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Tube is removed after a chaotic day

NO DOUBT: Judge Greer orders that Terri Schiavo's feeding tube be removed "forthwith."

By WILLIAM R. LEVESQUE, ANITA KUMAR, CHRIS TISCH and GRAHAM BRINK
Published March 19, 2005


photo
[Times photo: Cherie Diez]
Terri Schiavo's father, Bob Schindler, and her sister, Suzanne Vitadamo, go into the hospice in Pinellas Park after the morning news conference Friday.

  photo
[Times photo: Kathleen Flynn]
From left, staff attorney Tara McDonald, court reporter Charlene Eannel, Pinellas County sheriff's bailiff John Yaitanes and staff attorney Marsha MacConnell Davidson listen during a conference call with Judge George Greer.
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Decision day: Photo gallery

PINELLAS PARK - The U.S. Marshals had delivered the congressional subpoena for Terri Schiavo.

As the clock ticked to 1 p.m. - the hour a judge had ordered Schiavo's feeding tube be removed - a leading House Republican appeared before television cameras and reassured the nation that "Terri Schiavo will not be forsaken."

Fifteen years after Schiavo collapsed and seven years since the start of a bitter battle between her family to remove her feeding tube, Congressional leaders thought they had saved her.

Minutes later it all changed, again.

Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge George Greer faced off with lawyers for the U.S. House seeking to delay removal of the feeding tube. He stood his ground, and wondered why the federal government had suddenly shown up after all these years.

"The fact that ... your committee chooses to do something today doesn't create an emergency, sir," Greer said. "I'm sorry. My order will stand."

A lawyer standing by at the Hospice House Woodside where Schiavo lives asked if the order was effective immediately.

"The word was forthwith," the judge repeated. Now.

At 1:45 p.m. a doctor uneventfully removed Schiavo's feeding tube. A crowd of over 200 protesters outside awaited word and prayed.

It was the climax of another remarkable day of legal and political intrigue in a case that has captured the attention of the world, from the halls of the Vatican to the chambers of both Congress and the Florida Legislature.

White House spokesman Scott McClellan said President Bush discussed the case with his brother, Gov. Jeb Bush, and members of the state's congressional delegation during his swing through Florida on Friday to discuss Social Security. "The president believes when there are serious questions or doubts in a case like this that the presumption ought to be in favor of life," McClellan said.

This is the third time Schiavo's feeding tube has been removed, and she is expected to die within two weeks unless her parents, Bob and Mary Schindler, find a way around court orders.

Even with the tube removed, few are willing to predict events in the coming days given a case whose unpredictable and complicated history is thought unprecedented for any right-to-die case.

Two previous times, the Schindlers have won orders to reinsert the tube, the last time in 2003 when state lawmakers passed a law to accomplish it. The courts declared it unconstitutional.

Lawmakers in the nation's capitol were shocked their 11th hour tactic to subpoena witnesses and win delay didn't work, and described the removal of Schiavo's feeding tube as barbaric.

"Mrs. Schiavo's life is not slipping away - it is being violently wrenched from her body in an act of medical terrorism," House Majority Leader Tom DeLay said.

This time, the Schindlers lawyers acknowledge they are nearly out of legal options. "We're now up against a very tight clock because Terri is in the process of being starved to death," David Gibbs III said. "It looks like she's going to have a hungry weekend."

George Felos, attorney for Schiavo's husband, Michael Schiavo, condemned political interference. .

"It was odious. It was shocking. It was disgusting," Felos said. "They cannot walk over the dying body of Terri Schiavo for their own political gain."

But the Schindlers remain hopeful. Congress may yet pass a bill on Monday to keep their daughter alive. Michael Schiavo is just as hopeful the feeding tube won't be reinserted.

* * *

The day opened with The U.S. House Government Reform Committee issuing five subpoenas to Schiavo and her husband, two doctors and a hospice employee to appear at a hearing at the Pinellas Park hospice March 25 and to maintain "in its current operating state," the nutrition and hydration systems that have kept Schiavo alive.

A Senate committee sent a letter to Schiavo and her husband to appear at a March 28 hearing in Washington.

Congressional lawmakers had moved into action once it became clear the U.S. House and Senate wouldn't immediately draft new legislation to delay the removal of Schiavo's feeding.

"This is about getting all the facts," said Rep. Tom Davis, R-Va., chairman of the House Government Reform Committee, which issued the subpoenas. "The Senate and the House remain dedicated to saving Terri Schiavo's life," Senate Majority Leader Bill Frist said. The hearings are supposedly to review health care policies and practices of non-ambulatory persons or long-term care of incapacitated adults. But congressional leaders were not expected to go through with them since they were supposed to be used as a delay tactic only.

Federal criminal law protects witnesses called before official congressional committee proceedings from anyone who may obstruct or impede a witness attendance or testimony, and those who violates this law is subject to criminal fines and imprisonment.

Rep. Henry Waxman of California, senior Democrat on the Government Reform Committee, called the subpoenas a "flagrant abuse of power."

"The committee has no business inserting itself in the middle of an excruciating private family matter," he said.

In Tampa, the Schindlers attorney filed a petition in U.S. District Court, a "last-ditch" effort to get the courts to stop removal of the feeding tube. Within hours, a judge tossed it out.

* * *

Schiavo was 26 when she suffered cardiac arrest on Feb. 25, 1990. Her brain went without oxygen for five minutes. Doctors believe she suffered a chemical imbalance possibly caused by an eating disorder.

While the court, based on doctors' testimony, ruled she is in a vegetative state, her parents say she isn't. People in a persistent vegetative state may sleep and wake, grimace or laugh. But such movements are involuntary. They are not conscious, have no awareness of their surroundings, and have no thinking abilities.

On Friday, the Government Reform Committee petitioned Greer to intervene in the case so it could ask for a delay. Greer called an emergency hearing in Clearwater.

As the legal drama unfolded, a hospice priest administered communion to Schiavo, a Catholic, through the tube, and the last rites.

With events breaking quickly, Greer, lawyers for the House, Michael Schiavo and the Schindlers along with reporters crowded into a conference room at the courthouse as a telephone conference was set up.

At 12:30 p.m., just a half hour to the planned tube removal, Greer hadn't called into the conference.

Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge David Demers, chief of the circuit, got on the line and said he was trying to get in touch with Greer, who was guarded at an undisclosed location. Demers temporarily barred removal of the feeding tube, but ordered everyone to remain on standby.

Minutes later, Greer contacted a bailiff by cell phone and the hearing began. Greer quickly dispensed with the House motion to intervene. As a House attorney explained why lawmakers wanted a delay to hold a hearing March 25 at the hospice, Greer cut him off. "How many other field trips are scheduled for people on feeding tubes?"

"I'm not aware that there are any others at this time," said attorney Kerry Kircher.

Minutes after Greer's confirmed his order, hospice staff asked family to leave Schiavo's room.

An unidentified representative of Michael Schiavo and a doctor, and hospice staff, were in the room before the tube was removed. They said a prayer, Felos said, and shed some tears.

"It was a very calm, peaceful procedure," he said. "Of course with a degree of emotion."

Michael Schiavo came to the room shortly after the tube was removed, Felos said.

Schiavo's brother-in-law, Michael Vitadamo, also was inside Terri's room when family was asked to leave. They were allowed back in about 4 p.m.

In that time, Schiavo had been moved from her bed to a chair. The room had been rearranged so a police officer could observe any visitors inside the room. The tube was gone.

The Rev. Patrick Mahoney, director of the Christian Defense Coalition, said protesters will try to bring bread and water into the hospice today. Mahoney said when police officers stop the protesters, they will say "I'm sorry, I must feed my sister."

* * *

Gibbs said he had one remaining legal option: an appeal to the federal 11th Circuit appeals court in Atlanta that he planned to file quickly.

And he hasn't given up hope that Florida lawmakers may yet step in. The Florida House has passed a bill, but few expect their measure to gain approval in the Senate.

The U.S. House appealed Greer's order to the Florida Supreme Court. The court quickly dismissed it. Late Friday, the House went to the U.S. Supreme Court and asked it to order the feeding tube to be reinserted while it pursues appeals to have its subpoenas recognized.

House and Senate leaders are meeting behind closed doors this weekend, and expect to return to the Capitol Monday afternoon to vote on a bill.

As of late Friday, the two chambers still had major differences.

Both bills sought the same result: moving the case to federal court, where a judge would hold a new trial to review the facts and determine whether Schiavo's rights were violated.

Late Friday, Republican House members were told to remain accessible throughout the weekend.

"We will fight for Terri's life and spend all the time necessary to do that," DeLay said. "For friends, family and the millions of people praying around the world this Palm Sunday weekend, Terri Schiavo will not be forsaken."

Times staff writers Wes Allison, Bill Adair, Lauren Bayne Anderson, Lisa Greene, Alisa Ulferts, Tom Zucco and Christopher Goffard contributed to this report, which includes information from the Associated Press.

[Last modified March 19, 2005, 07:43:19]


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