Hi FM,
Sure, a report in a newspaper isn't support in the sense of determining ToD. However, it was listed as a source that reported the discovery of Stride being at 12:45, and that was really my point. The A.F. doesn't report the discovery as being at 12:45, they say that occurred when Deimshitz arrived at 1. The A.F. reports the murder as being at 12:45, not the discovery.
Since the A.F. doesn't indicate where they get the information about the murder being at 12:45 we cannot evaluate that report further. But the main point I was originally making wasn't on the accuracy of the report itself so much as whether or not it is a source that lists the discovery at 12:45, which it doesn't.
I've looked at a bunch of research papers looking at the accuracy of ToD estimates, and sadly, even short intervals end up with very wide error margins of +-3 hours. One small study, which isn't enough to draw certainty from but included very short intervals of under an hour, pointed towards the possibility that such estimates will be even more error prone (wider ranges) despite "common sense" suggesting it should be easier. As I often tell my students, common sense is what we think when we don't actually know how things work. And these are modern studies, using up to date state of the art methods and calculations. So basically, while we shouldn't dismiss the estimates given by the doctors entirely, they are probably no more reliable than witnesses statements of the time despite their mask of authority. In short, they are just another opinion.
- Jeff
Originally posted by Fleetwood Mac
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Since the A.F. doesn't indicate where they get the information about the murder being at 12:45 we cannot evaluate that report further. But the main point I was originally making wasn't on the accuracy of the report itself so much as whether or not it is a source that lists the discovery at 12:45, which it doesn't.
Dr Blackwell is important to the whole thing because as you say, he had a watch to check his time and he was a medical professional qualified to give a professional assessment. 'Much better than the various people running 'round: we can't be sure of their times, eye witness accounts are known to demand caution, we don't even know whether or not witness statements were implied as opposed to a verbatim transcript of that which they stated and we don't know how many of these witnesses embellished their account out of a desire to be a local celebrity (we know that these people stood around discussing the murders and that knowledge of a murder would afford somebody a few hours of attention, and we know that people charged money to view murder scenes).
In terms of estimates being reliable, modern day professionals are convinced that some are more reliable than others and there is one factor that has a huge impact on that reliability: time lapse from loss of life to estimated TOD. So, Dr Blackwell isn't in a bad position there to give his estimate (possibly).
Having said that, there is something in Dr Blackwell's testimony that I find interesting. That being his reasoning:
From twenty minutes to half an hour when I arrived. She would have bled to death comparatively slowly on account of vessels on one side only of the neck being cut and the artery not completely severed.
Obviously, the windpipe was severed also.
I don't think there is enough there to draw a conclusion that it must have been 20 minutes to half an hour. It is possible for a person to die within a few minutes of having the windpipe severed due to a lack of oxygen supply to the brain and/or blood flowing into the lungs, influenced by factors such as the severity of the cut and how much air remains in the lungs. It could take a lot longer by the way, hours rather than minutes. And then, there is the issue of blood flowing after the heart has stopped. An open would would still bleed after death due to gravity, which would be a slow oozing, but for how long?
In terms of estimates being reliable, modern day professionals are convinced that some are more reliable than others and there is one factor that has a huge impact on that reliability: time lapse from loss of life to estimated TOD. So, Dr Blackwell isn't in a bad position there to give his estimate (possibly).
Having said that, there is something in Dr Blackwell's testimony that I find interesting. That being his reasoning:
From twenty minutes to half an hour when I arrived. She would have bled to death comparatively slowly on account of vessels on one side only of the neck being cut and the artery not completely severed.
Obviously, the windpipe was severed also.
I don't think there is enough there to draw a conclusion that it must have been 20 minutes to half an hour. It is possible for a person to die within a few minutes of having the windpipe severed due to a lack of oxygen supply to the brain and/or blood flowing into the lungs, influenced by factors such as the severity of the cut and how much air remains in the lungs. It could take a lot longer by the way, hours rather than minutes. And then, there is the issue of blood flowing after the heart has stopped. An open would would still bleed after death due to gravity, which would be a slow oozing, but for how long?
- Jeff
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