INVESTIGATION FINDS NO EVIDENCE OF CRIME
Clearwater Police Criminal Investigations Detectives
concluded today an expansive and detailed investigation into suspicions
that physical harm done with criminal intent had been visited
upon a 40-year-old woman under the care of Hospice in Clearwater.
The investigation found no evidence of harm, injury
or violation as the result of a criminal act, said Police Chief
Sid Klein.
The Hospice patient, Mrs. Theresa M. Schiavo, was
the subject of investigative, forensic and medical scrutiny after
concern was expressed for her well-being on March 29, 2004.
At about 3:30 that Monday afternoon - as Mrs. Schiavo's
feeding regimen commenced - a Hospice employee noticed some marks
on Mrs. Schiavo's arms, and shared her observations with a Hospice
supervisor at the Park Place assisted living facility, 2750 Drew
Street. Concerns were heightened by the position of a plastic
hospital bracelet on Mrs. Schiavo's forearm; the positioning of
a plastic feeding tube wrapped around the chair in which she was
sitting; and the discovery of a small, purple medical apparatus,
initially described as a "needle cap."
(The lavender object, manufactured by a New York
medical supply company called Qosina, is not a hypodermic needle
cap, but rather a hollow, open-ended polypropylene "catheter
syringe tip adapter" - called a Luer, part # 41501 - and
is used as a plastic tubing connector in medical feeding and irrigation
setups; it has no application for injection).
The Hospice supervisor notified Mrs. Schiavo's husband,
Michael, who called his attorney and his wife's physician, Dr.
Stanton Tripodis. The physician examined Mrs. Schiavo at Park
Place, and authorized her transfer to Mease Hospital in Dunedin
for an examination. Various procedures, including toxicology tests
for the presence of unauthorized drugs, proved negative, and Mrs.
Schiavo was returned to Hospice care.
Clearwater Police Detectives conducted numerous
interviews with family members, physicians, Hospice employees
and others. The Mease Hospital attending physician found nothing
untoward about the marks on Mrs. Schiavo's arm, nor did her personal
physician. Neither physician quantified the marks on her upper
arm as evidence of an injection; the origin of these specific
marks is undetermined.
Although Detectives cannot say conclusively what
caused the other marks, it's believed they could have been the
result of a apparatus called a "Hoyer Lift," used to
move a patient from a reclining position on a bed to a sitting
position in a chair.
The plastic hospital bracelet, a rigid band of plastic,
may have worked itself up her forearm toward her elbow since Mrs.
Schiavo's arms are often contracted upward.
The feeding tube and its position was examined by
Hospice employees when concerns were initially expressed, and
subsequently by investigators: there was no indication of leakage;
detectives found no indication of intentional manipulation; the
monitor warning alarm was never activated, nor was the feeding
ever interrupted.
Detectives identified the lavender piece of plastic
found in Mrs. Schiavo's clothes as a tubing connector, and had
an independent company (National Medical Services of Willow Grove,
Pennsylvania) conduct chemical and gas examinations of swabs taken
from the Luer adapter. The test results were negative for foreign
substances.
The Clearwater Police Department found no evidence
of criminal activity, no indication of attempted criminal activity,
and no harm done to Mrs. Schiavo. The investigation has concluded.
All inquiries regarding this investigation should
be directed to Public Information Officer Wayne Shelor at (727)
562-4333.
/s/
SID KLEIN
Chief of Police