LAKELAND (FBW)-Ruling on their last pending
appeal for the year, Floridas Second District Court of
Appeal Dec. 29 affirmed a lower courts decision to not re-open
a case involving the religious liberty of a disabled woman, Terri
Schiavo, by issuing a one-word decree, Affirmed.
The latest twist in a drama being played out
in the Florida courts and at the U.S. Supreme Court came late in
the day as the Second District Court of Appeal rendered their
final decision for the year, without an opinion, while promising
a formal decision within 15 days, according to the court clerks
office.
Bob and Mary Schindler, Terris
parents, filed the appeal, arguing that the removal of the womans
feeding and hydration tube would violate her First Amendment
religious rights. The Schindlers may file a motion within 15 days
asking the court to re-hear their appeal, but will not be
permitted to appeal the court's decision to the Florida
Supreme Court.
The Schindlers maintain that even if she had
previously indicated she would wish to die in such circumstances,
that as a Roman Catholic, Terri would have likely changed her
mind after a statement last year by Pope John Paul II that
removing a feeding tube from a patient like Terri would
constitute euthanasia by omission.
Circuit Court Judge George Greer in October
denied the religious liberty argument and refused to re-open the
case based on what Schindler attorneys have said is a new
development arising from a topic which previously had divided
some Catholics. The stay he issued on removing Terri's
feeding tube will expire when the 2nd DCA issues their
final decision.
The woman at the center of the
legal debate, Terri Schiavo, has been in what some doctors
consider a persistent vegetative state since 1990, when she
collapsed in her home. Her husband and legal guardian, Michael
Schiavo who has fathered two children with his live-in
girlfriend has sought the removal of his wife's
feeding tube for nearly a decade, saying it is what she would
have wanted. However, no written request from Terri Schiavo
exists.
Terri Schiavo's parents, Bob
and Mary Schindler, have long maintained that their daughter has
not received the rehabilitation and care she requires.
Schiavo's feeding tube was
removed in October 2003, but the Florida legislature passed a law
giving Bush the authority to order the re-insertion of the tube.
He did so, and Michael Schiavo challenged the constitutionality
of the law, which was subsequently ruled unconstitutional by the
Florida Supreme Court in September 2004.
Bob Schindler told Florida
Baptist Witness he is angered and frustrated by the 2nd
DCA's ruling, which may clear the way for Michael Schiavo to
have his wife's feeding tube removed.
It was like a slap in the
face, Schindler said of the courts action, and
further, a delayed Christmas gift to [Michael] Schiavo.
Calling the court's action
unbelievable, Schindler said it appeared there is
collusion between the judges in the case, resulting
in what he calls summary judgments which don't
allow for oral arguments, opinions, or further appeals.
The Court's decision to play
out the appeals process during the holiday means despite a
pleasant Christmas visit with Terri at the Woodside Hospice where
she lives, Schindler will spend the New Year's holiday
working to expose what is happening in this case.
Christmas day Bob Schindler and his
wife, Mary, and son, Bobby Jr., tried to brighten Terri's
day with a stuffed dancing mouse replete with bright Christmas
lights.
Terri smiled in approval
and made efforts to speak at the sight of the comical gift, Bob
Schindler said, while he tried not to get angry at a nurse who
hollered at a hospice Santa and carolers that a stop in Terri's
room would be forbidden.
We forgot to put Santa on the
visitation list, Schindler said he told the nurse in jest.
It is typical what's happening, people have no idea.
At a certain point, enough is enough.
The day before Christmas, lawyers
from Gibbs Law Firm, who are representing the Schindlers, had
their first face-to-face visit with Terri.
It was amazing, Barbara
Weller told Florida Baptist Witness. She is so
alert and so aware of her environment.
Commenting on Terri Schiavo's
physical condition, Weller said the 41-year-old woman had a
peaches and cream complexion and gorgeous white teeth,
rather than being gray and sallow from not being
allowed regular forages to the outside.
Terri is a beautiful woman
who radiates light, said Weller.
Weller said she is surprised the 2nd
DCA has appeared to treat the case in such a cavalier
manner, and have obviously not considered all of the
implications.
The religious issue is very
important in Florida, Waller said. It was extremely
insulting how this was handled.
Although options for an appeal to
the recent motion filed with Judge Greer appear to be exhausted,
Weller said her firm is planning to file about 4-5 other legal
motions related to the case in the next few weeks.
George Felos, Michael Schiavo's
attorney, told the Associated Press Dec. 28 he did not intend to
respond to the Schindler's latest appeal.
Dec. 29, Felos called the 2nd
DCA's ruling a definitive denial of the Schindlers'
frivolous claim, and told the Associated Press the court's
decision to not ask [Schiavo] for a brief was an
extraordinary statement.
Bob Schindler told Florida
Baptist Witness that Schiavo's intention all along had
been to give the appearance he was backing off, when in reality
he plans to ask for the removal of Terri's feeding tube once
2nd DCA's formal decision is released, Schindler
said.
Of the court, Schindler said:
They gave the win to the team that didn't show up.
Meanwhile, lawyers for the governor
have asked the U.S. Supreme Court to hear the case and the
Washington-based American Center for Law and Justice weighed in
with an amicus brief asking the court to take the case.
The ACJL filed the friend of the
court brief Dec. 29 on behalf of Mary and Bob Schindler,
supporting Gov. Bush's petition.
Jay Sekulow, chief counsel of the
ACLJ said the governor and the Florida legislature acted properly
in passing Terri's Law and urged the high court
to take the case to protect Terri's life.
This is a case that certainly
deserves consideration by the Supreme Court and we are supporting
the Governor's office in its effort to have the high court
take this critically important case, said Sekulow. At
the center of this life and death struggle is Terri Schiavo
a woman who has received a death sentence from the Florida
courts.
The brief, available online at: www.aclj.org/media/pdf/AmicusBriefinSupportofPetitioner2.pdf,
argues the Florida Supreme Court acted unconstitutionally in its
decision when it determined that once any court has issued a
decree regarding the care of an incompetent person, neither the
legislature nor the executive branch can take independent steps
on behalf of the incompetent person's welfare. The brief
also asserts Terri Schiavo is not in a persistent vegetative
state and does not wish to die.
The U.S. Supreme Court is expected
to give a decision by early January on whether or not they will
accept the case.