Terri Schiavo: Judicial Murder
Her crime was being disabled, voiceless, and at the disposal of our media
by Nat Hentoff
March 29th, 2005 10:59 AM
BY NAT HENTOFF
For all the world to see, a 41-year-old woman, who has committed no crime, will
die of dehydration and starvation in the longest public execution in American
history.
She is not brain-dead or comatose, and breathes naturally on her own. Although
brain-damaged, she is not in a persistent vegetative state, according to an
increasing number of radiologists and neurologists.
Among many other violations of her due process rights, Terri Schiavo has never
been allowed by the primary judge in her case?Florida Circuit Judge George
Greer, whose conclusions have been robotically upheld by all the courts above
him?to have her own lawyer represent her.
Greer has declared Terri Schiavo to be in a persistent vegetative state, but he
has never gone to see her. His eyesight is very poor, but surely he could have
visited her along with another member of his staff. Unlike people in a
persistent vegetative state, Terri Schiavo is indeed responsive beyond mere
reflexes.
While lawyers and judges have engaged in a minuet of death, the American Civil
Liberties Union, which would be passionately criticizing state court decisions
and demanding due process if Terri were a convict on death row, has shamefully
served as co-counsel for her husband, Michael Schiavo, in his insistent desire
to have her die.
Months ago, in discussing this case with ACLU executive director Anthony Romero,
and later reading ACLU statements, I saw no sign that this bastion of the Bill
of Rights has ever examined the facts concerning the egregious conflicts of
interest of her husband and guardian Michael Schiavo, who has been living with
another woman for years, with whom he has two children, and has violated a long
list of his legal responsibilities as her guardian, some of them directly
preventing her chances for improvement. Judge Greer has ignored all of them.
In February, Florida's Department of Children and Families presented Judge Greer
with a 34-page document listing charges of neglect, abuse, and exploitation of
Terri by her husband, with a request for 60 days to fully investigate the
charges. Judge Greer, soon to remove Terri's feeding tube for the third time,
rejected the 60-day extension. (The media have ignored these charges, and much
of what follows in this article.)
Michael Schiavo, who says he loves and continues to be devoted to Terri, has
provided no therapy or rehabilitation for his wife (the legal one) since 1993.
He did have her tested for a time, but stopped all testing in 1993. He insists
she once told him she didn't want to survive by artificial means, but he didn't
mention her alleged wishes for years after her brain damage, while saying he
would care for her for the rest of his life.
Terri Schiavo has never had an MRI or a PET scan, nor a thorough neurological
examination. Republican Senate leader Bill Frist, a specialist in heart-lung
transplant surgery, has, as The New York Times reported on March 23,
"certified [in his practice] that patients were brain dead so that their organs
could be transplanted." He is not just "playing doctor" on this case.
During a speech on the Senate floor on March 17, Frist, speaking of Judge
Greer's denial of a request for new testing and examinations of Terri, said
reasonably, "I would think you would want a complete neurological exam" before
determining she must die.
Frist added: "The attorneys for Terri's parents have submitted 33 affidavits
from doctors and other medical professionals,all of whom say that Terri should
be re-evaluated."
In death penalty cases, defense counsel for retarded and otherwise mentally
disabled clients submit extensive medical tests. Ignoring the absence of
complete neurological exams, supporters of the deadly decisions by Judge Greer
and the trail of appellate jurists keep reminding us how extensive the
litigation in this case has been?19 judges in six courts is the mantra. And more
have been added. So too in many death penalty cases, but increasingly, close to
execution, inmates have been saved by DNA.
As David Gibbs, the lawyer for Terri's parents, has pointed out, there has been
a manifest need for a new federal, Fourteenth Amendment review of the case
because Terri's death sentence has been based on seven years of "fatally flawed"
state court findings?all based on the invincible neglect of elementary due
process by Judge George Greer.
I will be returning to the legacy of Terri Schiavo in the weeks ahead because
there will certainly be long-term reverberations from this case and its
fracturing of the rule of law in the Florida courts and then the federal
courts?as well as the disgracefully ignorant coverage of the case by the great
majority of the media, including such pillars of the trade as The New York
Times, The Washington Post, The Miami Herald, and the Los
Angeles Times as they copied each other's misinformation, like Terri Schiavo
being "in a persistent vegetative state."
Do you know that nearly every major disability rights organization in the
country has filed a legal brief in support of Terri's right to live?
But before I go back to other Liberty Beats?the CIA's torture renditions and the
whitewashing of the landmark ACLU and Human Rights First's lawsuit against
Donald Rumsfeld for his accountability in the widespread abuse of detainees,
including evidence of torture?I must correct the media and various "qualified
experts" on how a person dies of dehydration if he or she is sentient, as Terri
Schiavo demonstrably is.
On March 15's Nightline, in an appallingly one-sided, distorted account
of the Schiavo case, Terri's husband, Michael?who'd like to marry the woman he's
now living with?said that once Terri's feeding tube is removed at his insistent
command, Terri "will drift off into a nice little sleep and eventually pass on
and be with God."
As an atheist, I cannot speak to what he describes as his abandoned wife's
ultimate destination, but I can tell how Wesley Smith (consultant to the Center
for Bioethics and Culture)?whom I often consult on these bitterly controversial
cases because of his carefully researched books and articles?describes death by
dehydration.
In his book Forced Exit (Times Books), Wesley quotes neurologist William
Burke: "A conscious person would feel it [dehydration] just as you and I would.
. . . Their skin cracks, their tongue cracks, their lips crack. They may have
nosebleeds because of the drying of the mucous membranes, and heaving and
vomiting might ensue because of the drying out of the stomach lining.
"They feel the pangs of hunger and thirst. Imagine going one day without a glass
of water! . . . It is an extremely agonizing death."
On March 23, outside the hospice where Terri Schiavo was growing steadily
weaker, her mother, Mary, said to the courts and to anyone who would listen and
maybe somehow save her daughter:
"Please stop this cruelty!"
While this cruelty was going on in the hospice, Michael Schiavo's serpentine
lawyer, George Felos, said to one and all: "Terri is stable, peaceful, and calm.
. . . She looked beautiful."
During the March 21 hearing before Federal Judge James D. Whittemore, who was
soon to be another accomplice in the dehydration of Terri, the relentless Mr.
Felos, anticipating the end of the deathwatch, said to the judge:
"Yes, life is sacred, but so is liberty, your honor, especially in this
country."
It would be useless, but nonetheless, I would like to inform George Felos that,
as Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas said: "The history of liberty is the
history of due process"?fundamental fairness.
Contrary to what you've read and seen in most of the media, due process has been
lethally absent in Terri Schiavo's long merciless journey through the American
court system.
"As to legal concerns," writes William Anderson?a senior psychiatrist at
Massachusetts General Hospital and a lecturer at Harvard University?"a guardian
may refuse any medical treatment, but drinking water is not such a procedure. It
is not within the power of a guardian to withhold, and not in the power of a
rational court to prohibit."
Ralph Nader agrees. In a statement on March 24, he and Wesley Smith (author of,
among other books, Culture of Death: The Assault of Medical Ethics in America)
said: "The court is imposing process over justice. After the first trial
[before Judge Greer], much evidence has been produced that should allow for a
new trial?which was the point of the hasty federal legislation.
"If this were a death penalty case, this evidence would demand
reconsideration. Yet, an innocent, disabled woman is receiving less justice. . .
. This case is rife with doubt. Justice demands that Terri be permitted to live."
(Emphasis added.)
But the polls around the country cried out that a considerable majority of
Americans wanted her to die without Congress butting in.
A March 20 ABC poll showed that 60 percent of the 501 adults consulted opposed
the ultimately unsuccessful federal legislation, and only 35 percent approved.
Moreover, 70 percent felt strongly that it was wrong for Congress to get into
such personal, private matters?and interfere with what some advocates of
euthanasia call "death with dignity." (So much for the Fourteenth Amendment's
guarantee of due process and equal protection of the laws.)
But, as Cathy Cleaver Ruse of the Secretariat for Pro-Life Activities of the
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops pointed out:
"The poll [questions] say she's 'on life support,' which is not true [since all
she needs is water], and that she has 'no consciousness,' which her family and
dozens of doctors dispute in sworn affidavits."
Many readers of this column are pro-choice, pro-abortion rights. But what choice
did Terri Schiavo have under our vaunted rule of law?which the president is
eagerly trying to export to the rest of the world? She had not left a living
will or a durable power of attorney, and so could not speak for herself. But the
American system of justice would not slake her thirst as she, on television, was
dying in front of us all.
What kind of a nation are we becoming? The CIA outsources torture?in violation
of American and international law?in the name of the freedoms we are fighting to
protect against terrorism. And we have watched as this woman, whose only crime
is that she is disabled, is tortured to death by judges, all the way to the
Supreme Court.
And keep in mind from the Ralph Nader-Wesley Smith report: "The courts . . .
have [also] ordered that no attempts be made to provide her water or food by
mouth. Terri swallows her own saliva. Spoon feeding is not medical treatment.
This outrageous order proves that the courts are not merely permitting medical
treatment to be withheld, they have ordered her to be made dead."
In this country, even condemned serial killers are not executed in this way.
Source
http://www.villagevoice.com/news/0513,hentoff,62489,6.html
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