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The judge stated that the law was not applicable to Munoz since she is dead - so the "life support" was not legally required for dead people.
She should have been pronounced a few months ago, as she met all the criteria, but the hospital did not. Even though she has not been formally pronounced at this time, the judge acknowledged that she is indeed dead.
Indeed she was, dead and gone. Which then if it comes down to the desires of a dead woman and the possibility of preserving human life; I'd say the thing actually alive should be given top billing.