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View Full Version : Florida Law Keeping Brain-Damaged Woman Alive Ruled Unconstitutional


BorgHunter
05-06-2004, 09:23 PM
By Vickie Chachere Associated Press Writer
Published: May 6, 2004

TAMPA, Fla. (AP) - A law pushed through by Gov. Jeb Bush to keep a severely brain-damaged woman alive was struck down by a Florida judge Thursday in the latest turn in one of the nation's longest and bitterest right-to-die cases.

The governor's office filed an immediate appeal.

Circuit Judge W. Douglas Baird ruled that Terri's Law, named after Terri Schiavo, is unconstitutional because it violates the disabled woman's right to privacy and delegates legislative power to the governor.

The law was passed in October, just days after the removal of a feeding tube that has helped keep Schiavo alive for more than a decade. Bush immediately invoked the new law to order the feeding tube reinserted.

The tube will remain in place while the governor pursues his appeal.

Schiavo's husband, Michael, has fought a long court battle to remove the feeding tube and carry out what he said were his wife's wishes not to be kept alive artificially. The dispute has pitted him against his in-laws, who say her condition could improve.

Baird said Terri's Law improperly gives the governor "unbridled discretion" and interferes with Terri Schiavo's right to make her own medical decisions.

The judge said Terri's Law "in every instance, ignores the existence of this right and authorizes the governor to act according to his personal discretion."

He said the governor failed to spell out any compelling state interest that would be adequate to override Schiavo's rights.

Pat Anderson, an attorney for Terri Schiavo's parents, Bob and Mary Schindler, said they were disappointed, but not surprised.

Michael Schiavo's attorney had no immediate comment.

Terri Schiavo, 40, was left severely brain damaged more than 14 years ago after her heart stopped because of a chemical imbalance brought on by an eating disorder. She left no written directive about her wishes if she were ever incapacitated.

Several right-to-die cases across the nation have been fought in the courts in recent years, but few, if any, have been this drawn-out and bitter. The tangled legal fight between Michael Schiavo and his in-laws has been heard by at least 20 judges in at least six courts.

The 2nd District Court of Appeal has previously upheld Michael Schiavo's legal quest to remove the tube.

The governor's attorneys have defended Terri's Law, saying it creates an additional layer of protection for a disabled woman who left no record of her wishes and whose husband has a conflict of interest in wanting to end her life.

Michael Schiavo is engaged to another woman with whom he has two children. At one point in the case, he stood to inherit hundreds of thousands of dollars from a medical trust fund that paid for his wife's care; the money has largely been depleted through legal bills.

Bush's decision to intercede in the case brought criticism from Democrats and accusations that the Republican was pandering to anti-abortion conservatives.

AP-ES-05-06-04 1607EDT

WhammyBar
05-06-2004, 09:36 PM
hello other Bsuh, butt out of people's business. thank you.

BorgHunter
05-07-2004, 07:35 AM
Indeed.

The reasons for having the government butt out are twofold. First of all, I do not want the government to tell me that I cannot die if I am in serious pain or am a vegetable. The government has no right telling anyone that. And as Schiavo's spouse, the husband has the right to make the decisions for Terri if she is brain-dead, not the parents.

Second of all, since when did Jeb have the power to make that kind of proclamation? We live in a society with Seperation of Powers, and that means he had no right telling the doctors what to do anyway. He's a politician, not a doctor, and I'll be damned if I let a politician make decisions regarding anyone's health.

So I applaud the Florida courts. Seems this state is more intelligent than I give it credit for. :)