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Terri's parents voice private pain in conflictBy JONI B. HANNIGAN
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| "All we’re telling is Terri’s story. We’ve said the same thing for 13 years and have not deviated. It’s not hard to go on and talk about it, because it’s the truth." |
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| - Mary Schindler Terri's mom |
The Schindlers claim Terri never had the chance to improve after Michael won a $1.65 million medical malpractice lawsuit that also awarded him and his lawyers $640,000-in addition to an early out of court settlement of $250,000. After original attorneys fees were paid out, the fund for Terris care was down to $1.2 million. Of that, over $750,000 has already been used to pay fees for Michael Schiavos attorneys to ban the Schindlers from having any say in their daughters care and to petition the courts to have Terris feeding and hydration tube removed so that she will starve to death and die. [For more details, look in the Special Reports section: "Terri Schiavo: A Life at Stake."]
Bob and Mary Schindler were married in upstate New York in the early sixties, where Mary grew up near the Corning Glassware factoryand moved to Philadelphia. Bob, who had earned an engineering degree from Temple University in Philadelphia, went into business with a family member.
The Schindlers bought a 4-bedroom colonial-style tract home on half an acre in a new suburban development in Huntington Valley, Penn. They had a wood-paneled station wagon and a yellow Labrador Retriever.
Their first child, Terri, was born in 1963; Bobby followed in 1965; and Suzanne Schindler Carr in 1968. All three of the children attended private parochial school from pre-school through high school. Mary was the proverbial soccer mom. She loaded the kids in the station wagon and chauffeured them to where they needed to go.
Every day she volunteered at the school helping the teachers and staff.
"I loved it," Mary recalled, tentatively smiling. "I liked to be near the kids. Im bad like that."
Evidently, the kids liked it too.
When Bob and Mary semi-retired to St. Petersburg Beach in 1986 after Suzanne graduated from high school, two of their children, and Terris new husband Michael, moved with themBobby moved a year later after earning a marketing degree from LaSalle University.
"We all were close, weve always been close," Mary said. "We never went anywhere without them, unless we were on vacation."
The Schindlers said Terri met Michael, also from Philadelphia, in 1983 when they both attended classes at a community college. Terri did not date in high school and had lost a lot of weightshedding 45 pounds from her 55" frame by using a weight loss program on the advice of her pediatrician.
"Terri said, Mom, I want to lose weight now," recalled Mary. "She was so excited. She wanted to go to college and was coming out of her shell. Her dream was to be an assistant to Joan Embery, who was a curator for the San Diego Zoo. She loved animals."
Mary said Michael worked part-time for a popular fast-food restaurant chain and was the first boy Terri ever dated. "She didnt have any other boyfriends, and they were both really happy.
"I wish she would have waited, but they were in love and wanted to get married," Mary recalled. Bob said he spoke with Michael and cautioned him to wait.
"I am not trying to belittle the guy, but he would work for two weeks or a month and be gone," Bob recalled. "I said to him, my goodness, you have no education. What do you have to offer? Stay in school and at least get your associates. They would say, We love each other."
Terri married Michael in 1984.
At first, the couple seemed to get along financially in their modest apartment, but about six months after they were married, Bob said Michael and Terri moved into the basement of their Philadelphia home because they were unable to support themselves, despite Terris full-time job at an insurance company.
When Bob announced he and Mary were moving to Florida, he said Michael and Terri thought it would be good place to get a new start, so the family packed up the house and Terri was able to get a job transfer.
"Michael Schiavo for the most time was unemployed," Bob said. According to the Schindlers, Michael agreed to pay half the mortgage payment for a condominium the parents had purchased for themselves, but typically had difficulty "paying [he and Terris] share."
"This kept going on and on," according to Bob, who said after three years he finally asked the couple to move so he and Mary could sell the house they had purchased in the interim and not have to pay on two mortgages.
Money was getting tight for the Schindlers. Bob had begun a business selling futonsbut despite them "selling like crazy" up north, the futons didnt seem to catch on until later in Florida.
Describing the late eighties as a "comedy of errors," Bob said their funds were getting "lower and lower" and Michael Schiavo just "couldnt hold a job."
Mary agreed the situation was getting out of hand, but said she wanted to help the couple in any way she could.
"Shes my daughter and I wanted to help her," Mary said. "I always felt terrible for them both. She was so embarrassed about the money situation."
Terri and Michael finally moved into an apartment in 1989, and Bob said things were "copesthetic," until she was found lying face down on the floor in a newer apartment in 1990.
Things didnt get any better financially after Terris collapse. Michael Schiavo moved back in with the Schindlers and they began to pick up the tab for things Terri needed at the nursing home and for things she needed at home when the insurance company denied care.
Meanwhile, Terris parents pressured her insurance company to help with her upkeep, after they threatened to "literally put her out in the street" only months after her collapse.
"They would put Terri into a nursing home and say they would pay for it; but after a period of time, they would bounce her out again and we would get her back like a ping pong ball," Bob said.
Later, the Schindlers said they began to believe that maybe Michael Schiavo had "done something" to Terri, causing her to stop breathing, which is what appeared to have caused oxygen deprivation leading to severe brain damage. Medical reports, a bone scan and a police report eventually caused them to become suspiciousas did Michaels unwavering watchfulness from the beginning.
When the Schindlers said they finally got access to Terris medical records, they discovered she had a neck injury consistent with strangulation, they said a doctor told them. Mary admitted she remembered having seen an unusual number of bruises on her daughters arms and thighsand wondered about them.
They also knew Terri may have wanted a divorceand mentioned that to her brother, her friends, and her mother about a month before her collapse. Glancing at Bob, Mary said Terri would never have told her father.
"She just said, Michael and I are really having some problems and Im really not happy," recalled Mary, who admitted: "Dummy me, with my Catholic upbringing and all, I said, honey, maybe just try to work things out."
Mary said she remembered thinking right after Terris collapse that Michael was extraordinarily attentive for having been thrust into such a situation. She recalled five other young women in Terris condition at a nursing home in Sable Pondsand said their mothers told her that each of their husbands "flew" after they realized their wives would likely never be the same.
"I thought, look at this loving man thats here every day. He watched her like a hawk. Naturally, now I know he was afraid. He must have been thinking, what if they teach her to talk?" Mary speculated. "I think he was afraid she would say, what are you doing here? You did this to me! I think thats what happened."
Bob said he remembered thinking right before the malpractice trial, which began in 1992, that something was wrong, but he couldnt put his finger on it.
"I didnt lay up at night and think, why is he doing this, but when we finally got access to her medical records, I wondered," Bob said. "Something just didnt seem right with this guy."
Still, the Schindlers said they treated Michael like a son-in-law. Bob said he and Mary even understood when Michael pursued a "romantic interest."
Bob said Michael enrolled in classes at a local community college in September of 1991 and began to date a young woman, after a therapy they had pursued for Terri in California didnt work as well as the doctors would have liked.
"Two of them became an item," Bob recalled. "He had a photograph of her on his bureau.
"I told him, Michael, if you want to go off and ride into the sunset with [the woman], I understand. You are a young guy. Dont worry. Dont let your conscience bother you. Mary and I understand," Bob said he told Michael.
Thats when Michael moved in with the woman and had Terris two cats euthanized, Bob said. At the same time, Bob said Michael had refused to pledge proceeds from the expected malpractice suit to pay for expensive rehabilitation doctors told Terris parents she needed.
"Michael said to wait until the money comes in," Bob said.
Just before the trial for malpractice in 1992, Bob said Michael moved in with his parents who had long since relocated from Philadelphia to Florida.
"When that trial began, he walked into that courtroom with a halo on his head" and even recited his wedding vows, said Bob. Mary nodded in agreement.
Then on Valentines Day, February 14, 1993not too long after the court ruled in Michaels favor in the malpractice suit, the gloves came off and the Schindlers said they were astounded at Michaels reaction when Bob asked when rehabilitation would begin for Terri.
Bob recalled the incident vividly, saying "a book went flying across the room" after Michael started yelling at him.
"He threw [the book] at me and started yelling and coming towards me," Bob said, gesturing towards Mary. "She jumped in front of the two of us."
Thats when Michael Schiavo told Terris parents they would never see her again and he was going to have them banned from the nursing home, Bob said.
"That particular day, I never mentioned any of the other money he owed me," Bob said. "My concern was Terri and thats what we were focused on. My concern that day was trying to get him to agree to rehab. We are still trying to get her to Shands."
Mary agreed.
"I knew we could kiss that money good-bye," Mary said of Michaels previous indebtedness to them. "I was upset Terri was still in the nursing home and nothing was happening."
Bob said things got about as bad as they could after that. They were limited on time they could spend with Terri. They had no say in her careand they knew the settlement Michael had received was not being used for intensive rehabilitation. Worse still, in the late nineties Michael placed a "do not resuscitate" order on Terris chart, tried to prevent her from receiving basic medical care for an infection and banned her brother and sister from visiting her because they wanted a nurse to try and feed her a small amount of pudding.
The Schindlers also have had their "bad" days in court where they say judges have refused to listen to reasonand failed to acknowledge a conflict of interest in Michaels being appointed Terris guardian while admitting to relationships with other women.
"The whole thing surprises me the way the courts have set up the guardianship," Bob said. "The guardianship laws are horrible."
Bob said after the medical malpractice suit Michael "broke-up" with the woman he had been seeing and he began being "intimate" with the woman he has lived with for eight years sincewho is the mother of his two children.
Mary, like Bob, said she doesnt agree with a lot thats gone on, but said she understands why Michael would want to move on.
"I thought in my heart that if he found somebody elsefine, hes a young guy, go on with your life," Mary said firmly. "Just give me back my daughter. It was assumed. I will take care of her. Dont worry about it."
Photo by Joni B. Hannigan
Like clockwork, retired Catholic military chaplain Monsignor Thaddeus Malanowski (l) visits Terri Schiavo at Woodside Hospice three time a week — sometimes praying with her for several hours at a time. Nov. 4 was a "good day," Malanowski told Florida Baptist Witness. "This was the liveliest I have seen her in several days." With Malanowski is Terri Schiavo’s father, Bob Schindler — whose family is in the center of a national debate about the so-called "right-to-die."
After a moment, Bob expressed cynicism even though the courts have intervened and restored Terris feeding and hydration tube. On Oct. 21 Governor Jeb Bush signed "Terris Law" which began a process by which a guardian ad litem has been appointed by the court to look at the guardianship and other issues related to Terris case.
"I dont know," Bob said. "Michaels got this thing about killing her and maybe hell go through with it."
The thought seemed to catch him and he looked at Mary as if testing the waters. Mary looked away.
"I dont understand how he can do it. He has a child now," she said softly, shaking her head. "I wonder in my heart if he would starve his child to death. It is one of the most horrendous things. To starve somebody, I just cant think about it."
Bob looked befuddled toobut less forgiving of Michaels treatment of his daughter.
"Maybe I hate him for what hes doing to her," Bob sighed, while Mary pursued her lips, glancing up at a little card hanging from a cupboard on the inside of the trailer where she was seated. The trailer is located across from Woodside Hospice. The Schindlers pay a business to rent three parking spaces for their trailer so they can be close to Terri.
The card dangling above Bobs head is a picture of Mother Theresa of Calcuttaknown for her patience and for her fair treatment of the disabled.
After a few moments, Bob spoke up about Michaels numerous media appearances and interviews, with attorney George Felosand his allegations they didnt have anything to do with "religion" until right-to-life activists took an interest in Terris case and begin to picket and pray for Terri outside the hospice.
"We are good practicing Catholics," Mary sighed. "We have gone to mass every Sunday, all of our lives."
Bob chimed in and said Michael had even teased Terri and her parents about their commitment to the church.
"Michael used to laugh when Terri went to mass with us," Bob said. "He would say, say some prayers for me."
Responding to speculation that Terri suffered from an eating disorder which led to her collapse, Mary said she had not put on any weight since she initially lost weight after high school.
"I never saw her eat and eat," Mary said, refuting claims Michael made on television that Terri likely suffered from bulimia. "I was close and I watched. She had never gained weight."
In fact, Mary said the opposite was likely and like her, Terri typically ate one meal a day.
As to gaining anything from Terris medical trust, Mary said "we never tried to do that." According to both Bob and Mary, they didnt submit medical bills to the trust for expenses they had already incurred because they had been told "as a mother and father" they were not allowed.
"Michael knew we never told anybody else," Mary said. "He told us, Dont worry, Mom and Dad, youll be taken care of."
Bob said the debts they have incurred taking care of Terri and hiring lawyers to see that her needs are being taken care of have cost them "hundreds of thousands of dollars."
"Its taken everything I own," Bob said. Meanwhile George Felos, Michaels attorney, needs go only to Michael, who has had Judge George Greer "rubber stamp" the expensesand the bank pays the bills out of Terris medical trust.
The Schindlers did admit they acted out of desperation years ago to see if Michael "just wanted the money or wanted to kill" Terri. They said they worked with a lawyer to offer him a settlement to go away and leave them and Terri alone. Ironically, the money never existed, however, and the offer was never seriously considered.
"I remember I asked Bob where we were going to get the money," Mary said. "Bob never expected him to accept the bait."
Bob, who spent years driving the family to vacations on the Jersey shore and who Mary called a "little league dad," said the only thing the family has ever wanted is a chance to get their daughter the best care available. Terris smiles and responses to her family keep them going, even in the face of amazing odds.
"All were telling is Terris story," Mary said. "Weve said the same thing for 13 years and have not deviated. Its not hard to go on and talk about it, because its the truth."
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