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![]() "Gary" wrote in message ... "P.Fritz" wrote: And the strongest evidence that her husband could have given was announcing her desire immediately, not years later when he was impregnating someone else. Her husband does not have to do things on YOUR time-table. couldn't address the point directly I see..............had he announce her desires immediately, there would have been little question, waiting as he did raised many. As I understand it he tried for years to do everything he could to find a way for her to recover. It also seems very possible that for a few years after that he just didn't know what do to. It's very easy to imagine that he was in conflict between wanting to follow her expressed desires to not be kept alive by machines one the one hand -- and not wanting to make that horrible decision to let her die on the other. Then there was a while of legal battles. The fact that this took 13 years does not in any way mean that he did the wrong thing or that his motives are suspect. An dmy understanding is his revelations of her desires came about after the civil suit and his new girlfriend. "P.Fritz" wrote: The courts should have appointed a 3rd party guardian for her, but from what I understand, the parents were outlawyerd and once the judgment was entered, the high courts could only rule on the validity of the lower court ruling.....not retry the facts of the case. The husband was the legal guardian. Unless he was shown to be incompetent (which is not the same thing as just disagreeing with You) why should his rights be taken away? If a person signs a health proxy giving decision making rights to their spouse, then were in an accident, and then their parents contested the spouses rights -- but with no indication that the spouse was incompetent -- by what right & reason should a judge step in and assign rights to a 3rd party? I don't know if you are one of those "damned activist judges!" crowd, but to me, a judge that takes rights from someone for no reason would be *way* in the wrong. And just because the husband is not making the decision that you would want or just because you *think* his motives are suspect is not a good reason to take away his rights. PS: Someone mentioned here that a 3rd party guardian had been appointed as some point(s). Anyone know more about that? |
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