Literature supporting Terri Schiavo and her family hangs on a bulletin board at Our Lady of Good Counsel church, where Terri Schiavo attended grade school, in Southampton, Pennsylvania. (William Thomas Cain / Getty Images)
A sign at Archbishop Wood High School, where Terri Schiavo graduated in 1981, shows support for her and her family. (William Thomas Cain / Getty Images)
Protesters display signs and a photographs of Terri Schiavo with her mother outside the Pinellas Park Hospice on Oct. 25, 2003. (Peter Muhly / EPA)
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Terri Schiavo’s parents, Mary Schindler and Bob Schindler, listen to supporters in Pinellas Park, Fla. on March 12. (Paul Kizzle / AP)
George Felos, center, attorney for Terri Schiavo’s husband, Michael, talks to the media at the Pinellas County Courthouse in Clearwater, Fla. in February. (Tim Boyles / Getty Images)
Terri Schiavo’s father, Bob Schindler, lower left, and her brother Bob Schindler Jr., foreground, each spoke during a rally sponsored by Justice Coalition leader Ted Hires in front of the Federal Courthouse in downtown Jacksonville, Fla., in February. Jacksonville political and religious leaders were present to support the family’s efforts to get custody of their disabled daughter. (Bob Self / AP)
Judge George Greer listens to arguments in the Terri Schiavo case om Clearwater on Thursday. (Tim Boyles / Getty Images)
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Terri Schiavo’s sister, Suzanne Vitadamo, left, and father Robert Schindler listen while family attorney David Gibbs talks to the media outside the Woodside Hospice today. (Robert E. Hudson Jr. / EPA)
David Gibbs, attorney for Terri Shiavo’s family, issues a statement today outside the Woodside Hospice. (Robert E. Hudson Jr. / EPA)
D. Hanks, left, and Joan Milloy protest the removal of severely brain-damaged Terry Shiavo’s feeding tube today outside of Woodside Hospice. Hanks, who was born in The Netherlands and is bound to a wheelchair, suffers from Klipple Trenauney Syndrome (KT). (Robert E. Hudson Jr. / EPA)
Supporters of keeping a feeding tube in place for Terri Schiavo demonstrate today outside Woodside Hospice, her residence in Pinellas Park, Florida. The U.S. Senate Health Committee issued a subpeona for Schiavo and her husband, Michael, in a bid to stop removal of the tube. (Robert Sullivan AFP/Getty Images)