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    Olabisi Adekoya
    Participant

    1. In good health, Cheri Landy and Lori Budo encouraged one another. Budo went to get a few belongings from the filthy muck, carried them home, washed them, and sterilized them for her friend Landry before her friend’s house had to be torn down due to flood damage. Despite the fact that they found it challenging on a professional and existential level to not work, When unable to practice therapeutically, none of them has a position in academia to fall back on. In addition to caring for her ailing mother on a full-time basis, Landry lost her home to Katrina. With two children attending college, Budo was the primary provider for her family. They had mortgages, rent, and vehicle loans to pay, but with assistance from their Memorial ICU coworkers, the nurses organized a committee to provide food and carry out “other acts of kindness” for them. The nurses were middle-class people who had to pay their mortgages, rent, and car loans.

    The two arrested nurses also caused Karen Wynn, the nurse manager, anxiety. Wynn and other participants disregarded the advice of their lawyers, who had warned the under-investigation women not to communicate with one another for fear of being accused of conspiring, instead checking in to see how the others were faring.

    I believe that if the district attorney had opted not to charge them, their testimony to the grand jury would have been a good decision. However, from the perspective of their counsel, since there is no statute of limitations for murder, the women might still face charges in the future. Other evidence could be used to support their prosecution.

    Karen Wynn’s testimony was noticeably missing from the grand jury proceedings because she was waiting for the summons to testify, but unlike the others, it never came.

    2. Cathy Green claimed that she didn’t want a drawn-out conclusion for herself. If that time ever came, she instructed her daughter, “You just take me to Holland.” While employed in the ICU, she had repeatedly witnessed it. People frequently didn’t want to discuss death with the dying or be present when a relative passed away. Why did we celebrate every other life achievement but not this one? She questioned. The ratio of birth to death was one to one, despite the desire of everyone to be present to witness the beginning of life.

    3. In my opinion, justice was done because she didn’t need to be prosecuted because she was under so much pressure. No healthcare practitioner should ever be accused of making a snap decision in such a situation. She believed in comfort and thought that the greatest thing at the memorial

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