http://www.house.mo.gov/bills041/hlrbillspdf/0068C.01.pdf
Wow, apparently Caleb Horner is a member of the Lee's Summit Character Council!
Wow, apparently Caleb Horner is a member of the Lee's Summit Character Council!
How this guy can be compared to OJ, Jim Jones or the Heaven's Gate leader is beyond my comprehension...all four cases have vastly different facts and circumstances surrounding them.luvbeaches said:Personally, I don't think of it so much as being able to or not being able to do their job because of his religion...but more how competent is he. Any man that would allow his wife to linger like this, and his child to die, isn't someone I really want to cross paths with...especially if I were in need of medical treatment.
And it isn't just him. There are a lot of people in this country that have some mighty odd beliefs and I wouldn't want them anywhere near me in my time of need. If his judgement is this clouded when it comes to his wife...ughhh...I just hate to even think about him being a cop.
It would be like having OJ as lead Detective on the LAPD. Or Jim Jones in charge of beverages at the Boy Scout Jamboree. Or the guy from Heaven's Gate in charge of transportation for the state of California. All these people are nuts, and killed others.
I'd never in a million years want to look up and see any of these people at a car crash, hoping they'd call for help. Caleb also falls into this group. He's not dealing with a full deck, IMO.
southcitymom said:How this guy can be compared to OJ, Jim Jones or the Heaven's Gate leader is beyond my comprehension...all four cases have vastly different facts and circumstances surrounding them.
Just because this guy and his wife didn't find medical attention appropriate to their walk of faith does not mean that they would deny it to others. There's no evidence that this guy or his wife ever didn't get appropriate medical treatment for someone while they were serving in their professional capacities.
But, if it's truly a matter of faith, personal feelings, and their committment to their "religion", how could they turn that on and off depending on the situation? If they did, indeed, turn it on and off, then to me it can't possibly be a serious devotion to their faith....otherwise they would "live it" and apply those principles to their life all the time.southcitymom said:Just because this guy and his wife didn't find medical attention appropriate to their walk of faith does not mean that they would deny it to others. There's no evidence that this guy or his wife ever didn't get appropriate medical treatment for someone while they were serving in their professional capacities.
Hi Julianne,julianne said:But, if it's truly a matter of faith, personal feelings, and their committment to their "religion", how could they turn that on and off depending on the situation? If they did, indeed, turn it on and off, then to me it can't possibly be a serious devotion to their faith....otherwise they would "live it" and apply those principles to their life all the time.
luvbeaches said:Personally, I don't think of it so much as being able to or not being able to do their job because of his religion...but more how competent is he. Any man that would allow his wife to linger like this, and his child to die, isn't someone I really want to cross paths with...especially if I were in need of medical treatment. =QUOTE]
I agree with your assessment in this part of your post. The OJ and Jim Jones comparison is a bit much- but what you wrote, that I quoted, is right on, IMO.
Snips from the article posted above:
http://www.tiny.cc/KSHBARTICLE
Sources say Misty Horner had a stillborn baby on Dec. 1, 2006 and never recovered. No one inside Officer Caleb Horner's home would comment.
Horner's wife Misty died inside their Lee's Summit home on Tuesday, five weeks after delivering the stillborn baby, but the circumstances of her death remain a mystery. Lee's Summit detectives investigated; they sent a report to Jackson County's medical examiner on Wednesday. Autopsy results are pending.
Family members declined comment, but Lee's Summit Police know the couple well. Caleb Horner is a veteran Lee's Summit officer. His wife was a dispatcher who resigned late last year just before giving birth. *SNIP*
Emphasis is mine. She died five weeks after giving birth????? How could anyone stand by and let their wife suffer like that? I don't know if it's criminal to let your baby and wife die because you didn't get them medical treatment, but it's definetely morally reprehensible. It's absolutely abhorrent and disgusting that he watched his wife suffer for a full FIVE WEEKS and didn't get her to a doctor, resulting in her death. What is WRONG with people????
lynie said:My question is this....
There is an investigation after Misty died, and an autopsy. However, I have not seen any mention of an investigation or autopsy after the baby was born.
Were authorities notified that a stillbirth occured? Were there services held and if so, did Misty attend? Her family? Was the baby buried?
Seems to me that more family and or friends would have become involved if they had been around and knew details of the labor and birth.
Not that it would have made a difference :razz:
Lynie
Amraann said:Here is my confusion....
If my religion dictated that I breast feed and in that attempt my child died I would be charged with that child's death...
How is it any different then what this couple did my not seeking medical treatment for their unborn child...
That child was still born as a direct result from them not seeking medical care while Misty was in labor for a week.
scandi said:I think you got it figured out Amraann, and there is only one word that pops into my head - STUPID
God bless the baby for the life she never was allowed to have.
Sorry, but I'm quite hard nosed about this kind of thing. God gave humans creative and investigative minds that over a relatively short period of time learned all about the body and how to make it well. I believe this was part of God's overall plan from the beginning.
The reality is that we don't KNOW that's why the baby was stillborn. The baby could have been dead prior to labor beginning.Amraann said:Here is my confusion....
If my religion dictated that I breast feed and in that attempt my child died I would be charged with that child's death...
How is it any different then what this couple did my not seeking medical treatment for their unborn child...
That child was still born as a direct result from them not seeking medical care while Misty was in labor for a week.
scandi said:I agree totally Luvbeaches. This is one reason this land of ours has laws. For the protection of others.
Do we know if they are going to file charges on the hubby? Are they waiting for an autopsy?
southcitymom said:The reality is that we don't KNOW that's why the baby was stillborn. The baby could have been dead prior to labor beginning.
If, as facts are uncovered, it is determined that the child was born dead as a result of the protracted, unsuccesful labor, I believe that the father - and perhaps others who were aware of the circumstances - will be charged with something.
mssheila said:Thank goodness for Google! I found this article on Septic Shock.
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/000668.htm
If this is what Misty died from, it's even more atrocious, because it would seem that all she needed was some IV fluids and antibiotics in it's early stages. How her 'husband' could stand by and let her die over a period of 5 weeks is totally and completely unfathomable.
If it's true that Misty refused medical treatment for herself, and was adamant about it- well.. let me just say this. There is no way that I would be able to convince my husband to stand by and just let me die slowly and painfully over that long of a time period. He would be taking me to the emergency room one way or another, whether I wanted to go or not.
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