Originally posted by Herlock Sholmes
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I actually never even noticed the throat cutting part, I only cut out the part that seemingly verified your suggestion that tuberculosis led on a shortened rigor when it was the cause of death. At any rate, I think it is hard to make out the logic of a cut throat shortening the time and severe bloodloss stretching it. I find that an impossible equation.
At the end of the day, I also think that it is lunacy to throw "that will shorten the time!" and "that will lengthen the time" suggestions. There are parameters for and against in the Chapman case, and so they must take each other out. Violent death for asphyxiation, cut throat for alcoholism and so on. That will never get us anywhere.
The ambient temperature WILL get us somewhere though, since all experts agree on how higher temperatures lead to swifter rigor whereas lower temperatures lead to a slower one. Whether we choose to call the temperatures tropical or not does not have any impact on that.
Phillips checked two variables (in fact, he will have checked liver mortis and a few other things too) and he found that they were in line with each other and also in line with the normal cooling off and rigor onset times. You can post a million posts and that will never change. It means that either Phillips was totally and remarkably wrong on the temperature PLUS Chapman went in to rigor way ahead of the normal schedule, or she WAS cold and she DID answer to the normal rigor schedule.
It is business as usual and we land at a TOD that is consistent with the other murders.
Or we have two faulty parameters arriving at the same time (also known as a freak coincidence) and we land at a TOD that deviates from all the other murders.
You want to believe the freak scenario that makes Chapman unique in how she would have been killed at dawn.
I opt for the medical information being correct and Chapman dying at the time we should expect, given what we know of the other murders.
Let's settle for that and move on.
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