You know, it would have been a simple enough matter to have the St. Peter Hospital ICU staff conduct a repeat brain death examination, in accordance with standard guidelines and statutes. It kind of appears that all of the "miracle" testing that Dolan has touted since filing his memorandum with the court Sept 30, has taken place AFTER Jahi went from St. Peter to the private home living situation.
You kind of have to scratch your head over that. Especially since one of the videos they are using to "prove" that Jahi is not brain dead, dates back to May of earlier this year. So why the need to involve the medical school at Rutgers to do the MRI.....(except that Dr. Prestigiacomo is from Rutgers....and is also on Defina's Int' Brain Research Foundation board of directors....) Hmmmm.....why the need to have involvement of a Cuban neurologist not licensed in the U.S.?
There are
28 highly qualified, licensed, hospital credentialed neurologists listed on the St. Peter's hospital website, and
7 of those are pediatric neurologists. Apparently, Dolan, Defina, and the family do not believe any of those 27 licensed, credentialed providers are capable of determining brain death?
http://www.saintpetershcs.com/FindAPhysician/
It would have been very, very easy to have St. Peter's Hospital ICU intensivists repeat the standard brain death exam, and enter results onto whatever records they maintained for Jahi while there. So I have to conclude that Dolan, Defina, the family, and the rest of the team are not interested in really establishing that Jahi no longer meets brain death criteria. They can certainly do their own tests, but as Dr. Fischer aptly points out in his declaration to the court, that does not relieve anyone of performing. or repeating, the
standard tests, according to statute.
If Dolan's experts don't agree with the standard tests and criteria under the UDDA, they need to work to change the laws FIRST. You can't just ask the courts to ignore, or throw out, the standards established by law.
It was a great PR volley, though. Attracted a lot of attention, which was probably the best they could hope for. And for a whole week, they got to control the headlines and the sound bites.
I also can't help thinking that Dolan's events of this past week are designed to extend beyond the next 4 weeks, and the Prop 46 vote. I think he his paving the road to the eventual civil suit to be filed by NW. Testing the court, the media, and the public to see how they react to certain parts of his narrative. JMO. The SOL for wrongful death is 2 years, so they still have a bunch of time to plan for that.
Who knows-- the whole thing may eventually settle for a big dollar amount if Children's Hospital gets tired enough of dealing with this family.