Monday, February 15, 2016

INCOMPETENCE FOLLOWING SCALIA'S DEATH


There was disgraceful chaos, confusion, AND  incompetence after Scalia's death.  One of the most important people in the U.S. Government dies unexpectedly.  How should it have been handled? Not like it was.
"It then took hours for authorities in remote West Texas to find a justice of the peace, officials said Sunday. When they did, Presidio County Judge Cinderela Guevara pronounced Scalia dead of natural causes without seeing the body — which is permissible under Texas law — and without ordering an autopsy.
 As official Washington tried to process what his demise means for politics and the law, some details of Scalia’s final hours remained opaque. As late as Sunday afternoon, for example, there were conflicting reports about whether an autopsy should have been performed. A manager at the El Paso funeral home where Scalia’s body was taken said that his family made it clear they did not want one.
One of two other officials who were called but couldn’t get to Scalia’s body in time said that she
“If it had been me . . . I would want to know,” Juanita Bishop, a justice of the peace in Presidio, Tex., said in an interview Sunday of the chaotic hours after Scalia’s death at the Cibolo Creek Ranch, a luxury compound less than an hour from the Mexican border and about 40 miles south of Marfa.

Meanwhile, Guevara acknowledged that she pronounced Scalia dead by phone, without seeing his body. Instead, she spoke to law enforcement officials at the scene — who assured her “there were no signs of foul play” — and Scalia’s physician in Washington, who said that the 79-year-old justice suffered from a host of chronic conditions.
“He was having health issues,’’ Guevara said, adding that she is awaiting a statement from Scalia’s doctor that will be added to his death certificate when it is issued later this week.

Guevara also rebutted a report by a Dallas TV station that quoted her as saying that Scalia had died of “myocardial infarction.” In an interview with The Washington Post, she said she meant only that his heart had stopped.

“It wasn’t a heart attack,” Guevara said. “He died of natural causes.”
In a statement Sunday, the U.S. Marshals Service, which provides security for Supreme Court justices, said that Scalia had declined a security detail while at the ranch, so marshals were not present when he died. “Deputy U.S. Marshals from the Western District of Texas responded immediately upon notification of Justice Scalia’s passing,” the statement said."
 
Perhaps we need federal legislation to deal with similar situations involving high-ranking federal officials.

 

1 comment:

  1. Incompentence? BS. Old guys die. He was 79, overweight and lived a sedentary lifestyle. Could have been heart stroke, stroke or embolism. All of those are natural.

    When found, the body was cooled from 98.6. Having the blessing of a JP is a legal nicety, but it's pretty easy for a cop to tell if somebody's dead.

    What's important is that there was no evidence of foul play.

    Ah, well. Let the conspiracies begin.

    Art, age 81 :-)

    ReplyDelete