Trevor Marriott:
Fisherman
Please read and digest properly !
I invariably choose my own meals. They are easily enough digested.
But he could not have been able to give an accurate time of death based on the temperature of the body for the reasons I have shown.
Your reasons were somewhat odd. You spoke of the clothing covering the legs or something such. Well, it didnīt. It was up over the thighs until Paul pulled it to the knees. In contrast, her arms would have been covered down to the hands throughout. So if your musing swith cloth keeping you warm has something going for it, Nicholsī hands - not her feet - should have been warm.
There will always be an uncertainty involved in determining the TOD. But what we have is what we have. It should not have us go "he could not have been right". The better guess is that Llewellyns guess was an informed one.
To this point you talk utter rubbish ! You show me anywhere in any case where time of death has been solely determined by blood loss from a wound.
How eloquent you are, Trevor; utter rubbish, no less. It goes without saying that a person lying on the ground and bleeding from a totally severed neck can not bleed for very long.
You are ducking and diving because you know i am right !
I think many people out here work from the reverse assumption.
"If the police officers were not where they said they were, or their timings were wrong, they had ample time to make their statements fit before the inquest to cover up their wrongdoings, because by then they would have known the estimated time of death given by the doctor. That`s why we now have these anomalies with regards to the statements and press reports"
Aha. So itīs "if" again? If the policemen lied, then we have the wrong picture?
How informative.
The best,
Fisherman
Fisherman
Please read and digest properly !
I invariably choose my own meals. They are easily enough digested.
But he could not have been able to give an accurate time of death based on the temperature of the body for the reasons I have shown.
Your reasons were somewhat odd. You spoke of the clothing covering the legs or something such. Well, it didnīt. It was up over the thighs until Paul pulled it to the knees. In contrast, her arms would have been covered down to the hands throughout. So if your musing swith cloth keeping you warm has something going for it, Nicholsī hands - not her feet - should have been warm.
There will always be an uncertainty involved in determining the TOD. But what we have is what we have. It should not have us go "he could not have been right". The better guess is that Llewellyns guess was an informed one.
To this point you talk utter rubbish ! You show me anywhere in any case where time of death has been solely determined by blood loss from a wound.
How eloquent you are, Trevor; utter rubbish, no less. It goes without saying that a person lying on the ground and bleeding from a totally severed neck can not bleed for very long.
You are ducking and diving because you know i am right !
I think many people out here work from the reverse assumption.
"If the police officers were not where they said they were, or their timings were wrong, they had ample time to make their statements fit before the inquest to cover up their wrongdoings, because by then they would have known the estimated time of death given by the doctor. That`s why we now have these anomalies with regards to the statements and press reports"
Aha. So itīs "if" again? If the policemen lied, then we have the wrong picture?
How informative.
The best,
Fisherman
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