- MIAMI - (KRT) - Hours after
a judge ordered that Terri Schiavo wasn't to be removed from her hospice,
a team of Florida law enforcement agents were en route to seize her and
have her feeding tube reinserted - but they stopped short when local police
told them they would enforce the judge's order, The Miami Herald has learned.
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- Agents of the Florida Department of Law Enforcement told
police in Pinellas Park, the small town where Schiavo lies at Hospice Woodside,
that they were on the way to take her to a hospital to resume her feeding.
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- For a brief period, local police, who have officers around
the hospice to keep protesters out, prepared for what sources called a
showdown.
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- In the end, the state agents and the Department of Children
and Families backed down, apparently concerned about confronting local
police outside the hospice.
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- "We told them that unless they had the judge with
them when they came, they were not going to get in," said a source
with the local police.
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- "The FDLE called to say they were en route to the
scene," said an official with the city police who requested anonymity.
"When the Sheriff's Department, and our department, told them they
could not enforce their order, they backed off."
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- The incident, known only to a few, underscores the intense
emotion and murky legal terrain that the Schiavo case has created. It also
shows that agencies answering directly to Florida Gov. Jeb Bush had planned
to use a wrinkle in state law that would have allowed them to legally get
around the judge's order. The exception in the law allows public agencies
to freeze a judge's order whenever an agency appeals it.
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- Participants in the high-stakes test of wills, who spoke
with The Miami Herald on the condition of anonymity, said they believed
the standoff could ultimately have led to a constitutional crisis - and
a confrontation between dueling lawmen.
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- "There were two sets of law enforcement officers
facing off, waiting for the other to blink," said one official with
knowledge of Thursday morning's activities. In jest, one official said
local police discussed "whether we had enough officers to hold off
the National Guard."
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- "It was kind of a showdown on the part of the locals
and the state police," the official said. "It was not too long
after that Jeb Bush was on TV saying that, evidently, he doesn't have as
much authority as people think."
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- State officials on Friday vigorously denied the notion
that any "showdown" occurred.
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- The Department of Children and Families "directed
no such action," said agency spokeswoman Zoraya Suarez.
-
- Said Bush spokesman Jacob DiPietre: "There was no
showdown. We were ready to go. We didn't want to break the law. There was
a process in place and we were following the process. The judge had an
order and we were following the order."
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- Tim Caddell, a spokesman for the city of Pinellas Park,
declined to discuss the event.
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- The developments that set Thursday morning's events in
motion began the previous afternoon, when the governor and DCF chief Lucy
Hadi held an impromptu news conference to announce that they were considering
sheltering Schiavo under the state's adult protection law. The department
has been besieged, officials say, by thousands of calls alleging Schiavo
is the victim of abuse or neglect.
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- Alerted by the Bush administration that Schiavo might
be on her way to their facility, officials at Morton Plant Hospital went
to court Wednesday, asking Florida Circuit Judge George Greer, who ordered
the removal of Schiavo's feeding tube last week, what to do.
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- "It's an extraordinary situation," said Beth
Hardy, a hospital spokeswoman. "I don't think any of us has seen anything
like it. Ever."
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- Greer signed an order Wednesday afternoon forbidding
the department from "taking possession of Theresa Marie Schiavo or
removing her" from the hospice. He directed "each and every and
singular Sheriff of the state of Florida" to enforce his order.
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- But Thursday, at 8:15 a.m., DCF lawyers appealed Greer's
order to judges at the Second District Court of Appeal in Lakeland.
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- That created the window of time to seize Schiavo. When
DCF filed its appeal, it effectively froze the judge's Wednesday order.
It took nearly three hours before the judge found out and canceled the
automatic stay, shortly before 11 a.m.
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- Administrators of the 72-bed hospice, who have endured
a withering siege of their facility by protesters since Greer last Friday
ordered Schiavo's feeding tube be removed, declined to discuss Thursday
morning's events in any detail.
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- "I don't really know, or pretend to know, the specifics
of what is going on behind the scenes," said Mike Bell, a spokesman
for Hospice of the Florida Suncoast, which operates Woodside.
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- According to sources, DCF intended to take Schiavo to
Morton Plant Hospital, where her feeding tube had been reinserted in 2003
following a previous judicial order allowing its removal. But hospice officials
were aware that the hospital wasn't likely to perform surgery to reinsert
the tube without an order from Greer.
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- "People knew that taking (Schiavo) did not equate
with immediate reinsertion of the feeding tube," a source said. "Hospital
officials were working with their legal counsel, and their advisers, trying
to figure out which order superseded which, and what action they should
take."
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- Hardy, the hospital spokeswoman, said she doesn't believe
the hospital was made aware Thursday morning that DCF and state police
planned to bring Schiavo in.
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- George Felos, the attorney for Schiavo's husband, Michael,
said he doesn't think DCF officials knew of the window of opportunity they
had created until well after they filed their appeal.
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- "Frankly, I don't believe when they filed their
notice of appeal they realized that that gave them an automatic stay,"
Felos said. "When we filed our motion to vacate the automatic stay
... they realized they had a short window of opportunity and they wanted
to extend that as long as they could.
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- "I believe that as soon as DCF knew they had an
opportunity they were mobilizing to take advantage of it, without a doubt."
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- (Staff writers Phil Long and Marc Caputo contributed
to this story.)
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