The Truth about Terri Schiavo
LEGALIZED MURDER IN AMERICA
1 - CARLA IYER’S AFFIDAVIT
Affidavit
State of Florida
County of Pinellas
Before me, the undersigned authority, personally appeared
Carla Sauer Iyer, R.N., who being first duly sworn, deposes and says:
1. My name is Carla Sauer Iyer. I am over the age of
eighteen and make this statement of my own personal knowledge.
2. I am a registered nurse in the State of Florida,
having been licensed continuously in Florida, from 1997 to the present.
Prior to that, I was a Licensed Practical Nurse for about four years.
3. I was employed at Palm Gardens of Largo Convalescent
Center in Largo, Florida, from April of 1995 to July 1996, while Terri
Schiavo was a patient there.
4. It was clear to me at Palm Gardens that all decisions
regarding Terri Schiavo were made by Michael Schiavo, with no allowance made
for any discussion, debate or normal professional judgment. My initial
training there consisted solely of the instruction, "Do what Michael Schiavo
tells you or you will be terminated." This struck me as extremely odd.
5. I was very disturbed by the decision-making protocol,
as no allowance whatsoever was made for professional responsibility. The
atmosphere throughout the facility was dominated by Mr. Schiavo’s
intimidation. Everyone there, with the exception of several people who
seemed to be close to Michael, was intimidated by him. Michael Schiavo
always had an overbearing attitude, yelling numerous times such things as
"this is my order and you’re going to follow it." He is very large and uses
menacing body language, such as standing too close to you, getting right in
your face and practically shouting.
6. To the best of my recollection, rehabilitation had
been ordered earlier for Terri by medical professionals, but I never saw any
being done or had any reason at all to believe that there was ever any rehab
of Terri done at Palm Gardens while I was there. I became concerned because
nothing was being done for Terri at all, no antibiotics, no tests, no range
of motion therapy, no stimulation, no nothing. Michael said again and again
that Terri should not get any rehab, etc. I and a CNA named Roxy would give
Terri range of motion anyway. One time, I put a wash cloth in Terri’s hand
to keep her fingers from curling together, and Michael saw it and made me
take it out, saying that it was therapy.
7. Terri’s medical condition was systematically distorted
and misrepresented [to the public]. When I worked with her, she was alert
and oriented. Terri spoke on a regular basis while in my presence, saying
such things as "mommy," and "help me." "Help me" was, in fact, one of her
most frequent utterances. I heard her say it hundreds of times. Terri would
try to say the word "pain" when she was in discomfort, but it came out more
like "pay." She didn’t say the "n" sound very well. Other ways that she
would indicate that she was in pain included pursing her lips, grimacing,
thrashing in bed, curling her toes or moving her legs around. She would let
you know when she had a bowel movement by flipping up the covers and pulling
on her diaper.
8. When I came into her room and said, "Hi, Terri," she
would always recognize my voice and her name, and would turn her head all
the way toward me, saying "Haaaiiiii" sort of, as she did. I recognized this
as a "Hi," which is very close to what it sounded like, the whole sound
being only a second or two long. When I told her humorous stories about my
life or something I read in the paper, Terri would chuckle, sometimes more a
giggle or laugh. She would move her whole body, upper and lower. Her legs
would sometimes be off the bed, and need to be repositioned.
I made numerous entries into the nursing notes in her
chart, stating verbatim what she said and her various behaviors; but by my
next on-duty shift, the notes would be deleted from her chart. Every time I
made a positive entry about any responsiveness of Terri’s, someone would
remove it after my shift ended.
Michael always demanded to see her chart as soon as he
arrived, and would take it in her room with him. I documented Terri’s rehab
potential well, writing whole pages about Terri’s responsiveness, but they
would always be deleted by the next time I saw her chart. The reason I wrote
so much was that everybody else seemed to be afraid to make positive entries
for fear of their job, but I felt very strongly that a nurses’ job was to
accurately record everything that bears on a patient’s condition. I upheld
the Nurses Practice Act, and if it cost me my job, I was willing to accept
that.
9. Throughout my time at Palm Gardens, Michael Schiavo
was focused on Terri’s death. Michael would say, "When is she going to die?"
"Has she died yet?" and "When is that __ gonna die?" Other statements which
I recall him making include, "Can’t you do anything to accelerate her death;
won’t she ever die?" When she wouldn’t die, Michael would be furious.
10. Any time Terri would be sick, as with a UTI or fluid
buildup in her lungs, colds, pneumonia, Michael would be visibly excited,
thrilled even, hoping that she would die. He would call me, as I was the
nurse supervisor on the floor, and ask for every little detail about her
temperature, blood pressure, etc., and would call back [later] frequently
[on the phone] asking if she was dead yet. He would blurt out, "I’m going to
be rich!" and would talk about all the things he would buy when Terri died,
which included a new car, a new boat, and going to Europe, among other
things.
11. When Michael visited Terri, he always had the door
closed and locked while he was with her. He would typically be there about
twenty minutes or so. When he left, Terri would be trembling, crying
hysterically, and would be very pale and have cold sweats. It looked to me
like Terri was having a hypoglycemic reaction [from too much insulin in her
blood], so I’d check her blood sugar. The glucometer reading would be so low
it was below the range where it would register an actual number reading. I
would put dextrose in Terri’s mouth to counteract it. This happened about
five times on my shift as I recall. Normally, Terri’s blood sugar levels
were very stable, due to the uniformity of her diet through tube feeding. It
is my belief that Michael injected Terri with regular insulin, which is very
fast-acting.
12. . . [Carla Iyer, the author of this legal affidavit,
mentions an LPN who was very anxious for Terri to die. But when Carla phoned
the police about this, she was terminated from the nursing home.]
13. . . [Carla tells how that LPN was very friendly with
Michael, never shouted at by him, always did what he told her to do, and,
while on duty at night, would have long calls from him on the phone.]
14. While at Palm Gardens, I became fearful for my
personal safety. This was due to Michael’s constant intimidation, including
his menacing body language, vocal tone and mannerisms.
—Carla Sauer Iyer, R.N., affidavit made September 2003.
2 - ATTORNEY’S LAST VISIT
Statement by Attorney Barbara Weller (who with David
Gibbs III of the Gibbs Law Firm of Seminole, Florida, represented Bob and
Mary Schindler in their efforts to save the life of their daughter, Terri.)
When Terri Schiavo’s feeding tube was removed at 1:45
p.m. on March 18, 2005, I was extremely surprised . . [She mentions how she
had been certain that state or federal government authorities would step in
and prevent it from happening, because they had a legal right to do so.] I
had done the legal research weeks before, and was fully convinced that Gov.
Bush had the power, under our co-equal branches of government, to issue a
reprieve in the face of a judicial death sentence intended to lead to the
starvation and dehydration of an innocent woman, when scores of doctors and
neurologists were saying she could be helped.
All morning long, as I was in the room with Terri and her
family, we were telling her that help was on the way. Terri was in good
spirits that morning. The mood in her room was jovial, particularly around
noontime, as we knew Congressional attorneys were on the scene and many were
working hard to save Terri’s life. For most of that time, I was visiting and
talking with Terri, along with Terri’s sister Suzanne Vitadamo, Suzanne’s
husband, and Terri’s aunt, who was visiting from New York to help provide
support for the family. A female Pinellas Park police officer was stationed
at the door outside Terri’s room.
Terri was sitting up in her lounge chair, dressed and
looking alert and well. Her feeding tube had been plugged in around 11 a.m.,
and we all felt good that she was still being fed. Suzanne and I were
talking, joking, and laughing with Terri, telling her she was going to go to
Washington, D.C. to testify before Congress, which meant that finally
Terri’s husband, Michael, would be required to fix her wheelchair. When that
was done, Suzanne would be able to take Terri to the mall shopping and could
wheel her outdoors every day to feel the wind and sunshine on her face,
something she has not been able to do for more than five years [because her
husband refused it].
When I noticed Terri’s window blinds were pulled down, I
went to the window to raise them so Terri could look at the beautiful garden
outside her window and see the sun after several days of rain. As sunlight
came into the room, Terri’s eyes widened and she was obviously very pleased
. . [More about their talk together.]
Suzanne and I continued to talk and joke with Terri for
probably an hour or more. At one point Suzanne called Terri the "bionic
woman," and I heard Terri laugh out loud heartily for the first time since I
have been visiting with her. She laughed so hard that for the first time I
noticed the dimples in her cheeks.
The most dramatic event of this visit happened at one
point when I was sitting on Terri’s bed next to Suzanne. Terri was sitting
in her lounge chair and her aunt was standing at the foot of the chair. I
stood up and leaned over Terri. I took her arms in both of my hands. I said
to her, "Terri, if you could only say ‘I want to live,’ this whole thing
could be over today." I begged her to try very hard to say, "I want to
live."
To my enormous shock and surprise, Terri’s eyes opened
wide; she looked me square in the face, and with a look of great
concentration, she said, "Ahhhhhh." Then, seeming to summon up all the
strength she had, she virtually screamed, "Waaaaaa." She yelled so loudly
that Michael Vitadamo, Suzanne’s husband, and the female police officer who
were then standing together outside Terri’s door, clearly heard her. At that
point, Terri had a look of anguish on her face, such as I had never seen
before, and she seemed to be struggling hard, but was unable to complete the
sentence. She became very frustrated and began to cry. I was horrified that
I was obviously causing Terri so much anguish. Suzanne and I began to stroke
Terri’s face and hair to comfort her. I told Terri I was very sorry. We told
her she didn’t have to say it any more, and that I would tell the world that
she had tried to say, "I want to live."
Suzanne and I continued to visit and talk with Terri,
along with other family members who came and went in the room, until about
2:00 p.m., when we were all told to leave—after Judge Greer denied yet
another motion for stay and ordered the removal of the feeding tube to
proceed. As we left the room, the female police officer outside the door was
trying to keep from crying.
Just as Terri’s husband, Michael, has told the world he
must keep an alleged promise to kill Terri—a promise "remembered" after
being awarded a millions dollars [by the court to be used solely to care for
her for the rest of her life, involving giving her rehabilitation] and
nearly a decade after the fact;—so I must keep my promise to Terri. And
immediately. Time is running out for her. I went out to the banks of cameras
outside the hospice facility and told the story. Now I must tell the story
in writing for the world to hear.
About four in the afternoon, several hours after the
feeding tube was removed, I returned to Terri’s room. By that time, she was
alone except for a male police officer now standing inside the door. When I
entered the room and began to speak to her, Terri started to cry and tried
to speak to me immediately. It was one of the most helpless feelings I have
ever had.
Just before I left the room, I leaned over Terri and
spoke right into her ear. I told her I was very sorry I had not been able to
stop the feeding tube from being taken out and I was very sorry I had to
leave her alone. But I reminded her that Jesus would stay right by her
side—even when no one else was there with her. When I mentioned Jesus’ name,
Terri again laughed out loud. She became very agitated, and began loudly
trying to speak to me again. As Terri continued to laugh and try to speak, I
quietly prayed in her ear, kissed, placed her in Jesus care, and left the
room.
—Statement by Attorney Barbara Weller.
3 - ADDITIONAL INFORMATION
The following statements and facts were collected from
various sources:
• On March 18, the day the feeding tube was removed,
Michael Schiavo told the press that it was because he loved his wife, Terri,
that he must fulfill her request to let her die.
• The day after the feeding tube was removed, Michael
gave orders that Terri’s parents and relatives could no longer visit her
(although they later returned.)
• Three days after the feeding tube was removed, on March
20, 2005, Terri suddenly and very mysteriously developed a type of high
fever which can be brought on by the giving of certain drugs.
• The Florida State statute on "persistent vegetative
state" specifies that the person must be (1) unconscious, (2) unable to
swallow food, and (3) unable to make any communication. None of these apply
to Terri Shiavo.
• Under normal state law, Terri, who is 41 years old now,
has a right to due process, a right to equal rights, and a right to live.
• When family members are not in the room, Michael
requires that the blinds be closed. Some believe he thinks this might help
her die quicker. He also refuses to let her be taken outside.
• The affidavit made by Carla Sauer Iyer, R.N. (quoted
earlier in this study) was presented to Judge Greer in September 2003. He
totally ignored it, along with an abundance of other evidence offered in
court, repeatedly declaring, then and thereafter, that no evidence has ever
been presented that Terri is totally incapacitated and unconscious.
• George Greer has been the only judge to which evidence
has ever been presented. No other judge has ever reviewed the evidence. All
higher courts have refused to consider the case.
• Judge Greer issued an order to "prevent the governor’s
office from seeking additional information from witnesses, which also
prevents a much desired interview with Michael Schiavo. Ken Connor, the
governor’s attorney, argued that such questioning is necessary because
lawmakers were uncomfortable with Michael Schiavo’s motives."—Center for
Reclaiming America, May 6, 2004.
"Judge Greer has repeatedly allowed Michael Schiavo to
skirt his statutory duty to file mandatory annual guardianship plans to
establish a ward’s approved plan of care for the coming year. This appears
to be a direct violation of the applicable Florida Statutes."—Daily
Standard, January 30, 2004.
• "Because the legislature of Florida created
guardianships to be administered by the courts, judges are mandated to
strictly comply with the dictates of the law. But Judge Greer hasn’t."—Tampa
Tribune, April 13, 2004.
• "Over the years [Judge] Greer has repeatedly allowed
Michael to shirk his legal mandate as guardian to file annual prospective
‘guardianship plans,’ specifying his proposal for providing for Terri’s
medical and social needs for the coming year."—Daily Standard, April 30,
2004.
• Three nurses (Heidi Law, Carla Sauer Iyer, and Carolyn
Johnson) have presented testimony in court, all of which has been ignored by
Judge Greer. Each testified that Michael was abusive to Terri and may have
attempted to kill her by insulin injections and attempts to induce pneumonia
by turning the thermostat in her room to 64 o
F.
• Heidi Law, a CNA at the Palm Gardens nursing home who
cared for Terri in 1997, filed a sworn affidavit that she was able to feed
Terri normally on many occasions. In spite of the fact that Michael required
that food only be given through a feeding tube, Terri was able to normally
swallow food which Heidi gave her secretly. This included orange and apple
juice, and Jello "which she was able to swallow and enjoyed immensely." The
only reason Heidi did not feed Terri more frequently was "because I was so
afraid of being caught by Michael."
• Michael Baden, a top forensic patholgist in the nation
when interviewed on Fox News (October 25, 2003), made several statements
regarding Terri’s bone scan and injuries: Her injuries were not consistent
with a heart attack; for there is no cardiac evidence to support it. It
would be extremely rare for a woman her age and in good health to have a
potassium imbalance. She had injuries consistent with severe trauma,
possibly caused by a beating. The injuries, as noted in medical records,
warrant an immediate investigation.
• Dr. William Hammesfahr, a neurologist who is a Nobel
prize nominee, testified that Terri’s neck injuries are consistent with only
one type of injury: an attempted strangulation at some earlier time.
• Michael has prevented Terri from undergoing a barium
swallow test, a procedure necessary to ascertain the consistency of foods
able to be taken by mouth.
• Michael Shiavo has stated that, after Terri has died,
he will refuse to let her body receive an autopsy. He does not want her
examined during life, nor after death. It might reveal too much.
• Michael has hired Dr. Stanton Tripodis as the physician
to "care for Terri." Tripodis has five malpractice suits (initiated between
1994 and 1998) against him.
• Michael is committing adultery by living with another
woman who has already given birth to one child, with another on the way.
This creates an obvious conflict of interest for Michael as Terri’s
guardian.
• Michael has committed both perjury (2 counts) and
insurance fraud by promising to provide care and therapy for his wife, in
exchange for the 1993 court award of $1.2 million. No care has ever been
provided to Terri. By terms of the court award, made at that time, whatever
money was left over after caring for Terri was to be handed over to Michael
upon her death. He has consistently placed Terri in facilities which provide
her with free, or near free, care.
• Michael’s attorney is George J. Felos. Felos is the
director of the Florida Right to Die organization, which strongly advocates
the death of the infirm and elderly. Felos has stated that he can ascertain
a person’s desire to die by "looking into their eyes and letting their
spirit speak directly to him."
This report was prepared on March 23, 2005. Unless
something unexpected occurs, by the time you read this, Terri will be dead.
—vf
"Disability activists have called for a nationwide
moratorium on the dehydration and starvation of people alleged to be in
‘persistent vegetative state.’ This would apply to individuals who do not
have an advance directive or durable power of attorney.
"The call for a moratorium is a reaction to the newly
published report indicating high levels of brain activity in people thought
to be in ‘minimally conscious state (MCS).’ The study, published in the
February issue of Neurology, discovered evidence that these individuals may
hear and understand much of what is going on around them, but are unable to
respond.
"The study drew a distinction between MCS and Persistent
Vegetative State (PVS), but the distinction is not a reliable one. In a
New York Times article, Dr. Joseph Fins mentioned research indicating a
30% misdiagnosis rate of PVS, indicating that nearly a third of persons
diagnosed in PVS are actually in "minimally conscious state." Fins is chief
of the medical ethics division of New York Presbyterian Hospital-Weill
Cornell Medical Center.
"With the exception of oblique references to Terri
Schiavo, current coverage of the study and its implications dance around the
most important issues regarding this study. Namely, thousands of people
around this country with labels of both MCS and PVS are being starved and
dehydrated, often without an advance directive indicating their wishes, or a
durable power of attorney appointing a substitute decision-maker they chose
for themselves.
" ‘Given the current research regarding brain activity
and misdiagnosis, it’s a virtual certainty that countless people have been
helpless to prevent their own deaths through starvation and dehydration,’
says Stephen Drake, research analyst for Not Dead Yet, a national disability
rights group opposed to legalization of assisted suicide and euthanasia."—Article
by Not Dead Yet, Inc., Forest Park, IL, Feb. 14, 2005.
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