- PINELLAS PARK, Fla. - As
Terri Schiavo's health waned, her parents pushed on to restore the brain-damaged
woman's feeding tube after the nation's highest court and judges in Florida
defeated their latest legal appeals.
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- Bob and Mary Schindler held onto the slim hope that Gov.
Jeb Bush would somehow find a way to intervene or a federal judge who had
turned them down before would see things their way. Bush warned, however,
that he was running out of options.
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- "We're minute by minute right now. But it doesn't
look like we have much left," Suzanne Vitadamo, Terri Schiavo's sister,
told The Associated Press late Thursday.
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- As of early Friday, Terri Schiavo, 41, had been without
food or water for almost seven days and was showing signs of dehydration
" flaky skin, dry tongue and lips, and sunken eyes, according to attorneys
and friends of the Schindlers. Doctors have said she would probably die
within a week or two of the tube being pulled.
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- The woman's husband, Michael Schiavo, says his wife would
not want to be kept alive artificially, and he has been backed by years
of court rulings affirming doctors' diagnoses that Terri Schiavo lives
in a persistent vegetative state.
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- The Schindlers appeared before a federal judge in Tampa
late Thursday to make another emergency request that the feeding tube be
reattached while they pursue claims that Schiavo's religious and due-process
rights were violated. U.S. District Judge James Whittemore previously rejected
a similar request and said Thursday he would work through the night to
issue his new ruling.
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- "It's very frustrating. Every minute that goes by
is a minute that Terri is being starved and dehydrated to death,"
said her brother, Bobby Schindler, who said seeing her was like looking
at "pictures of prisoners in concentration camps."
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- Michael Schiavo's brother, Brian Schiavo, strongly disagreed
with that assessment, telling CNN that Terri Schiavo "does look a
little withdrawn" but insisting she was not in pain. He added that
starvation is simply "part of the death process."
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- A lawyer for Michael Schiavo said he hoped the woman's
parents and the governor would finally give up their fight.
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- "We believe it's time for that to stop as we approach
this Easter weekend and that Mrs. Schiavo be able to die in peace,"
attorney George Felos said.
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- In the federal court hearing, Schindler lawyer David
Gibbs III argued that Terri Schiavo's rights to life and privacy were being
violated. Whittemore interrupted as Gibbs attempted to liken Schiavo's
death to a murder.
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- "That is the emotional rhetoric of this case. It
does not influence this court, and cannot influence this court. I want
you to know it and I want the public to know it," Whittemore said.
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- A perimeter around the federal courthouse was evacuated
during the hearing after a suspicious backpack was found outside. The hearing
was not interrupted, and the package was safely detonated using a remote
device.
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- Thursday evening, a man was arrested after he went to
a gun store in Seminole and threatened its owner with a box cutter while
demanding a weapon to "rescue" Terri Schiavo, the Pinellas County
sheriff's office said.
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- Terri Schiavo suffered brain damage in 1990 when her
heart stopped briefly from a chemical imbalance believed to have been brought
on by an eating disorder. She left no living will, but her husband argued
that she told him she would not want to be kept alive artificially. Her
parents dispute that, and contend she could get better.
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- The dispute has led to what may be the longest, most
heavily litigated right-to-die case in U.S. history.
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- Earlier Thursday, the U.S. Supreme Court (news - web
sites), without explanation, refused to order the feeding tube reinserted.
The case worked its way through the federal courts and reached the Supreme
Court after Congress passed an extraordinary law over the weekend to let
the Schindlers take their case to federal court.
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- Later Thursday, Pinellas County Circuit Judge George
Greer declined to hear Bush's new allegations that Schiavo was neglected
and abused and that her diagnosis as being in a persistent vegetative state
may be wrong.
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- "The requested intervention...appears to be brought
for the purpose of circumventing the courts' final judgment and order setting
the removal date in violation of the separation of powers doctrine,"
Greer wrote.
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- Bush appealed that decision to the 2nd District Court
of Appeal. The Florida Supreme Court (news - web sites) later declined
to take up a separate appeal on a Greer injunction that blocked the state's
social services agency from taking temporary custody of Schiavo while challenges
are argued. State law allows the Department of Children & Families
to act in emergency situations of adult abuse.
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- The department also filed another petition before Greer
seeking to provide emergency protective services for Schiavo. Greer had
not scheduled a hearing, but he indicated one could occur Monday, according
to Bush's office.
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- "For this lockdown to occur without having the ability
to have an open mind, and say, 'Well, maybe there are new facts on the
table, maybe there are new technologies, maybe, just maybe, we should be
cautious about this' ... is very troubling," Bush said.
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- In his ruling, Greer said an affidavit from a neurologist
who believes that Schiavo is "minimally conscious" was not enough
to set aside his decision to allow the withdrawal of food and water.
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- "By clear and convincing evidence, it was determined
she did not want to live under such burdensome conditions and that she
would refuse such medical treatment-assistance," Greer wrote.
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- ___
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- Associated Press writers Mitch Stacy in Clearwater, Vickie
Chachere and Jill Barton in Tampa, and Jackie Hallifax and Brendan Farrington
in Tallahassee contributed to this report.
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