Entry: A Death Sentence for Terri Sunday, March 20, 2005



A Florida court has sentenced a woman to death by starvation. She didn't get a trial. She didn't get a lawyer. No one knows what crime she has committed. Yet Terri Schiavo has been condemned to a cruel death by slow starvation, for no good reason that I can discern. Although those who argue for her death repeatedly refer to "extraordinary measures" and "extensive medical procedures" meant to keep her alive, it's difficult to see how a simple nutrient tube qualifies as either of these two things. The inability to swallow solid food is not a reason for a death sentence in any civilised country of which I'm aware, nor is being mentally disabled.

Convicted mass-murderers get seemingly endless appeals on the public dime. When the sentence is finally carried out, the justice system goes to great lengths to ensure that the death is as quick and painless as possible. If convicted murderers aren't sentenced to starve to death, why has that sentence been passed on a woman whose only crime was to get sick?

In 1990, Terri Schiavo collapsed of heart failure, probably caused by a potassium imbalance. She suffered brain damage as a result of lack of oxygen. Unable to eat, she receives nutrients through a feeding tube. Michael Schiavo, her husband and legal guardian, first petitioned to have the tube removed in 1998. Two years later, Judge Greer of Florida's Sixth Judicial Circuit Court decided that Terri would have chosen to have the tube removed, because Michael claimed that she once told him so. Why it took him so long to remember this has yet to be explained.

A friend of Terri's testified that she once told Terri a cruel joke about a woman who fell into a coma after mixing drugs and alcohol. "What is the state vegetable of New Jersey?" the friend asked Terri. The punchline was, "Karen Ann Quinlan." Terri didn't find the joke about the fight to take Quinlan off life support funny. "How did they know she would want this?" she asked. This testimony was seemingly ignored, while her husband's insistence that Terri, a Roman Catholic like her parents, would not want to be kept alive using any artificial means was taken as fact. Judge Greer referred to Michael Schiavo's hearsay -- and that's what it amounts to -- as "clear and convincing evidence" that Terri would rather die than take food through a tube.

Terri Schiavo's condition is nothing like Karen Ann Quinlan's. Despite the picture painted by advocates for her death, Terri is not a vegetable, nor is she in a coma. She's not dying -- or wouldn't be, if she was being fed. She's merely brain-damaged in a way no one yet understands, yet she is responsive to various stimuli. Her eyes track motion, she responds to the sight of her family members, and she even laughs. How can you say that someone who can laugh at a joke is no longer deserving of the right to live? And how can you sentence someone to die of starvation because she can't eat properly?

This is not a "right to die" case, as Terri's husband and his lawyers portray it. It's a "right to kill your wife when that whole 'in sickness and in health' thing becomes inconvenient" case. As far as I'm concerned, Michael Schiavo stopped being Terri's husband in all but name when he broke his marriage vows by moving in with Jodie Centonze in 1995. He should have been removed as Terri's legal guardian at that time, and on those grounds. Since then, he's repeatedly tried to accomplish his wife's death, even refusing to allow therapy or tests that could determine whether improvement is even possible. A CNA (Certified Nursing Assistant) who worked at the Palm Gardens Nursing Home testified in 2003 that she "was personally aware of orders for rehabilitation that were not being carried out. Even though they were ordered, Michael would stop them." Michael Schiavo is an unfit guardian who is not looking out for Terri's best interests, and ought to lose that power.

Congress has convened an emergency Sunday session concerning this case. They intend to pass legislation that might prevent Terri's life from being ended before the full extent of her present condition can be determined, by the very tests Michael Schiavo refuses to allow. This makes logical as well as moral sense. How can a person be sentenced to die -- the ultimate deprivation of civil rights -- when their condition isn't actually known?

Many of those on the Left are outraged by the involvement of Congress in this decision. They ask, "Do you want Congress to decide medical questions?" I don't see how allowing an unelected judge to decide medical questions is any worse. Their real concern, as evidenced by their speeches about "rule of law" and "judicial independence," is that the godlike power of activist judges will be curtailed.

Hat tip to Hyscience for the videos of Terri Schiavo reacting to stimuli.

   11 comments

Jamie
March 20, 2005   10:50 PM PST
 
This is so WRONG, what they are trying to do, kill that poor woman.

Everyone needs to read the story that I link to here:

http://tinyurl.com/5ema8

Read it. The woman is NOT in a coma. She has NOT been receiving the care that she needs to recover. She has NOT had any tests to determine her true condition.

A nurse from the facility where Terry is warehoused has signed an affadavit as to how she has heard the husband say 'When is that bitch gonna die?'" on numerous occasions.

Now, does that sound like a loving husband?
Maureen
March 21, 2005   08:03 AM PST
 
I can't understand why this guy doesn't just divorse his wife and leave her care to her parents. Why does he even care??? He is with another woman, has children, he has moved on! He should let it go!!! As far as I'm concerned, it's none of his damn business anymore. Hmmmm I wonder what kind of payment he is going to receive when she dies. Must be SOME policy!!
Crazy8tz
March 21, 2005   09:29 AM PST
 
It's about time someone found it odd that her husband would not allow any medical tests on her. I believe he did something that brought this on, and he is simply trying to hide the medical evidence. I think in a turn of events, we will see that doctors find evidence of severe head trauma caused by a shovel or bat. Stay tuned! - Aside from that, it is unfortunate that we are not medically advanced enough to know if the brain is healing itself to the point of recovery. - I have a friend in this same situation (meaning a coma) and within 3 days the doctors had said that he has 0% chance of recovery. However, a guy that lives across the street from me pulled through despite the doctors telling his wife he had no chance. So, I believe there is ALWAYS a chance, and Terri deserves her's.
Lea
March 21, 2005   12:54 PM PST
 
Not to mention his attorney, George Felos, is a weird right-to-die advocate, who also wrote a book on the subject.

We wouldn't starve our dog or cat. It's disgraceful.
Crazy8tz
March 21, 2005   04:51 PM PST
 
>I can't understand why this guy doesn't just divorse his wife and leave her care to her parents.

I truly believe that he is the cause of her brain damage and he simply won't let go because if he does, evidence will be found to convict him of attempted murder. - They were known for being an "abusive" relationship, or so many have said. It's all to coincidental. Heck, the guys from Law & Order would have sorted this out in an hour. <vbg>
Jamie
March 21, 2005   08:02 PM PST
 
This is something new that I heard just today from a Nobel Prize nominated doctor (he was nominated for his work with people with injuries like Terri's.) This doctor said that for the first 7 years after her injury, while they were in court in the case which ended with the eventual million+ settlement, Terri was given therapy, could speak a few words, was walking using the parallel bars, etc. Once the case was settled, her husband moved her to a nursing home and forbade any and all therapy!
JM
March 22, 2005   07:36 PM PST
 
Jamie, you probably mean Dr. William Hammesfahr. Transcriptions of some of his statements regarding Terri can be found here: http://www.ifrl.org/IFRLDailyNews/040109/1/
Jamie
March 22, 2005   09:01 PM PST
 
Yes, I believe that is the doctor that I heard speak about his examination of Terri. Thanks for the link.
Seige
March 22, 2005   09:13 PM PST
 
This is sad news. I've read about it on a different blog. Though, till now. I still don't exactly have anything right to say.
Name
March 23, 2005   08:15 AM PST
 
And what do you have to say now?
JM
March 23, 2005   08:18 AM PST
 
Teri's CT scan resembles that of an older woman with Alzheimer's. There IS a cerebral cortex -- it's NOT gone -- but it's much thinner than it should be for her age.

http://www.miami.edu/ethics/schiavo/CT%20scan.png

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