL A. RODRIGUEZ
Florida Bar No. 511439
General Counsel
CHRISTA CALAMAS,P> Florida Bar No. 142123,
Assistant General Counsel
Executive Office of the Governor
Room
209, The Capitol
Tallahassee, Florida 32399-1050
Telephone No. (850) 488-3494
Facsimile No. (850) 448-9810
CERTIFICATE OF SERVICE I HEREBY CERTIFY that a true and correct copy of the foregoing has been mailed this day of October, 2003, to the following: GEORGE J. FELOS, Esquire, 595 Main Street, Dunedin, Florida, 34698; LAWRENCE D. CROW, Esquire, Larry Crow, P.A., 1247 South Pinellas Avenue, Tarpon Springs, Florida, 34689; WALLACE B. ANDERSON, Esquire, 2202 NW Shore Blvd., Suite 200, Tampa, Florida, 33607-5747; JAMES SHEEHAN, Esquire, 341 3rd Street South, St. Petersburg, Florida 33701; CATHERINE PEEK MCEWEN, Esquire, P. O. Box 3355, Tampa, Florida, 33601-3355; CHRISTOPHER A. FERRARA, Esquire, American Catholic Lawyers Association, Inc., P. O. Box 277, Ramsey, New Jersey, 07445-0277; JASON VAIL, Esquire, Assistant Attorney General, Office of the Attorney General, PL 01, The Capitol, Tallahassee, Florida, 32399; and PATRICIA F. ANDERSON, Esquire, 447 3rd Avenue, North, Suite 405, St. Petersburg, Florida, 33701.
If'n you accept that you are allowing yourself to be persuaded by a lie. The Branches of govt are supposed to be separate and equal. If the Judicial Branch is to decide everything, disband all legislatures and send the governors home;same for POTUS.
Let the Judiciary run everything - they already do. What need have I to vote? I have the Judicial Oracles.
You want Bush to issue an executive order? I don't know what legal basis a governor would have to override a court order in a civil case.
The Florida legislature could've acted to pass legislation that'd ban this and Jeb could sign it, but it'd probably be ruled not retroactive so that it'd apply to Terri's case.
Living will pioneer Doris Herbert dies at 93, [excerpt]
Citing Florida's constitutional right to privacy, the state Supreme Court ruled in September 1990 that people who are permanently incapacitated need not be subjected to forced feeding.In a unanimous ruling, the court held that a living will can allow caregivers to withhold food and water from an incapacitated person, even when death isn't imminent.
The ruling went further, granting a right to die to people who have told friends or relatives that they don't want to be fed indefinitely through a tube.
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