Posted on 05/07/2004 3:23:12 PM PDT by amdgmary
Parents of Terri Schindler-Schiavo Told to Pay to See Their Daughter
Clearwater, FL May 7, 2004: In yet another bizarre twist of the Terri Schindler-Schiavo case, the Schindler family was informed that they must now pay a fee for security each time that they want to visit their daughter.
On Wednesday, May 5, 2004, Deborah Bushnell of Dunedin, an attorney representing Michael Schiavo, faxed a letter to attorneys representing the parents of Terri Schindler-Schiavo.
In her communication, Ms. Bushnell recommended that Ms. Schiavo's parents could be permitted to visit their disabled daughter if they would agree to hire an off-duty police person to accompany them. This comes after attorney Patricia Anderson, who represents Ms. Schiavo's parents, filed a Writ of Quo Warranto, demanding that Mr. Schiavo demonstrate what authority he has to deny his wife visits from her immediate family. Should the Schindlers fail to pay, they would be denied visitation rights.
Ms. Schiavo currently has an off-duty police person, paid for by Hospice of the Florida Suncoast, assigned to her on a 24 hour a day basis. Additionally, the Schindlers have reported that, during their visits, nursing staff frequently enter their daughter's room.
Ms. Schiavo's parents, Bob and Mary Schindler, have not been permitted to visit her since March 29, 2004 (39 days), when attorney George Felos of Dunedin issued a press release stating that suspicious marks were found on her arm. A toxicology study conducted on Ms. Schiavo concluded that no unauthorized chemicals were found in her system. Ms. Schiavo's parents, along with her siblings, had attempted to visit her the following day at Park Place Assisted Living and were turned away by nursing staff in compliance with "Mr. Schiavo's orders".
Statement of Attorney Patricia Anderson:
By recommending that the financially-strapped Schindlers may only visit Terri if they pay yet another off-duty police person to accompany them, is an effort to inhibit them from freely seeing their own daughter. A couple of years ago, Michael Schiavo contacted Terri's parents and offered to give the balance of Terri's money over to charity. He and his attorneys used this a talking point for the media - claiming that Michael had no financial interest in Terri's death. What they neglected to mention was that that particular offer was predicated upon the Schindler's agreeing to Terri's dehydration and starvation death.
This latest tactic from Ms. Bushnell is really no different. I will not be surprised if Ms. Bushnell uses this as another talking point with the media in an attempt to make her and her client appear less cruel.
No mother should have to pay an admission fee to see her child on Mother's Day. Perhaps Ms. Bushnell has forgotten how most people spend Mother's Day."
All of the above is an indication of what Terri wants now, most particularly the fact that she has survived serious illness, injury and attempts to starve her to death. Her past and her present influences have made her the person she is today.
You still did not answer the first question I posed earlier. Neither did you answer my second question.
Should parents be forbidden from caring for these people, on the basis that they can't care for themselves and may or may not want to live?
That's funny, I thought that when neglect leads to death it is considered murder. At least it is if I allowed that to happen to my pet, and I know I'd go to jail for that! Why are humans less worthy than our dogs and cats?
Were it not for years spent in therapy, Stephen Hawking would be absolutely incapable of making his wants and desires known. His conciousness, which to you seems obvious, would not be so had it not been for the work of many people. Without such efforts, his apparent level of conciousness would likely be even lower than Terri's.
Your original comment is above. I then asked if Christopher Reeves and Stephen Hawking want to live because neither one, like Terri, can live without help.
In your last response to me you added additional qualifiers presumably because I pointed out the absurdity of your original comment.
Actually, "not expending the resources to keep someone alive" is not necessarily criminal, if one's non-expenditure of resources is performed in such a way as to allow others to take over the responsibility.
For example, in Illinois, mothers who don't wish to expend the effort to keep their newborns alive can drop them off at hospitals or staffed fire stations and be free of further obligation.
What Michael is seeking to do, however, is not merely to absolve himself of responsibility (which he could easily do in any number of ways) but rather to actively prevent anyone else from taking over. The issue isn't that he doesn't want to provide care for Terri--it's that he doesn't want anyone to provide care for Terri.
It is the basic philosophy, that you do no harm. Now, many are willing to advance beyond the basic philosophy. There are people that volunteer to take care of someone, who would ordinarily die, all the time.
That is their choice. It's also Mr. Shiavo's choice, and rightfully his under the law, the common law and custom. Conservatives supposed to conserve that. It is closest to Nature. Nature is unforgiving and we have a contract of obedience with her when we are born.
Michael's actions are between him and God, since the law that grants them presumes honest care, which is the case in almost all instances.
If we could give Terri the same ability to communicate as that which was given Stephen Hawking, it would positively blow the socks off the naysayers.
No. If I were a judge, I wouldn't use anything close to my own name out here.
Michael isn't merely making the choice not to give Terri food and water himself, though; rather, he's seeking to prevent anyone else from providing it.
If you pick up a cat from a shelter, you are accepting the responsibility of providing a certain level of care for that cat. Severe neglect is punishable by law. That does not mean, though, that you're obligated for life to provide for the animal. If you become unable to care for it yourself you are allowed to either find someone else to care for it or return it to the shelter and let the shelter try to find someone (which they may or may not manage to do).
In short, you're not required to care for the animal yourself, but that does not give you the right to prevent others from doing so.
Should Michael's "property interest" in Terri exceed that of a cat owner over his pet?
Justice William Glenn Terrell served from 1923 to 1964, but he was not the court's longest serving employee (assuming justices don't mind being considered employees).
WAS A JUDGE? I'm getting warmer. lol
Holy cow...if Felos was working on behalf of a someone on the "right" side of this controversy, they would have called him a wacko by now.
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