
WASHINGTON (BP)--The U.S. House of Representatives should
protect its subpoenaing power by sending in federal agents to
protect Terri Schiavo and re-insert her feeding tube, Ken Connor,
the lawyer who has represented Florida Gov. Jeb Bush in the case
of the disabled woman, told Baptist Press.
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On March 18 a House committee issued a subpoena for Schiavo
herself to appear in Washington for a hearing regarding the care
and treatment of incapacitated persons. The hearing was scheduled
to take place March 25.
While the subpoena was intended to protect Schiavo, Florida
Judge George Greer ignored it and ordered that her feeding tube
be pulled. If her feeding tube is not re-inserted she will die of
starvation and dehydration within a matter of days.
"Congress has inherent authority, in my view, to take
acts necessary to preserve its own jurisdiction," Connor
told BP. "... If Terri Schiavo dies, the object of that
investigation will be compromised and frustrated, at least in
part. I would urge the House to consider sending agents to gain
control of Terri and to re-insert her feeding tube in order to
preserve the evidence and to preserve Terri as a potential
witness."
By not doing so, Connor said, the House will be acknowledging
that it is "somehow subordinate to and subservient to the
judicial branch."
"If Congress is not willing to assert itself as a co-equal
branch of government in this case -- preserve its authority to
conduct its investigation, preserve the life of Terri Schiavo ...
when will it ever assert itself?" Connor asked.
Connor encouraged those who want Schiavo to be kept alive to
contact Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert and House Majority
Leader Tom DeLay through the Capitol switchboard (202-224-3121).
Connor acknowledged that Schiavo won't be a "communicative
witness" but he said there are "significant issues"
as to whether she is indeed in a Persistent Vegetative State.
While some experts have said she is in such a state, others have
disagreed. Renowned neurologist William Hammesfahr, a Nobel Prize
nominee, has said he does not think Schiavo is a PVS patient.
"It may very well be necessary to conduct further
examinations to glean what her current status is cognitively and
mentally," Connor said.
On March 21 Congress passed and President Bush signed a law
giving Schiavo's parents the opportunity to take their case to
federal court. So far, though, federal courts have refused to
order that the feeding tube be re-inserted.
"If Terri dies ... Congress' intent -- which was to get a
fresh set of eyes to review the constitutional issues -- would be
totally frustrated," Connor said. "But ... the court
has always been expansive and aggressive to exercise authority to
preserve its jurisdiction. I would maintain that Congress needs
to be no less zealous to protect its authority and jurisdiction
under the Constitution than the courts are."
Congress, Connor said, is a co-equal branch of government and
needs to act that way.
"As it currently stands the executive and legislative
branches are continually seeing their intent frustrated by a
court system that has shown itself to be zealous in the
protection of its own turf -- so much so that it is willing to
usurp the authority of the other branches of government," he
said.
If Congress does not act, Connor said, many people will
question whether congressional laments about "an out-of-control
judiciary" are serious.
"The political realities are going to be that the courts
will have blackened the eyes of the Congress and the president,
who acted in haste and in good faith to preserve this woman's
life," he said. "And the courts have been slow walking
this thing ever since they acquired jurisdiction and have
obviously acted in a manner so as to completely frustrate
Congress' intent. The question is whether the Congress will
assert itself to protect its own constitutional authority in this
case or not."
Schiavo's case has captured the nation's attention in recent
weeks. For years her parents and her husband have been in a legal
struggle over whether she should live or die. While her husband,
Michael Schiavo, says she would not want to live in her present
state, no written request exists. Meanwhile, he has lived with
his girlfriend, by whom he has fathered two children. Terri
Schiavo's parents say she has the capacity to swallow and could
be fed orally if it were allowed. She is 41.