Posted on 03/29/2005 9:36:23 PM PST by WhistlingPastTheGraveyard
Edited on 03/29/2005 9:59:29 PM PST by Jim Robinson. [history]
FEDERAL APPEALS COURT WILL LET TERRI'S PARENTS FILE A PETITION FOR REHEARING FOR AN INJUNCTION TO REINSERT FEEDING TUBE... BREAKING
Be gone, troll.
I wish they would hurry Terri doesn't have much time.
God be with Terri and give her comfort and strength.
Well, whatever it takes is fine with me. This may very well be a good lesson for all of those who sit back and wait on the polls before they decide what to do. I give great credit to Jesse Jackson for doing the right thing.
I just hope and pray this happens quickly enough for Terri.
May Felos and Greer be d**ned.
"One more chance to play god." If you want to talk to someone about playing God, talk to Felos.
Greer can't because it's out of his jurisdiction when it's in Federal court.
Thankyou for explaining the probate thingy. But my question is: From where and how does Greer get the power and authority
to prevent a poor dying woman from taking a sip of water ???
Careful of those curses, they have a way of bouncing back on people.
Well gee if they'd gone on FreeRepublic they would have known about it days ago
Jesus said, "BE HEALED" - I believe that might just be HIS will!!
BE HEALED TERRI - IN THE NAME OF JESUS!!!
Greer's wife is NOT on the board of hospice -- it was a phoney rumor spread on this site.
Husband has a flair for the obvious.
Sometimes, last ditch efforts work.
I blame the courts and the lawyers. A verdict was reached, Schiavo's side 'won' and that is that as far as the lawyers are concerned. There is no place in the law for charity or mercy, it is a win/lose proposition. I still can't believe that Felos said that Terri was the most peaceful he has ever seen her. Ugh.
I think that the Judicial machinery has begun to figure out that they have leant an air of truth to Charles Dicken's famous quote from Oliver Twist "Of the law supposes that, said Mr. Bumble, the law is a ass, a idiot."
The abuse in talking as though this is all going to end with her being starved yet once more to the death.
Forever and ever, Amen.
The abuse in talking as though this is all going to end with her being starved yet once more to the death.
Don't they operate 24/7 ..??
Kinda late in the game for a prayer like that.
Do you have some information on the state of Terri's internal organs?
AARON BROWN, HOST: Good evening, again, everyone. Terri Schiavo has begun her 12th day without a feeding tube, both sides agree now, the end is drawing close. Mrs. Schiavo is reportedly no longer producing urine, a sign her kidneys may be shutting down.
That said, those who want to save her have not stopped fighting, at least not publicly.
(BEGIN VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN (voice-over): This evening, Mrs. Schiavo's mother, Mary Schindler made a public plea to her daughter's husband, Michael Schiavo, and to his girlfriend Jody.
MARY SCHINDLER, TERRI SCHIAVO'S MOTHER: Michael and Jody, you have your own children. Please, please give my child back to me.
BROWN: Outside Terri Schiavo's hospice in Pinellas Park, Florida, supporters of Michael Schiavo have joined the crowd of protesters, though they remain vastly outnumbered. And, as you probably know by now, the Reverend Jesse Jackson joined the protesters, and entered the fight on the side of the Schindler family, calling for Florida lawmakers to pass emergency legislation to intervene.
REV. JESSE JACKSON, POLITICAL ACTIVIST, SUPPORTS SCHINDLERS: I was on the phone today, talking with members of the Senate, asking them to be creative enough to try to fashion some emergency legislation to stop the starving, to stop the dehydration.
(END VIDEOTAPE)
BROWN: An outline of another sad day in the Schiavo case.
We're joined now from Pinellas Park by Larry Klayman, attorney and former general council of Judicial Watch. He's been with the Schindler family over the past few days, and is in this, as he is in virtually everything I've ever known him to do, a passionate proponent, in this case of that cause.
Larry, it's good to see you.
LARRY KLAYMAN, ATTORNEY, FMR. GEN. COUNCIL, JUDICIAL WATCH: Thanks, Aaron, it's good to see you, too.
BROWN: Can you give me a concrete idea that your side has that could turn this around at this point?
KLAYMAN: The Reverend Jackson articulated it very well. He reached out to us. Obviously, we've asked the governor for his help. We believe that he has the executive power. He's a good man, he's been a good governor, we'd like him to act. He has the ability to grant clemency to Terri, in fact, restore her civil rights. But if that does not happen, the legislature in Florida is really where we're at right now.
We're trying to reintroduce legislation that was voted down last week. We're looking for senators to support -- state senators -- Jesse Jackson is playing an instrumental role. We believe he will turn around at least three senators, and the procedures exist that this legislation can be reenacted, very, very quickly, perhaps within a day. Now, we're racing the clock, and we urge Jesse Jackson and those senators in Tallahassee to get the job done quickly before it's too late.
BROWN: Larry, someone speaking for the state house in Florida said that they wouldn't get to this till next Tuesday at the earliest, even if it passed the senate.
KLAYMAN: That person is mistaken because they'll be reintroducing the legislation that was discussed last week in the Senate. It can be reintroduced tomorrow at 9:30 a.m. for a new vote. The senate can vote upon it. It will go over to the house. The house would then have an opportunity to adopt the senate bill or house bill. That would then be sent back to the senate. It could all be done in one day, and the whole job could be signed by the governor tomorrow evening. It can happen, if everything breaks the right way. We thank Reverend Jackson for being here and working very hard to get this thing done.
BROWN: Larry, a couple of other things. You said to us earlier today when we talked that the legal system had failed both sides. Let me just play this back to you for a second. This case has probably been litigated as much as any right-to-life or right-to-die case in the history of any country. Each side has had doctors, the court has appointed doctors, Ms. Schiavo has had a guardian, independent of her husband, looking out for her interests. It may be the outcome isn't an outcome that people are comfortable with, and that makes sense to me, but how can you argue that the system failed?
KLAYMAN: Aaron, I saw it in a smaller way. You know, over the years -- that's why I started Judicial Watch in 1994. I'm now in private practice, having run for the senate down here, and this was a big part of my campaign, is that we need to do something about the system where we don't have the best and brightest on the bench. Now, how could this Judge Greer have made a decision, that there was clear and convincing evidence, when the evidence here was simply that Terri had made a statement watching an episode of E.R., of emergency room?
And when that kind of a situation arises, there are judges that are supposed to review the decisions of other judges. But judges, like everybody else -- lawyers, doctors, you name it -- protect themselves, and they rally around, they group the wagons, and that was the reason for Judicial Watch, was to watch judges, and it performs a valuable function.
But, beyond that, the lesson that will be taken out of this -- and let's pray that Terri lives, because not only do we want her to live as a human being, but she'll be very helpful in getting the job done -- is that we need better judges on the bench, number one, and number two, in the family law system -- and I had a tragedy in my own family where my grandmom had a do not resuscitate order put on her charts and my stepdad at the time told the hospital not to feed her. I went in as the grandson, I had no standing, just like the Schindler family. My grandmother was the closest person in my life, and we need to revise the family laws which simply do not serve the interest of the American people.
BROWN: That is a great conversation, honestly, to have, and we ought to have it, and I'd love to have it with you, perhaps, tomorrow or after this terrible tragedy ends, because there will be other chapters no matter how it ends. That's a good place to start.
Larry, it's good to see you.
KLAYMAN: Absolutely. Absolutely. Thank you, Aaron. God bless.
My thoughts exactly. I worry that her fragile mother may not be able to endure much more. Hear our prayers Terri and hold on just a bit longer.
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