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Last-Ditch Efforts For Schiavo

The House of Representatives and Florida legislature have both entered the battle over the removal of the feeding tube keeping alive a brain-damaged woman whose husband has been given permission by a state court to allow her to die.

The legislative moves followed a Florida appeals court's refusal Wednesday to block the removal of Terri Schiavo's feeding tube. For years her husband has battled her parents over his efforts to allow her to die, which he contends she would prefer rather than live in a vegetative state.

Her parents, Bob and Mary Schindler, are playing what could be their last legal card, reports Gordon Byrd of CBS radio affiliate WHNZ in Tampa. Their attorney, David Gibbs, is taking the matter to the U.S. Supreme Court.

"We're going to be petitioning Justice Kennedy for the stay and ask that Terri's life be spared," said Gibbs.

The Schindlers planned to ask the Supreme Court to consider whether their daughter's religious freedom and due process rights have been violated.

Meanwhile, the Florida Department of Children and Families, rebuffed last week when it tried to enter the case, will ask for its own stay at a hearing Thursday afternoon.

The U.S. House of Representatives bill, passed on a voice vote late Wednesday, would move such a case to federal court. Federal judges have twice turned down efforts by the Schindlers to move the case out of Florida courts, citing a lack of jurisdiction.

Senate Republicans are introducing a separate bill to give Schiavo and her family standing in federal court, and they hope it can be debated on Thursday, a Republican aide said.

Under the House legislation, a federal judge would decide whether withholding or withdrawing food, fluids or medical treatment from an incapacitated person violates the Constitution or U.S. law. It would apply only to incapacitated people who had not left directives dealing with being kept alive artificially and for whom a state judge had authorized the withholding of food or medical treatment.

In Tallahassee, the House and Senate were considering competing proposals to prevent the removal of Terri Schiavo's feeding tube.

The bills would block the removal of feeding tubes from patients in a persistent vegetative state who didn't leave specific verbal or written instructions otherwise. But the Senate plan would only affect cases where families disagreed.

Schiavo, 41, suffered severe brain damage in 1990 when her heart stopped temporarily, and court-appointed doctors say she is in a persistent vegetative state. Her husband, Michael Schiavo, says she told him she would not want to be kept alive artificially. Her parents disagree that was her wish and say she could improve with proper treatment.

Florida Circuit Judge George Greer has granted Michael Schiavo permission to remove the feeding tube, a ruling a state appellate court upheld Wednesday. Without the feeding tube, which the state court allowed to be removed as early as Friday, Terri Schiavo would likely die in one to two weeks.

"What's going on in Florida regarding Terri Schiavo is nothing short of inhumane," said House Judiciary Chairman James Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.), who introduced the bill with Rep. Dave Weldon, a Florida Republican.

Some House members criticized the bill, which Rep. Jerrold Nadler, a New York Democrat, called "a dangerously reckless way to deal with some serious issues."

"It does not deal just with feeding tubes. It would allow intervention in any decision affecting any kind of medical care. Read the bill," Nadler said.

The Florida appeals court said in Wednesday's ruling that the issues the Schindlers' raised were not new ones and had been dealt with previously by numerous courts.

"Not only has Mrs. Schiavo's case been given due process, but few, if any similar cases have ever been afforded this heightened level of process," Chief Judge Chris Altenbernd wrote.

The court also rejected the Department of Children & Families' request for a 60-day stay while that agency investigates allegations that Terri Schiavo has been abused.

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