ORLANDO, Fla. (AP) -- A paralyzed woman who won the right to be allowed to die made peace with her mother, who is accused of shooting her, a few hours before she was removed from life support, the mother's attorney says. Georgette Smith spoke to her mother during a videotaped deposition from her hospital bed Tuesday, one day before Ms. Smith was removed from a ventilator at her own request. ``It was very emotional. They were at peace with one another,'' the mother's attorney, Bob Wesley, said Thursday. Shirley Egan, 68, is charged with attempted murder in her daughter's shooting, and the charge could be changed to manslaughter or murder now that her daughter is dead. Wesley said he didn't believe a grand jury would indict Egan for murder once they saw the deposition. Ms. Egan, who has emphysema and is blind in one eye, is accused of shooting her 42-year-old daughter in March after overhearing her discuss putting her in a nursing home. The bullet hit Ms. Smith's spinal cord, paralyzing her and leaving her unable to speak without effort and incapable of swallowing or controlling her bladder. In asking a court for permission to be taken off life support, she said she could only wink and wiggle her nose and tongue, and added, ``I can't live like this.'' Ms. Smith died Wednesday after a court granted her wish. Ms. Egan supported her daughter's decision, but Wesley fought it to avoid the charge being upgraded to murder. Wesley said Ms. Egan didn't mean to shoot her daughter and didn't want to see her suffer. Ms. Smith was sedated before the ventilator was removed Wednesday night. Ms. Egan was told of her daughter's death by a chaplain. ``It was a traumatic night for her,'' Wesley said. -=-=- 