Schindler family photo
⢠Terri on her wedding day, November 10, 1984.
Schindler family photo
⢠Bobby, Terri, Bob, Mary, and Suzanne Schindler on Terri's wedding day, November 10, 1984.
AP Images
⢠A 1987 Christmas photo of Terri, taken twenty-six months before her collapse.
Joe Walles/St. Petersburg Times/WPN
⢠Michael visits with Terri at St. Petersburg's College Harbor Nursing Home in November 1990, about nine months after her collapse.
David Nee, Photos for Him
⢠The sign outside of Woodside Hospice. Michael had Terri moved to Woodside on April 10, 2000.
AP Images
⢠Bob Schindler, left, with his wife, Mary, daughter Suzanne, and son, Bobby, at a hearing December 13, 2002, at the Pinellas County Courthouse. On November 22 the court had ruled that Michael Schiavo could have Terri's feeding stopped on January 3, 2003, but the Schindlers won a stay to continue Terri's feeding until an appellate court could rule on the case.
AP Images
⢠On October 23, 2003, Florida Governor Jeb Bush signed Terri's Law, the order that allowed her feeding tube to be reinserted. (Pictured here in June 2005.)
AP Images
⢠Michael Schiavo, left, answers questions at a news conference following oral arguments in the Florida Supreme Court case concerning Terri's Law, on August 31, 2004. With Michael are his brother Bryan, center, and his attorney George Felos, right.
St. Petersburg Times
⢠Bob and Mary Schindler, along with David Gibbs, raced Hurricane Jeanne across Florida to catch a flight to California to tell their story on Larry King Live Just days after the Florida Supreme Court ruled Tern's Law unconstitutional.
Tampa Tribune
⢠David Gibbs with the Schindlers at a press conference on February 25, 2005âthe day Judge Greer issued his third and final death order to remove Terri's feeding tube on March 18, 2005.
AP Images
⢠George Felos and David Gibbs talk before the start of a hearing in the Pinellas County Circuit Court on September 30, 2004.
AP Images
⢠Twelve pro-family organizations stage the Rose Rally for Terri on March 13, 2005. Supporters gather in Tallahassee's Old Capitol courtyard, holding one thousand long-stemmed roses to be delivered the following morning to Florida legislators as a reminder of the urgency at hand in the fight for Terri's life.