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DeLay's Own Tragic Crossroads
Family of the lawmaker involved in the Schiavo case decided in '88 to
let his comatose father die.

By Walter F. Roche Jr. and Sam Howe Verhovek, Times Staff Writers

CANYON LAKE, Texas — A family tragedy that unfolded in a Texas
hospital during the fall of 1988 was a private ordeal — without
judges, emergency sessions of Congress or the debate raging outside
Terri Schiavo's Florida hospice.

The patient then was a 65-year-old drilling contractor, badly injured
in a freak accident at his home. Among the family members keeping
vigil at Brooke Army Medical Center was a grieving junior congressman
— Rep. Tom DeLay (R-Texas).

More than 16 years ago, far from the political passions that have
defined the Schiavo controversy, the DeLay family endured its own
wrenching end-of-life crisis. The man in a coma, kept alive by
intravenous lines and oxygen equipment, was DeLay's father, Charles
Ray DeLay.

Then, freshly reelected to a third term in the House, the 41-year-old
DeLay waited, all but helpless, for the verdict of doctors.

Today, as House Majority Leader, DeLay has teamed with his Senate
counterpart, Bill Frist (R-Tenn.), to champion political intervention
in the Schiavo case. They pushed emergency legislation through
Congress to shift the legal case from Florida state courts to the
federal judiciary.

And DeLay is among the strongest advocates of keeping the woman, who
doctors say has been in a persistent vegetative state for 15 years,
connected to her feeding tube. DeLay has denounced Schiavo's husband,
as well as judges, for committing what he calls "an act of barbarism"
in removing the tube.

In 1988, however, there was no such fiery rhetoric as the congressman
quietly joined the sad family consensus to let his father die.

"There was no point to even really talking about it," Maxine DeLay,
the congressman's 81-year-old widowed mother, recalled in an interview
last week. "There was no way [Charles] wanted to live like that. Tom
knew — we all knew — his father wouldn't have wanted to live that way."

Doctors advised that he would "basically be a vegetable," said the
congressman's aunt, JoAnne DeLay.

When his father's kidneys failed, the DeLay family decided against
connecting him to a dialysis machine. "Extraordinary measures to
prolong life were not initiated," said his medical report, citing
"agreement with the family's wishes." His bedside chart carried the
instruction: "Do not resuscitate."

On Dec. 14, 1988, the DeLay patriarch "expired with his family in
attendance."

"The situation faced by the congressman's family was entirely
different than Terri Schiavo's," said a spokesman for the majority
leader, who declined requests for an interview.

"The only thing keeping her alive is the food and water we all need to
survive. His father was on a ventilator and other machines to sustain
him," said Dan Allen, DeLay's press aide.

There were also these similarities: Both stricken patients were
severely brain-damaged. Both were incapable of surviving without
medical assistance. Both were said to have expressed a desire to be
spared from being kept alive by artificial means. And neither of them
had a living will.

This previously unpublished account of the majority leader's personal
brush with life-ending decisions was assembled from court files,
medical records and interviews with family members.






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