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To: Ohioan from Florida; Goodgirlinred; Miss Behave; cyn; presently no screen name; Abby4116; Alissa; ..
I have been with company the last few days and away from the computer but am back.

8mm

This time it is called murder


595 posted on 08/27/2005 3:18:53 AM PDT by 8mmMauser (ChristtheKingMaine.com)
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To: All

http://www.centredaily.com/mld/centredaily/news/opinion/12489175.htm


Posted on Sat, Aug. 27, 2005


Editorial | Pa. Court Rulings on Autopsies Narrow and confusing



Had Terri Schiavo died in her native Pennsylvania, rather than in Florida, it's unlikely that the public would know much more than her cause of death.

The critical findings - the condition of her brain, her blindness and the absence of abuse - could by law have been kept from the public.

Why? Because the case law in Pennsylvania at the time said that autopsy reports were not a public record and that a coroner or medical examiner need disclose only the cause and manner of death.

(In Schiavo's case, the cause was marked dehydration; the manner was undetermined.)

In Florida, where autopsy reports are public record, the autopsy findings quieted a raging national debate about the woman's cognitive functions and whether her husband had physically injured her.

Last week, Pennsylvania took a step toward more openness on autopsy reports, but in way so narrow that it will require further litigation or lawmaking to settle the question.

Yes, autopsy reports often include material, including photos, whose publication would serve mostly a prurient, not public purpose. Responsible media ought to exercise restraint. But autopsy reports can also shed invaluable light on legitimate public policy questions about drug abuse, domestic violence, gun lethality, suicide and other issues.

The state Supreme Court ruled Aug. 15 that a district attorney can seek a court order to seal an autopsy report if its disclosure could compromise an ongoing criminal investigation. The ruling, in a Blair County case, is based on the assumption that all autopsy reports, unless sealed, are public record in Pennsylvania.

Unfortunately, the Supreme Court made only passing reference to this point. So coroners who, for whatever reason, prefer to keep autopsies secret could harken back to a Commonwealth Court ruling earlier this year. In that March ruling, the lower court said, in unhelpfully contradictory fashion, that autopsy reports are not part of the official record that coroners must file with the county court clerk each January.

The General Assembly should take two corrective steps. First, it should amend the Coroner's Act so that it states unambiguously that autopsy reports are public record. Second, it should include autopsy reports among those things that are public records under the Right To Know Act, eliminating the embargo period that now freezes these records until January. No public purpose is served by withholding them for up to 12 months.

In an Internet world, there may be no surefire way to prevent the painful release of graphic autopsy photos. That's why Florida's legislature decided to ban the release of such photos.

The Pennsylvania Supreme Court ruling, however, suggests a better method. It allows for the trial judge and disputing parties to review - in the judge's chambers - whether specific information, if released, would hinder an ongoing investigation. A similar review could be made on photographs, with the judge weighing the public purpose versus the privacy rights of families.

Now's a good time for the legislature to clean up the confusion caused by court rulings - before some red-hot controversy such as the Schiavo case brings the issue to the fore.


596 posted on 08/27/2005 3:41:48 AM PDT by 8mmMauser (ChristtheKingMaine.com)
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To: 8mmMauser

Thanks for the ping!


602 posted on 08/27/2005 7:59:29 AM PDT by Alamo-Girl
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To: 8mmMauser
Thanks for the ping.

This is one sick world we live in where people can off their brain damaged loved ones with blessings and those that assist them are given "awards".

603 posted on 08/27/2005 9:13:37 AM PDT by Earthdweller (US descendant of French Protestants_"Where there is life, there is hope"..Terri Schiavo)
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To: 8mmMauser; Republic
bumping to 595. "This Time it is called Murder"

By the way, a few days ago, I posted that the local GOP were going to put me on their email list. Guess they changed their mind after I told them that someone was going to be arrested, not just on judgment day. The GOP here is afraid to acknowledge that murder is illegal and against God. Guess they want to stay in the dark over there across from Bernie McCabe's jail complex.

PINELLAS GOP HQ 727-539-6009. They ENDORSED JUDGE GREER in 2004, did a deceptive MAILER sent only to senior citizens. Shame on them.

617 posted on 08/28/2005 8:35:10 AM PDT by floriduh voter (www.conservative-spirit.org Daily Newsfeeds & Weekly Update)
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