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Brain-Damaged Woman Won't Get Guardian
Yahoo ^ | 01/09/04 | Associated Press

Posted on 01/09/2004 8:04:38 PM PST by Micavaga

CLEARWATER, Fla. - A judge on Friday rejected Gov. Jeb Bush's request that an independent guardian continue working in the interests of a severely brain-damaged woman at the center of a right-to-die case.

Chief Judge David Demers ruled that he would not reappoint a guardian to the case, citing pending litigation over the constitutionality of the law that called for the guardian for Terri Schiavo.

"Terri Schiavo yet again has been denied an independent voice in the proceedings that may very well determine the outcome of her life," the governor's office said in a statement.

Florida courts repeatedly have said Michael Schiavo, Terri Schiavo's legal guardian, has the right to remove the feeding tube that has kept her alive. Her parents want to keep her alive and see if she will respond to therapy, and dispute her husband's contention that she had said she didn't want to be kept alive artificially.

The tube was removed for six days in October until the Legislature and the governor stepped in to have the tube reinserted and an independent guardian appointed for her.

The guardian, Jay Wolfson, issued a report that recommended further tests, but did not take a side in the controversy of whether Terri Schiavo wanted to be kept alive artificially. Wolfson was dismissed once the report was issued.

Pat Anderson, a lawyer for Terri Schiavo's parents, questioned Friday's ruling. Her parents have argued that their daughter deserved to have an independent guardian, saying her husband has a conflict of interest because he is engaged to another woman and they have children together.

Michael Schiavo denies a conflict of interest and says he is just carrying out his 40-year-old wife's wishes.

Terri Schiavo collapsed in 1990 at age 26 when her heart stopped from what doctors believe was a chemical imbalance.


TOPICS: Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 6thcircuit; campbells; constitutionality; demers; denied; dueprocessforjeb; executingdisabled; fl; guardian; injustice; itbeginslikethis; nocerebralcortex; pinellascounty; pvs; retainedrights; righttodie; schiavo; terri; terrischiavo; terrisfight
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To: cyn
Bingo!

Yes, a deliberate campaign of disinformation perpetrated by Felos and Schiavo has sought to cement public support for Terri's murder-by-civil judgement!

Checked google for "Terri Schiavo" + coma:
From CNN alone:
Searched pages from cnn.com for "Terri Schiavo" coma
Results 1 - 38 of about 130

Earlier reports, going back to 2001, portray Terri as IN A COMA:

CNN.com - Ruling ends feeding of comatose woman - August 8, 2001
CLEARWATER, Florida (CNN) -- Terri Schiavo, a comatose woman at the center of a bitter legal tug [of war]... Her parents argued that Schiavo, who has been in a coma for 11 [years]

The URL for archived Terri articles is www2.cnn.com/2003/LAW/10/22/coma.woman/

And, there is also a grab bag of other misleading terms, including "coma-like state" - "heart attack" - "heart failure" - all of which have been debunked by Dr. Hammesfahr and others as inaccurate descriptions of Terri's condition or cause of her condition.

21 posted on 01/10/2004 10:42:41 AM PST by msmagoo (Indict Michael Schiavo! Let a jury decide who is telling the truth!)
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To: msmagoo; BuckeyeNan
Hi, msmagoo! Happy Saturday to you!

Thanks for posting your search about the years of misinformation of Terri being in a coma, which though incorrect has become the truth the public knows, to the detriment of Terri and justice.

This experience shows how important it is to correct misinformation in the media no matter how small or insignificant it might seem at the time.

22 posted on 01/10/2004 1:23:53 PM PST by cyn (miss you, Larrylied!)
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To: cyn
I will give media a little bit of credit for recently substituting "brain-damaged" for "comatose" (probably in response to emails from Terri's attorney and the public) but that is just the tip of the disinformation iceberg.

The whole case is a perversion of law! Take this quote from CNN on August 26, 2003:

"But Greer said Terri Schiavo's infection must be treated aggressively until the moment of her death."

Also, the misleading title of that article is "Judge: Comatose woman must be treated" yet the first sentence of the article is:

MIAMI, Florida (CNN) -- A woman who has been ruled to be in a persistent vegetative state and is fed through a tube must be given life-saving treatment in a Florida hospital, according to a Pinellas County judge.

Larry King gave a full hour to the HINO and his attorney - when will the 'other side' get their due?

Ken Connor, Dr. Hammesfahr, Dr. Walker deserve equal time on LKL.

23 posted on 01/10/2004 2:17:35 PM PST by msmagoo (Indict Michael Schiavo! Let a jury decide who is telling the truth!)
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To: msmagoo; BuckeyeNan; Alamo-Girl
LOL! Look at the picture they have of 'poor comatose Terri'. What goofs!
Look at the URL, http://www.cnn.com/2003/LAW/08/26/comatose.woman/, LOL!
...except that Terri's life is at stake, and others.

Judge: Comatose woman must be treated
From Rich Phillips CNN Tuesday, August 26, 2003 MIAMI, Florida (CNN) -- A woman who has been ruled to be in a persistent vegetative state and is fed through a tube . . .

The related stories have titles "Judge allows comatose woman to die" and "Ruling ends feeding of comatose woman"; the email alerts are for Terri Schiavo, coma, and comatose.

Gee, d'ya think they have an agenda??

24 posted on 01/10/2004 3:36:55 PM PST by cyn (Larrylied fan club: 2 and counting!)
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To: cyn; All
"The related stories have titles "Judge allows comatose woman to die" and "Ruling ends feeding of comatose woman"; the email alerts are for Terri Schiavo, coma, and comatose. Gee, d'ya think they have an agenda??"

It's crazy, isn't it??
There are no rules except the rule that Terri must die...

Read what Pat Anderson, Terri's attorney, has to say in Wesley J. Smith's latest (and possibly greatest) Weekly Standard column on Terri (no URL at this time):

What we can learn from the Schiavo case.
by Wesley J. Smith
01/19/2004, Volume 009, Issue 18


IT IS THE CALM before the storm in the Terri Schiavo case. The Florida woman, who was in the throes of a court-ordered death by dehydration last October when Florida's legislature and Governor Jeb Bush intervened, continues to receive tube-supplied food and water. But this good news may not last. In December, as her family and many supporters celebrated her 40th birthday, their joy was tempered by the knowledge that powerful cultural forces are adamant that Terri Schiavo not live to see age 41.

The Schiavo case was one of the most important stories of 2003. The big news wasn't that she was ordered dehydrated to death: Conscious and unconscious cognitively disabled people like Terri are often denied tube-supplied food and water in America's hospitals and nursing homes. What made this case remarkable was the successful public campaign mounted by Terri's parents Bob and Mary Schindler to prevent their daughter from suffering a slow and potentially agonizing death. As a result, millions of people awakened to the ugly reality that we treat helpless humans in a way that would be criminal if done to a horse.

When more than 100,000 people contacted Florida governor Jeb Bush demanding that he intervene and save Terri's life, the result was the passage of "Terri's Law," a measure that permits the governor to suspend the removal of a feeding tube from patients (a) who do not have a written advance directive instructing that they not be nourished and (b) whose families disagree with the decision to dehydrate. Bush acted and Terri's food and water were restored.

But Michael Schiavo, Terri's quasi-estranged husband--he's lived with another woman for several years and has two children with her--remains adamant that Terri die. Assisted by the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and cheered on by the bioethics establishment and media, which view the case through a distorting "right to die" prism, Michael Schiavo sued to have Terri's Law declared unconstitutional. If he succeeds, Judge George Greer of Florida's Sixth Judicial Circuit will undoubtedly order Terri's feeding tube removed as he has done twice before.

As we await further court proceedings, it is a good time to take stock of the case, clear up some common misperceptions, and see whether anything can be done to prevent future Terri Schiavos.

The Myth of 19 Judges: Supporters of Terri's dehydration often argue that Terri's rights have been fully protected through extensive judicial oversight. Michael Schiavo put it this way on "Larry King Live": "Nineteen judges have come to the conclusion that this [dehydration] was Terri's wish." His attorney George Felos then added, "This case has gone from the trial court to the appellate Court to the Florida Supreme Court, to the U.S. Supreme Court, to the Federal District Court. All of those judges have looked at this case, have looked at the facts, and have found that Mike acted properly."

Well, bunk. The case has been shunted back and forth between the Sixth Judicial Circuit Court and the Florida Second District Court of Appeal, where the rulings have been repeatedly replayed like a looping audio tape. Only one trial judge and one appellate court actually reviewed the evidentiary record. Moreover, contrary to Felos's assertion, the Florida Supreme Court and the U.S. Supreme Court did not look at the facts. Rather, both declined to review the case. Refusing to rule is not the same thing at all as studying the record.

This is a crucial point because many important and highly relevant facts have never been fully litigated. For example, because the Schindlers could not afford to hire a neurologist to examine Terri at the time of the original trial, Judge Greer heard only one perspective about Terri's medical condition.

This situation has now changed. Several doctors and rehabilitation experts have signed affidavits asserting not only that Terri is conscious, but also that she could be weaned off her feeding tube with rehabilitation. Judge Greer refused to permit this evidence to be presented fully in open court, however, because to do so, he said, would be to retry the case.

But the case should be retried. A human life is at stake. And there are many other issues in addition to the heterodox expert medical opinions about Terri's condition that must be considered if justice is to prevail over mere legal procedure.

For example, Michael Schiavo was not cross-examined at the first trial about the two different stories he has told to two different courts, from which he wanted two different verdicts. When he wanted a money award from a medical malpractice jury, he presented evidence that Terri would have a normal life span, that she would need extensive and expensive rehabilitation throughout her life, and that he would provide her this care as long as he lived. (In cases such as this, the longer the patient is likely to live, the higher the award probably will be.)

Six years later, when he wanted his wife's feeding tube removed, he changed his story, contending that she told him she wouldn't want to live "on anything artificial." Surely, the credibility gap created by this 180-degree turnabout is worth considering, given that Michael's testimony and that of his brother and sister-in-law constituted the only evidence presented to Judge Greer that Terri would want to die.

There are other inconsistencies in Michael Schiavo's story: After the medical malpractice jury money was safely in the bank, he withheld antibiotics from Terri when she developed an infection. Because of this, the Schindlers sued to remove him as Terri's guardian. When Michael was questioned in a deposition about a conversation he had with a doctor about removing Terri's feeding tube, he testified, "I said [to the doctor] I couldn't do that to Terri." He also admitted that he did not want Terri to regain consciousness because he did not think it in her best interests.

There is also considerable evidence that would be presented in a new trial casting doubt on Michael's good intentions toward Terri. Several nurses who cared for Terri in the mid-1990s have come forward and signed sworn affidavits that are highly relevant to the dispute over Terri's medical condition and Michael's good faith. For example, the nurses testified in their affidavits that Terri was responsive and could even speak on occasion.

The affidavit of Carla Sauer Iyer, RN, is especially damaging to Michael's case. She testified that Michael refused medical recommendations that Terri be given therapy, insisting that "Terri should not get any rehab, that there should be no range of motion [therapy], whatever, or anything else. . . . One time I put a wash cloth in Terri's hand to keep her fingers from curling together, and Michael saw it and made me take it out, saying that was therapy."

Even more disturbing, Iyer has stated under penalty of perjury:

Throughout my time at Palm Gardens [Terri's former nursing home], Michael Schiavo was focused on Terri's death. Michael would say, "When is she going to die?" "Has she died yet?" and "When is that bitch going to die?"

Of course, Iyer's accusation should not be accepted at face value and should be tested by rigorous cross-examination. But so too should Schiavo's version of his disputes with care providers. He admits clashing with Terri's nurses, but claims he was angry because they were not providing her with good enough care.

These matters are sufficiently serious to warrant a thorough airing in a full-blown trial. This should be uncontroversial. After all, if Terri were a condemned murderer facing execution and factual matters of this import and relevance had not been adequately addressed in the original proceeding, the ACLU would never stop suing. Yet, even though Terri's case is just as much a death case as any murder proceeding, the ACLU wants Terri to die.

Unfortunately, the judges of the Sixth Judicial Circuit are not eager to face new facts. Indeed, Judge Greer's Sixth Judicial Circuit colleague, W. Douglas Baird, has now refused to permit Governor Bush's attorneys to conduct any factual discovery in the lawsuit over the constitutionality of Terri's Law.

This is to stack travesty upon travesty. Despite the general legal rule that laws are to be presumed valid when being challenged constitutionally, Baird instead declared Terri's Law "presumptively unconstitutional" before Governor Bush had even filed pleadings in the case. Such a statement at least presents a sufficient appearance of bias to require Baird be removed. Instead, the looping tape brought the controversy back to the Second District Court of Appeal, which true to form refused to order that Baird be disqualified. And now, even though Judge Baird has been transferred to a criminal court, he has nonetheless held on to the Schiavo case.

The Missing Guardians ad Litem: "I have never seen anything like the Terri Schiavo litigation," the Schindlers' attorney Pat Anderson told me recently. "I call it the 'Rule of Terri's Case.' If following a legal procedure will likely result in Terri dying, it will be adhered to. But if a procedure could make that outcome more difficult to attain, it will not be followed. It's the most frustrating experience of my legal career."

Bitter words from a lawyer who has, so far, lost her case? I don't think so. Consider the fact that Terri does not currently have a guardian ad litem who would be duty-bound to look out for her interests. This, despite a Florida statutory requirement that an ad litem be appointed whenever a conflict of interest may arise between a guardian and a ward, as it clearly has between Michael and Terri.

Terri once had a guardian ad litem, attorney Richard L. Pearse Jr. of Clearwater, Florida. But after opining before the trial that Terri's dehydration should not be permitted and further urging that she continue to be represented by a guardian ad litem, he was dismissed from the case and no replacement has ever been appointed. When the Schindlers appealed, the Second District Court of Appeal brushed their concerns aside, ruling in essence that Judge Greer could serve both as Terri's advocate and as a neutral arbiter of her fate. As a consequence, Terri was sentenced to die without having an unbiased, zealous advocate acting solely on her behalf.

The same pattern has now occurred under Terri's Law, which explicitly requires a guardian ad litem be appointed for a patient whose dehydration has been suspended by the governor. Accordingly, David A. Demers, chief judge of the Sixth Judicial Circuit, appointed health law professor Jay Wolfson to represent Terri and ordered him to review the case and report back to the court and to the governor within 30 days. Wolfson filed a 38-page report on December 1, 2003. While accepting Judge Greer's ruling that Terri is in a persistent vegetative state, he recommended that Terri be given a swallow test--she has not had one since 1992--opining that if she "has a reasonable hope of regaining any swallowing function," her feeding tube should not be removed. Wolfson also expressed his belief that "due process requires that the ward's interests continue to be represented in all further proceedings herein" by a guardian ad litem or "other appropriate fiduciary."

Judge Demers was having none of that. He thanked Wolfson for his report and dismissed him from further service. Thus, Terri is yet again being denied an advocate to call her own.

The Lack of a Legal Presumption for Life: The Terri Schiavo case shows the acute dangers posed to the most weak and vulnerable among us by the so-called right to die. We are now a society that too often gives the benefit of the doubt to death in cases such as Terri's. Terri's Law was merely a stopgap measure.

A more thorough and well-thought-out law is clearly needed. Such legislation has been filed in Florida. Senate Bill 692, to be considered in the 2004 session, would create an explicit legal presumption in favor of providing tube-supplied food and fluids to cognitively disabled patients. But this general rule would not be ironclad. The presumption would not apply for patients who had signed a written advance medical directive instructing that the tube-supplied sustenance be withheld if it "would not contribute to sustaining the incompetent person's life or provide comfort to the incompetent person."

Such a common sense law would strike a proper balance between the right to make our own medical decisions and the right to life of our most vulnerable citizens. It would also go far in preventing bitter intra-family litigation such as the Schiavo case that has roiled the nation in recent years. A just and compassionate society should accept no less.

Wesley J. Smith is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute, an attorney for the International Task Force on Euthanasia and Assisted Suicide, and a special consultant to the Center for Bioethics and Culture.

25 posted on 01/10/2004 6:33:59 PM PST by msmagoo (Indict Michael Schiavo! Let a jury decide who is telling the truth!)
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To: msmagoo
> Where there's smoke, there's fire, imo.

I agree, Magoo. Felos would do well to remember, where there's fire, there's brimstone.

26 posted on 01/10/2004 7:12:14 PM PST by T'wit
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To: cyn
>> It is NOT Terri who has changed, but MICHAEL!

Just about as soon as he got his hands on her treatment money.

27 posted on 01/10/2004 7:15:56 PM PST by T'wit
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To: Micavaga
A judge on Friday rejected Gov. Jeb Bush's request that an independent guardian continue working in the interests of a severely brain-damaged woman at the center of a right-to-die case.

It is so obvious that the Fl justice system is corrupt. Terri never had a chance against them. The legislature is her only hope. They need to enact another law that prohibits this kind of killing. It is her only chance to survive.

28 posted on 01/10/2004 7:22:47 PM PST by blueriver
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To: T'wit
Felos would do well to remember, where there's fire, there's brimstone.

LOLOL I totally agree with you there! Be afraid, FeelLousy...what you've done in this world to Terri is only a taste of what's in store...and Our Father does not go by Judge Greer's playbook!

29 posted on 01/10/2004 8:25:21 PM PST by msmagoo (FReepmail me if you want to be added to a Terri ping list)
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To: cyn; floriduh voter
You know - your post says it ALL:

Judge: Comatose woman must be treated

THIS WOMAN IS NOT IN A COMA!

And this poll, asking the incredibly biased question, "Should Florida Gov. Jeb Bush have ordered a comatose woman to be kept alive?" is still open for voting!

FReep here: http://www2.cnn.com/2003/LAW/10/22/coma.woman/

Should Florida Gov. Jeb Bush have ordered a comatose woman to be kept alive?
Yes
  27%
56543 votes
No
  73%
155864 votes
Total: 212407 votes

30 posted on 01/10/2004 8:36:22 PM PST by msmagoo (FReepmail me if you want to be added to a Terri ping list)
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To: cyn
Jeepers... Thanks for the ping!
31 posted on 01/10/2004 8:53:36 PM PST by Alamo-Girl
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To: msmagoo
The interview with Dr. Hammesfahr is informative, moving, powerful. Terri's Freepers who can find time should listen to the whole thing. If we have a super-hero among us who can transcribe it, it would a good new weapon for us.
32 posted on 01/10/2004 9:00:23 PM PST by T'wit
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To: T'wit; All
Yes, he would be a great person to appear on national TV for an in-depth interview. This just came in - CARLA IYERS will be on Highway2Health Tuesday night, Jan. 13:

YOU WON'T WANT TO MISS THIS TUESDAY'S SPECIAL INTERVIEW!

RON PANZER
HOSTS HIGHWAY2HEALTH
WITH VERY SPECIAL GUEST
CARLA IYER, RN
who cared for Terri Schiavo in 1995 - 1996


* CARLA FILED A POLICE REPORT IN 1996
DETAILING THE VIAL OF INSULIN FOUND IN TERRI'S ROOM

* CARLA FILED AN AFFIDAVIT DETAILING HER CONCERNS
THAT TERRI MIGHT HAVE BEEN INJECTED WITH INSULIN

* AFTER MICHAEL SCHIAVO VISITED, CARLA CHECKED TERRI'S BLOOD GLUCOSE LEVEL AND FOUND IT TO BE VERY LOW, TERRI WAS SHAKING, PALE AND SHOWED SYMPTOMS OF HYPOGLYCEMIC SHOCK

* CARLA WAS FIRED FOR FILING THE POLICE REPORT, EVEN THOUGH NURSES ARE REQUIRED BY THEIR LICENSE TO REPORT WHAT THEY BELIEVE TO BE CRIMES AGAINST INDIVIDUALS!

* LISTEN TO RON PANZER AND CARLA IYER, RN TUESDAY NIGHT at 9-10 PM EASTERN/6-7 PM PACIFIC TIME

* Providing information the major media withholds from the public *

Highway 2 Health Home Page: http://www.highway2health.net/

Listen Live Link (9-10 pm Eastern 6-7 pm Pacific) http://www.warpradio.com/popTuner.asp?id=14108

Ron Panzer and the Hospice Patients' Alliance: http://www.hospicepatients.org/




33 posted on 01/10/2004 9:42:22 PM PST by msmagoo (Indict Michael Schiavo! Let a jury decide who is telling the truth!)
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To: Micavaga
This is insane. The "husband" has morally forfeited any say in this matter by shacking up and procreating with another woman. That should be obvious to any judge on its face, but it seems that most judges haven't got enough common sense to feed themselves.
34 posted on 01/10/2004 9:47:43 PM PST by B Knotts (Go 'Nucks!)
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To: AntiGuv
Those numbers are incorrect and Felos spits them out every chance he gets. ONE judge has reviewed Terri's current case and an appellate panel concurred. The Florida Supreme Court, the US Supreme Court and the Federal Court all declined to hear the case.
35 posted on 01/11/2004 7:10:02 AM PST by phenn (http://www.terrisfight.org)
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To: Micavaga
It reminds me of a quote from a movie - help, me out everyone, I can't remember which one and have to run, but here it is:

"Why - won't - you - just - die already?" (said breathlessly while apparently attacking the victim).

36 posted on 01/11/2004 7:13:07 AM PST by fortunecookie
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To: All
Thanks for the post - I signed up to Yahoo just to add to message board and notify people about terrisfight.org
37 posted on 01/11/2004 5:16:59 PM PST by a5478 (a5478)
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To: Micavaga; cyn; T'wit; Pegita; nicmarlo; floriduh voter; FL_engineer; FR_addict; ...
Request Denied For Schiavo Probe

Jan 10, 2004

By DAVID SOMMER

CLEARWATER - Gov. Jeb Bush's request for additional independent investigation of the Terri Schiavo case has been denied by Pinellas and Pasco counties' chief judge.

Bush wanted a guardian ad litem to take a closer look at how the 40-year-old St. Petersburg woman became ill and the suitability of her husband to serve as her guardian.

Last month, Bush sent Chief Circuit Judge David Demers a list of questions he said were not addressed in an earlier investigation by University of South Florida Professor Jay Wolfson.

Wolfson served as Schiavo's court-appointed guardian ad litem for about two months before being discharged in December.

The governor said then that Wolfson had not had the opportunity to probe deeply enough into the case.

Bush listed 10 areas he wanted investigated, including what happened the night Schiavo's heart stopped in February 1990, cutting off oxygen to her brain and leaving her in what has been diagnosed as a persistent vegetative state.

The governor also asked about ``statements of law enforcement, emergency medical professionals and staff members of medical facilities where Schiavo was treated.'' He asked what Michael Schiavo, his wife's legal guardian, said ``at the time regarding her condition and how she was found.''

Demers subsequently asked Michael Schiavo and his in-laws, Bob and Mary Schindler, for their positions on Bush's request.

The two sides have been locked in a 5 1/2-year battle over whether Terri Schiavo should be kept alive with the help of a feeding tube.

Michael Schiavo contends his wife made statements prior to her illness indicating she would not want to be kept alive with no hope of improvement. His doctors have testified that her brain was destroyed and she will never be able to eat normally.

The Schindlers say their daughter reacts to them and could improve. They say their daughter never said she would not want to be kept alive with a feeding tube.

In response to Bush's request, Michael Schiavo argued Wolfson had performed his duties as outlined in Terri's Law, a legislative measure enacted in October to allow for Wolfson's appointment and to allow Bush to intervene in the case.

Bush used the law to order that the feeding tube be reinserted after the woman spent six days without nourishment. It had been the second time the tube was removed with court permission.

The Schindlers supported Bush's request and added some questions, including ``the advisability of the dissolution of the marriage'' since Michael Schiavo is living with another woman with whom he has had two children.

In a three-page ruling signed Thursday, Demers said the 2nd District Court of Appeal recently ruled Terri's Law is presumptively unconstitutional. Demers denied the governor's request without further explanation.

38 posted on 01/12/2004 11:31:19 AM PST by msmagoo (Indict Michael Schiavo! Let a jury decide who is telling the truth!)
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To: msmagoo
>> Demers said the 2nd District Court of Appeal recently ruled Terri's Law is presumptively unconstitutional.

Terri's right to be represented in legal proceedings that affect her is not at issue and should not be overruled by judicial fiat. This judge is prejudiced in the extreme and should be removed not just from the case but from the bench. He is unfit to serve.

39 posted on 01/12/2004 11:50:44 AM PST by T'wit (Liberals don't care what you do, as long as it's compulsory.)
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To: T'wit; All
The root of the rot, as I see it, is that the appeals court holds all previous legal findings to be beyond reproach. Demers says Terri's Law is 'presumptively unconstitutional' based on Felo's one-sided argument (at the time Demers made the comment he had not even read Bush's response) and the Appeals Court consistently rubber-stamps Demers and Greer, compounding the errors instead of correcting them!

MS, the jerk, is assumed to be the perfect caring hubby, only looking out for his wife's best interests despite the overwhelming evidence offered to the contrary.

Of course if the evidence showing his numerous conflicts of interests and outright perjury were allowed in as evidence, the situation would be different.

But, in an amazing disply of see-no-evil, hear-no-evil, the overwhelming evidence of conflict of interest and evidence indicating MS suppressed evidence of trauma and abuse (in the malpractice trial) has been IGNORED and disregarded by the court - yet the judges claim they've followed the law and Terri must die - and their rulings based on false, incomplete and misleading evidence are upheld!

The evidence proving he is an unfit guardian has not been heard by Greer and yet the march to withdraw the feeding tube continues. The 2nd District Court of Appeal backs up Greer, Demers and Baird. Where does it end? Even a videotape of MS strangling her would be barred as evidence at this point! Greer would say it's too late to revisit the prior findings, sorry, good bye.

How can justice be served when a woman's life rests on this suspiciously remembered hearsay, when the court acts as an accomplice to attempted murder? MS refused to allow Terri antibiotics, which is against the law, even before he even asked to have the feeding tube removed! How can that NOT be interpreted as attempted murder?

The only hope to see justice is to move this out of civil court and into criminal court. Let the HINO defend his actions under oath before a jury. Let the full weight of the law come down on his head and put his freedom at risk. Isn't that the very least the State of Florida owes Terri, whose LIFE is at risk?

40 posted on 01/12/2004 1:12:16 PM PST by msmagoo (Indict Michael Schiavo! Let a jury decide who is telling the truth!)
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