Hers was a small-town practice. She knew a lot of her patients. Most had no insurance and therefore could not afford the tests the state's experts said they needed to do. |
I just don't understand how they could have convicted her on the trafficking, especially with those tapes. |
I think the jury tried hard, but that doesn't mean I can't be bitterly disappointed. This could put someone behind bars for the rest of her life for something I'm not convinced is a crime, but unfortunately the state of Florida has made it so. |
I'm disappointed that it was not the barest minimum. It's a death penalty for her because she's 64 years old ... I think she's in a state of shock, understandably so. |
She did what she thought in her own professional judgment was best. She might not have been right, but that certainly doesn't mean she was criminally liable. |
She's 64 years old. She's a frail woman. I think she's in a state of shock, understandably so. |
Sprawl is killing people, some 300,000 premature deaths annually because of the sprawl sedentary lifestyle, and it is killing our natural environment, scenic vistas, biodiversity, rural towns and much more. |
This evidence is so weak and so fraught with danger to not only confuse the jury but also prejudice the defendant. |