1 00:00:01,400 --> 00:00:06,840 Speaker 1: Quality diamonds, but Joseph's gotten more. I don't know about y'all, 2 00:00:06,840 --> 00:00:11,440 Speaker 1: but I think about temperature every day, and generally it 3 00:00:11,480 --> 00:00:17,640 Speaker 1: has to do with determining how much money I'll have 4 00:00:17,760 --> 00:00:19,360 Speaker 1: at the end of the month to pay for my 5 00:00:19,560 --> 00:00:23,640 Speaker 1: air conditioning bill, because I hate being an old I 6 00:00:23,680 --> 00:00:25,520 Speaker 1: don't even like I'm not even gonna say hot. I 7 00:00:25,520 --> 00:00:27,600 Speaker 1: hate being in a warm house. I like being in 8 00:00:27,640 --> 00:00:34,239 Speaker 1: a cool house. And unfortunately my desire for physical comfort 9 00:00:34,440 --> 00:00:40,400 Speaker 1: is noncompatible with summertime in the Deep South. I'm gonna 10 00:00:40,400 --> 00:00:44,000 Speaker 1: wind up having a huge electric bill at the end 11 00:00:44,080 --> 00:00:49,320 Speaker 1: of every month, guaranteed. I think about temp in that sense. 12 00:00:49,360 --> 00:00:52,400 Speaker 1: But you know, I thought about temp for a long 13 00:00:52,440 --> 00:00:59,200 Speaker 1: time as a death investigator, because we use temperature in 14 00:00:59,360 --> 00:01:06,480 Speaker 1: order to determine how long it's been since someone has 15 00:01:06,800 --> 00:01:10,640 Speaker 1: I don't know, been cast off this mortal coil in 16 00:01:10,720 --> 00:01:13,479 Speaker 1: the words of the Bard, and there are a lot 17 00:01:13,480 --> 00:01:19,600 Speaker 1: of indicators that we look for, and today on bodybags, 18 00:01:20,000 --> 00:01:26,759 Speaker 1: we're going to have a discussion about PMI post mortem interval, 19 00:01:27,640 --> 00:01:30,880 Speaker 1: and in particular, we're going to have a discussion that 20 00:01:31,000 --> 00:01:34,080 Speaker 1: ties back to a case that it's currently in the 21 00:01:34,120 --> 00:01:37,320 Speaker 1: news and will be for months and months to come 22 00:01:38,880 --> 00:01:45,279 Speaker 1: the murder of the four students in Idaho. I'm Joseph 23 00:01:45,280 --> 00:01:52,240 Speaker 1: Scott Morgan and this is bodybacks, David. I don't know 24 00:01:52,280 --> 00:01:58,680 Speaker 1: if you recall this, but have you have you ever 25 00:01:58,880 --> 00:02:03,880 Speaker 1: been around and it's generally a grandparent. It doesn't matter 26 00:02:04,720 --> 00:02:07,600 Speaker 1: if it is as hot as the surface of the 27 00:02:07,640 --> 00:02:11,440 Speaker 1: sun outside, they're going to run the heat. They're going 28 00:02:11,480 --> 00:02:14,880 Speaker 1: to put a shawl around them or a blanket. Yeah, 29 00:02:14,880 --> 00:02:17,800 Speaker 1: they're going to have like woolen socks on. And a 30 00:02:17,800 --> 00:02:20,160 Speaker 1: part of that is getting old, you know, you lose 31 00:02:20,240 --> 00:02:20,920 Speaker 1: muscle mass. 32 00:02:22,720 --> 00:02:26,839 Speaker 2: You you funny bit about old people being cold? Why 33 00:02:26,880 --> 00:02:28,400 Speaker 2: is this so cold in feezing? 34 00:02:31,160 --> 00:02:36,720 Speaker 1: It's so cold in it? Thought about that in years. Yeah, 35 00:02:36,840 --> 00:02:39,840 Speaker 1: what a great stand up that was. Uh yeah, it's 36 00:02:39,840 --> 00:02:40,960 Speaker 1: so cold in heal baby. 37 00:02:41,040 --> 00:02:43,120 Speaker 2: But why is that? Because I had these two women 38 00:02:43,520 --> 00:02:49,080 Speaker 2: that were they were sisters and they were like the 39 00:02:49,080 --> 00:02:52,679 Speaker 2: Snoop sisters back in the day on the Waltons. Yeah yeah, 40 00:02:52,800 --> 00:02:55,000 Speaker 2: I think they're combined age with three hundred and fifty seven. 41 00:02:55,040 --> 00:02:58,280 Speaker 2: But I remember my mother in law was afraid something 42 00:02:58,280 --> 00:02:59,760 Speaker 2: had happened to one of them and asked me to 43 00:02:59,800 --> 00:03:02,519 Speaker 2: take were over there because they wouldn't answer the phone, 44 00:03:02,720 --> 00:03:05,120 Speaker 2: and as we got to the house, Joe, it was 45 00:03:05,360 --> 00:03:08,840 Speaker 2: August and Alabama, so it was probably in the upper nineties, 46 00:03:08,919 --> 00:03:12,000 Speaker 2: late afternoon. We were already sweating from the humidity, and 47 00:03:12,040 --> 00:03:14,760 Speaker 2: I could hear their TV as we got to the door. 48 00:03:14,840 --> 00:03:18,040 Speaker 2: They had it turned up very loud. And when my 49 00:03:18,160 --> 00:03:20,720 Speaker 2: mother in law opened the door, just you know, was 50 00:03:20,800 --> 00:03:23,120 Speaker 2: knocking on it and the door cracked open, I felt 51 00:03:23,120 --> 00:03:25,760 Speaker 2: the heat hit me. I actually backed up the heat 52 00:03:25,760 --> 00:03:28,399 Speaker 2: from the house and I thought, oh, they're dead. Yeah, 53 00:03:28,440 --> 00:03:30,760 Speaker 2: And they were in there and they were bundled up, 54 00:03:30,800 --> 00:03:33,200 Speaker 2: both of them, both of them bundled up with the 55 00:03:33,240 --> 00:03:35,960 Speaker 2: heat going. And it's ninety eight degrees outside. That was 56 00:03:35,960 --> 00:03:36,600 Speaker 2: freaky to me. 57 00:03:37,120 --> 00:03:39,640 Speaker 1: Yeah, and it's probably equally as hot in that house, 58 00:03:39,920 --> 00:03:44,640 Speaker 1: yeahsty Yeah, And it's terrifying on one level. Do you remember, 59 00:03:44,800 --> 00:03:50,600 Speaker 1: I know, I know that you do. The summer God, 60 00:03:50,680 --> 00:03:53,120 Speaker 1: it was I know, well over a decade. You remember 61 00:03:53,240 --> 00:03:57,120 Speaker 1: that summer of horror they had in Chicago. Oh yeah, 62 00:03:57,160 --> 00:04:01,120 Speaker 1: where it was so hot. Yep, the old people were 63 00:04:01,200 --> 00:04:06,120 Speaker 1: dying in their homes. And I knew the chief and 64 00:04:06,240 --> 00:04:08,680 Speaker 1: me at the time for Cook County, which is Chicago, 65 00:04:10,280 --> 00:04:14,800 Speaker 1: Ed what's his name, doctor Ed Donahue, I think, great 66 00:04:14,840 --> 00:04:18,040 Speaker 1: forensic pathologies and a heck of a nice guy. I mean, 67 00:04:18,120 --> 00:04:23,919 Speaker 1: just a really really cool cat. And anyway, it was, 68 00:04:24,240 --> 00:04:27,680 Speaker 1: and this happened right before, this happened right before he 69 00:04:27,760 --> 00:04:30,360 Speaker 1: retired from Cook County. I can see why this would 70 00:04:30,400 --> 00:04:32,240 Speaker 1: be something that will push you over this because they 71 00:04:32,240 --> 00:04:34,680 Speaker 1: had people that were dying left and right, and you know, 72 00:04:34,720 --> 00:04:36,880 Speaker 1: that's that's kind of a story for another day, but 73 00:04:36,920 --> 00:04:43,040 Speaker 1: it's you know, it's deaths related to hypothermia, uher hyper thermia, Yeah, 74 00:04:43,040 --> 00:04:44,000 Speaker 1: as opposed to hypo. 75 00:04:44,279 --> 00:04:46,920 Speaker 2: So I had me to run with that. But I'm 76 00:04:46,920 --> 00:04:49,279 Speaker 2: just curious, man, that you mentioned the old people and heat. 77 00:04:49,400 --> 00:04:52,680 Speaker 2: Do they really I mean, do as we age, do 78 00:04:52,920 --> 00:04:54,200 Speaker 2: we feel colder? 79 00:04:54,400 --> 00:04:57,240 Speaker 1: I mean, yeah, I think I think the perception is right. 80 00:04:57,279 --> 00:04:59,840 Speaker 1: I'm not a geriatric specialist, but. 81 00:05:02,600 --> 00:05:08,240 Speaker 2: I'm becoming a geriatric. You'll have to, you're qualified. I 82 00:05:08,240 --> 00:05:10,920 Speaker 2: think that one of the things that occurs. First off, 83 00:05:10,960 --> 00:05:15,839 Speaker 2: you're losing you're losing mass in your body. You know, 84 00:05:15,920 --> 00:05:20,599 Speaker 2: your insulation is kind of dwindling away, fat layer, muscle layer, 85 00:05:21,160 --> 00:05:24,000 Speaker 2: And in addition to that, you don't have the same 86 00:05:24,760 --> 00:05:31,160 Speaker 2: robust circulatory system that you once had. And so therefore 87 00:05:30,960 --> 00:05:34,599 Speaker 2: you're gonna feel cooler or you'll feel like, you know, 88 00:05:34,760 --> 00:05:36,719 Speaker 2: I know, my grandmother always said she feel like she 89 00:05:36,760 --> 00:05:39,080 Speaker 2: had a chill on her, you know, And that's that's 90 00:05:39,160 --> 00:05:41,240 Speaker 2: kind of a common theme, you know, that kind of 91 00:05:41,320 --> 00:05:42,560 Speaker 2: runs through it as you get older. 92 00:05:42,880 --> 00:05:45,040 Speaker 1: It hadn't hit me yet. I mean, I can tell you. 93 00:05:45,080 --> 00:05:47,880 Speaker 1: I'll sit around and I'll be sweating, and I'll look 94 00:05:47,920 --> 00:05:51,000 Speaker 1: at him and I'll say, hey, what's the air conditioning on? 95 00:05:51,120 --> 00:05:56,599 Speaker 1: She'll say sixty eight. I'll say, wow, it's really hot 96 00:05:56,640 --> 00:05:58,960 Speaker 1: in here, and she'll say, turn the fan up her. 97 00:05:59,440 --> 00:06:01,839 Speaker 1: And that's another thing. We can't sleep without a fan on. 98 00:06:02,000 --> 00:06:04,320 Speaker 1: I'm addicted to it. I even use a fan. I 99 00:06:04,400 --> 00:06:07,440 Speaker 1: use a fan app on my phone when I'm traveling. 100 00:06:08,040 --> 00:06:10,559 Speaker 1: That's how addicted to fans I am. And it lasts 101 00:06:10,560 --> 00:06:13,000 Speaker 1: for it lasts literally for ten hours. 102 00:06:13,760 --> 00:06:18,080 Speaker 2: So on meeting one day, my name's Dave. That's it. 103 00:06:18,160 --> 00:06:18,919 Speaker 2: I'm addicted of. 104 00:06:19,480 --> 00:06:25,400 Speaker 1: Hey, all right, so pos yeah, yeah, yeah, post warum 105 00:06:25,440 --> 00:06:28,240 Speaker 1: interval I it's it's you know, you hear this term 106 00:06:28,320 --> 00:06:31,160 Speaker 1: is thrown around. I'm guilty of using it. I can't 107 00:06:31,200 --> 00:06:36,000 Speaker 1: say guilty because it's an abbreviation, but uh, you know, 108 00:06:36,080 --> 00:06:39,479 Speaker 1: so it's it's p M. I you'll hear use that 109 00:06:39,600 --> 00:06:43,719 Speaker 1: term constantly, but it is postmar interval and the the 110 00:06:43,800 --> 00:06:46,840 Speaker 1: four big categories that we look at when we're trying 111 00:06:46,880 --> 00:06:53,360 Speaker 1: to assess the dead, and that is going to be 112 00:06:54,240 --> 00:06:58,880 Speaker 1: riger mortise or rigor it's pronounced both ways. 113 00:06:59,640 --> 00:06:59,960 Speaker 2: Uh. 114 00:07:00,080 --> 00:07:05,440 Speaker 1: We have post mortem lividity, which is also uh the 115 00:07:05,560 --> 00:07:12,080 Speaker 1: term uh live or mortise. Then we have alger mortise, 116 00:07:12,200 --> 00:07:15,440 Speaker 1: not to be confused with a former vice president and 117 00:07:15,760 --> 00:07:19,520 Speaker 1: it and and then we have then we have gastric content. 118 00:07:20,440 --> 00:07:24,760 Speaker 1: So you have four areas that are really kind of 119 00:07:24,800 --> 00:07:30,720 Speaker 1: exploited by us in in circles of death investigation to 120 00:07:30,840 --> 00:07:33,160 Speaker 1: give us, you know, to try to do. And really 121 00:07:33,160 --> 00:07:38,400 Speaker 1: what it is, Dave, it's a it's a snapshot of time. Okay, 122 00:07:40,080 --> 00:07:42,880 Speaker 1: and we go out and we try to do these assessments. 123 00:07:43,840 --> 00:07:45,480 Speaker 1: Let me tell you this, and I'll say this right 124 00:07:45,560 --> 00:07:49,960 Speaker 1: up front. This is kind of my you know, word 125 00:07:49,960 --> 00:07:57,440 Speaker 1: of warning here. None of the stuff is accurate to 126 00:07:57,480 --> 00:08:01,800 Speaker 1: the point where you could bet your life on it. Okay, 127 00:08:01,920 --> 00:08:07,880 Speaker 1: It's not like it's not a true quantitative measurement where 128 00:08:07,920 --> 00:08:12,840 Speaker 1: you can say with precision. I'm talking about like Swiss 129 00:08:12,920 --> 00:08:18,160 Speaker 1: watch precision where you can say this is the exact 130 00:08:18,200 --> 00:08:21,680 Speaker 1: moment in time when they took their last breath. That's 131 00:08:22,560 --> 00:08:26,480 Speaker 1: mathematically it's impossible to do that. You cannot do that. 132 00:08:27,400 --> 00:08:30,400 Speaker 1: I actually went to I'll never forget it. I was 133 00:08:30,440 --> 00:08:33,640 Speaker 1: at a conference one time. By the way, I recommend 134 00:08:33,760 --> 00:08:38,400 Speaker 1: highly that if you're interested in becoming a medical legal 135 00:08:38,440 --> 00:08:42,680 Speaker 1: death investigator. The mother church of all medical legal death 136 00:08:42,720 --> 00:08:46,480 Speaker 1: investigation is Saint Louis University in Saint Louis, Missouri, School 137 00:08:46,600 --> 00:08:50,640 Speaker 1: of Medicine, Department of Forensic Pathology. There are four classes 138 00:08:50,679 --> 00:08:53,800 Speaker 1: that are offered every year in intro to medical legal 139 00:08:53,840 --> 00:08:57,240 Speaker 1: death Investigation. I went through the class in I finally 140 00:08:57,240 --> 00:08:59,960 Speaker 1: got a spot in nineteen eighty seven. I've been working 141 00:09:00,000 --> 00:09:03,240 Speaker 1: looking for over two years by that time. And it 142 00:09:03,360 --> 00:09:09,320 Speaker 1: is a rigorous program. You go for five days, it's 143 00:09:09,360 --> 00:09:13,640 Speaker 1: eight hours a day, and it is they don't knowledge 144 00:09:13,720 --> 00:09:16,400 Speaker 1: into your brain in this place, like you can't imagine. 145 00:09:16,440 --> 00:09:19,480 Speaker 1: There's no really no breaks in here. So you're you're 146 00:09:19,559 --> 00:09:25,160 Speaker 1: learning among the finest. You're learning from the finest at 147 00:09:25,160 --> 00:09:29,040 Speaker 1: the medical school. And it was there that I first got, 148 00:09:29,160 --> 00:09:33,280 Speaker 1: you know, really my intro in a class sense. At 149 00:09:33,280 --> 00:09:37,120 Speaker 1: Saint Louis University to how do we how do we determine, 150 00:09:37,200 --> 00:09:40,520 Speaker 1: you know, how somebody how long someone has been dead. 151 00:09:41,320 --> 00:09:43,840 Speaker 1: And there's a program called the Master's program that's only 152 00:09:43,840 --> 00:09:45,880 Speaker 1: offered like every other summer, and you have to have 153 00:09:45,960 --> 00:09:48,079 Speaker 1: attended the basic course first. And I went to this thing. 154 00:09:48,120 --> 00:09:51,320 Speaker 1: They had this guy from Germany and Dave. This is 155 00:09:51,360 --> 00:09:54,080 Speaker 1: in the days. It wasn't a chalkboard, but he had 156 00:09:54,120 --> 00:09:56,760 Speaker 1: a whiteboard up on the stage and it wasn't one, 157 00:09:56,880 --> 00:10:01,200 Speaker 1: it was three. And he had created a formula that 158 00:10:01,360 --> 00:10:06,280 Speaker 1: extended over the surfaces of three whiteboards. And he claimed 159 00:10:07,440 --> 00:10:12,079 Speaker 1: that he had the magic bullet to determining time of death. 160 00:10:12,760 --> 00:10:14,720 Speaker 1: And I remember there were a bunch of us sitting 161 00:10:14,760 --> 00:10:17,679 Speaker 1: there and we just we're just kind of rolling our eyes. 162 00:10:17,720 --> 00:10:20,440 Speaker 1: First off, no one has this much time. This is 163 00:10:20,480 --> 00:10:23,720 Speaker 1: only something a university professor could do. When you're in 164 00:10:23,960 --> 00:10:27,160 Speaker 1: tempo and you're out in the field and you're you've 165 00:10:27,160 --> 00:10:29,720 Speaker 1: got a homicide that you're working, and you might have 166 00:10:30,240 --> 00:10:33,600 Speaker 1: a suicide holding, a motor vehicle accident holding. You're going 167 00:10:33,679 --> 00:10:35,599 Speaker 1: to glean as much information at the homicide as you 168 00:10:35,640 --> 00:10:37,679 Speaker 1: possibly can. You got to move on to the next case. 169 00:10:38,320 --> 00:10:42,640 Speaker 1: He had taken years to compile this data in a 170 00:10:42,640 --> 00:10:47,240 Speaker 1: perfect world, you know, maybe it had some utility maybe, 171 00:10:47,640 --> 00:10:50,160 Speaker 1: but still to this day, they can't give you a 172 00:10:50,200 --> 00:10:53,800 Speaker 1: specific time of death. So that's kind of my warning 173 00:10:53,920 --> 00:10:56,120 Speaker 1: before we get into all of this. So if you 174 00:10:56,240 --> 00:10:59,760 Speaker 1: ever come across someone that actually tells you that they 175 00:10:59,760 --> 00:11:04,040 Speaker 1: can do it, that they can give you an exact time, run, 176 00:11:04,320 --> 00:11:05,520 Speaker 1: don't walk out away. 177 00:11:05,559 --> 00:11:08,000 Speaker 2: For years, I really did think you could come within 178 00:11:08,080 --> 00:11:11,079 Speaker 2: fifteen minutes of knowing. I really did until I talk 179 00:11:11,120 --> 00:11:12,920 Speaker 2: to you about it, because I didn't know. I mean, 180 00:11:13,200 --> 00:11:15,959 Speaker 2: you watch TV. Oh I see he had a corn 181 00:11:16,040 --> 00:11:18,240 Speaker 2: in his diarrhea. That means you know. 182 00:11:19,200 --> 00:11:21,840 Speaker 1: Yeah, it's the best we can do. And I'd say 183 00:11:21,840 --> 00:11:24,480 Speaker 1: the best I've ever been able to do just looking 184 00:11:24,520 --> 00:11:28,480 Speaker 1: at the numbers alone that we collect and the examination 185 00:11:28,559 --> 00:11:32,160 Speaker 1: that we do at the scene. Maybe maybe four hours, 186 00:11:32,880 --> 00:11:33,920 Speaker 1: maybe four to five. 187 00:11:34,040 --> 00:11:36,319 Speaker 2: And now can you take this in with the other timeline, right, I. 188 00:11:36,240 --> 00:11:38,920 Speaker 1: Mean right, you have to. That's that's to the exclusion 189 00:11:38,920 --> 00:11:42,120 Speaker 1: of circumstantial you know, I last saw him at this time. Okay, 190 00:11:42,280 --> 00:11:45,280 Speaker 1: I'm just talking about pure science now, as pure as 191 00:11:45,280 --> 00:11:47,560 Speaker 1: it can be in that kind of environment. So it's 192 00:11:47,679 --> 00:11:51,160 Speaker 1: a not controlled, a non controlled environment and everything, and 193 00:11:51,240 --> 00:11:53,600 Speaker 1: I mean just about everything we're going to discuss right 194 00:11:53,640 --> 00:11:57,120 Speaker 1: now is environmentally dependent. So I think that it's really 195 00:11:57,160 --> 00:11:59,800 Speaker 1: important that we keep our wits about us and just 196 00:12:00,080 --> 00:12:00,640 Speaker 1: understand that. 197 00:12:00,760 --> 00:12:05,120 Speaker 2: So it's fascinating. It's amazing that you have to truly 198 00:12:05,240 --> 00:12:08,880 Speaker 2: know investigation beyond just the like you mentioned the guy 199 00:12:09,080 --> 00:12:12,400 Speaker 2: uses three whiteboards to write a formula down to put 200 00:12:12,400 --> 00:12:16,640 Speaker 2: this to get it, and yet it actually does. There's 201 00:12:16,720 --> 00:12:19,560 Speaker 2: more to it than just the nuts and bolts. You 202 00:12:19,640 --> 00:12:22,800 Speaker 2: have to actually investigate the person's life to know about 203 00:12:22,800 --> 00:12:23,240 Speaker 2: their death. 204 00:12:24,520 --> 00:12:28,439 Speaker 1: Yeah, and that lecture lasted for it was like two 205 00:12:28,480 --> 00:12:30,439 Speaker 1: hours and forty five minutes, and I wish I had 206 00:12:30,440 --> 00:12:34,280 Speaker 1: that time back. It did demonstrate to me. It did 207 00:12:34,320 --> 00:12:38,680 Speaker 1: demonstrate to me, however, that nobody really knows. I mean, 208 00:12:38,960 --> 00:12:43,160 Speaker 1: nobody really knows. And you know, I guess you could say, well, 209 00:12:43,280 --> 00:12:45,480 Speaker 1: somebody's sitting in front of a clock, and this is 210 00:12:45,520 --> 00:12:48,560 Speaker 1: an old example people have used before. I've heard it stated. 211 00:12:49,160 --> 00:12:51,640 Speaker 1: And they're shot and it's a thurn through wound and 212 00:12:51,679 --> 00:12:54,720 Speaker 1: it hits the clock and the clock stops. And so 213 00:12:54,800 --> 00:12:56,600 Speaker 1: you marry that up with it if you get to 214 00:12:56,640 --> 00:12:58,760 Speaker 1: the body at you know, what is it? They say? 215 00:12:58,800 --> 00:13:01,520 Speaker 1: A broken A broken clock is right twice a day, 216 00:13:01,880 --> 00:13:05,240 Speaker 1: so even that has a caveat to it. But for me, 217 00:13:06,360 --> 00:13:12,640 Speaker 1: for me, I think starting off with rigidity otherwise known 218 00:13:12,720 --> 00:13:14,520 Speaker 1: as riger mortis. 219 00:13:14,040 --> 00:13:14,800 Speaker 2: When does that happen? 220 00:13:14,880 --> 00:13:19,320 Speaker 1: Jim, Well, it begins, you know, you first begin to 221 00:13:19,880 --> 00:13:26,199 Speaker 1: appreciate it pretty It's not immediate, and this is kind 222 00:13:26,200 --> 00:13:31,600 Speaker 1: of how it works. So if you think about the 223 00:13:31,720 --> 00:13:34,520 Speaker 1: muscle groupings in your body, and I'm talking about like 224 00:13:34,559 --> 00:13:38,240 Speaker 1: the tiny muscles that you even have, like that surrounds 225 00:13:38,240 --> 00:13:45,400 Speaker 1: your eyelids, it happens everywhere. Okay, it happens simultaneously where 226 00:13:45,600 --> 00:13:49,280 Speaker 1: you have this rigidity that begins to set in throughout 227 00:13:49,320 --> 00:13:51,880 Speaker 1: the body. And a lot of people will say it 228 00:13:52,120 --> 00:13:55,840 Speaker 1: starts in the small muscles of the body and extends 229 00:13:55,840 --> 00:14:00,160 Speaker 1: out to larger ones. That's a fallacy. That's inaccurate. It 230 00:14:00,800 --> 00:14:07,760 Speaker 1: starts everywhere, everywhere simultaneously. However, it's most appreciated in the 231 00:14:07,800 --> 00:14:12,319 Speaker 1: small muscles, and then the larger muscle groups are slower, 232 00:14:12,559 --> 00:14:14,640 Speaker 1: you know, to kind of come around. So I'll give 233 00:14:14,640 --> 00:14:18,800 Speaker 1: you a great example of this. You might not have rigidity, 234 00:14:19,520 --> 00:14:23,480 Speaker 1: say in the elbows, the wrist, maybe the shoulders, and 235 00:14:23,520 --> 00:14:27,440 Speaker 1: certainly in the knees. But if you and this is 236 00:14:27,480 --> 00:14:29,360 Speaker 1: one of the things. This is the first area I 237 00:14:29,440 --> 00:14:32,480 Speaker 1: always go to to check a body for rigidity, and 238 00:14:32,520 --> 00:14:36,120 Speaker 1: that's the mouth. If I press down on the chin 239 00:14:36,440 --> 00:14:39,680 Speaker 1: in order to try to open the mouth and I'm 240 00:14:39,720 --> 00:14:42,720 Speaker 1: struggling with it. This is what I know. That muscle 241 00:14:42,760 --> 00:14:47,640 Speaker 1: grouping that is adjacent to where your jaw fits in 242 00:14:47,880 --> 00:14:51,040 Speaker 1: de mandible actually fits in to that joint like the 243 00:14:51,120 --> 00:14:55,400 Speaker 1: TMJ when it goes in there, those muscle groups are 244 00:14:55,400 --> 00:14:59,479 Speaker 1: most affected. They're tiny, Okay, So you get this rigidity 245 00:14:59,520 --> 00:15:01,960 Speaker 1: that sets and the jaw. And yet people say you 246 00:15:02,040 --> 00:15:06,800 Speaker 1: can appreciate it in the eyelids. I've never really seen that. 247 00:15:07,280 --> 00:15:09,520 Speaker 1: I guess clinically they say you can. But for me 248 00:15:09,560 --> 00:15:12,480 Speaker 1: as a practitioner on the field, the jaw would be 249 00:15:12,520 --> 00:15:14,280 Speaker 1: where I would go to first, and then it kind 250 00:15:14,320 --> 00:15:17,680 Speaker 1: of extends out from there. You know, the smaller, smaller 251 00:15:17,760 --> 00:15:20,880 Speaker 1: muscle groups, you'll see it, you know, like in the fingers, 252 00:15:21,400 --> 00:15:23,720 Speaker 1: you know, or in the toes before you're going to 253 00:15:23,720 --> 00:15:27,640 Speaker 1: see it in the ankles or the knees, are certainly 254 00:15:27,640 --> 00:15:31,640 Speaker 1: in the hips. But what's what has occurred is that 255 00:15:32,680 --> 00:15:38,800 Speaker 1: we are dependent. We are dependent in life on what's 256 00:15:38,840 --> 00:15:43,360 Speaker 1: called cellular respiration. And so those cells are living, breathing 257 00:15:43,480 --> 00:15:47,120 Speaker 1: all right. When they begin to shut down. When they 258 00:15:47,160 --> 00:15:52,160 Speaker 1: begin to shut down, cellular respiration has ceased, and so 259 00:15:53,200 --> 00:15:58,000 Speaker 1: the body, the body generally you I'm not going to 260 00:15:58,000 --> 00:16:01,320 Speaker 1: go into great detail, but there's crib cycle and it 261 00:16:01,320 --> 00:16:06,080 Speaker 1: throws off these little balls of energy. Okay, ATP, Well 262 00:16:06,560 --> 00:16:09,400 Speaker 1: that ceases, then you begin to produce ADP. And one 263 00:16:09,400 --> 00:16:12,880 Speaker 1: of the products of ADP is actually lactic acid. So 264 00:16:13,360 --> 00:16:16,920 Speaker 1: if you have ever worked out, if you've ever worked 265 00:16:16,920 --> 00:16:19,440 Speaker 1: out in your life, and you hadn't done it in 266 00:16:19,520 --> 00:16:22,320 Speaker 1: a while, and you wake up the next morning and 267 00:16:22,320 --> 00:16:25,640 Speaker 1: you're stiff as a board, Look, you can go take 268 00:16:25,680 --> 00:16:27,840 Speaker 1: all the motrin and tile and all and aspirin and 269 00:16:27,840 --> 00:16:30,280 Speaker 1: everything else you want to take, but sooner or later, 270 00:16:30,840 --> 00:16:33,720 Speaker 1: that rigidity is going to leave your body. That's actually 271 00:16:33,800 --> 00:16:37,240 Speaker 1: a lactic acid build up that you're having, you're experiencing 272 00:16:37,240 --> 00:16:41,720 Speaker 1: and your joints. The reality is, because we're upright and 273 00:16:41,760 --> 00:16:46,400 Speaker 1: still breathing, our body metabolizes that. Okay, the dead can't, 274 00:16:47,520 --> 00:16:50,280 Speaker 1: the can't. The can't, they can't do it at the 275 00:16:50,280 --> 00:16:53,720 Speaker 1: same rate that we do in life. Now after a 276 00:16:53,760 --> 00:16:56,720 Speaker 1: period of time, and this is one of important things 277 00:16:56,760 --> 00:17:02,560 Speaker 1: about rigidity. After a period of time, time that lactic 278 00:17:02,640 --> 00:17:06,320 Speaker 1: acid build up in the dead begins to back out 279 00:17:07,040 --> 00:17:10,760 Speaker 1: and it leaves all right. So there's I think that 280 00:17:10,840 --> 00:17:14,120 Speaker 1: there's a common common thought where people believe that, hey, 281 00:17:14,200 --> 00:17:18,240 Speaker 1: you know what, once you're here, here's and we've heard 282 00:17:18,240 --> 00:17:21,359 Speaker 1: this before, once you're cold and stiff, man, you're cold 283 00:17:21,400 --> 00:17:24,600 Speaker 1: and stiff. Well, no you'll be you'll be cold, but 284 00:17:24,640 --> 00:17:30,680 Speaker 1: you ain't gonna be stiff because that your your arms, 285 00:17:31,119 --> 00:17:36,000 Speaker 1: your legs, your hips, your jaw, everything becomes flacid. Once again, 286 00:17:36,640 --> 00:17:40,720 Speaker 1: you revert back. So you have to you have to 287 00:17:40,800 --> 00:17:43,000 Speaker 1: be there like Johnny on the spot. So what are 288 00:17:43,040 --> 00:17:46,920 Speaker 1: you looking at relative to this, Well, it's first noticeable. 289 00:17:47,280 --> 00:17:52,199 Speaker 1: The rigidity, the ryger mortis is first noticeable. It's going 290 00:17:52,240 --> 00:17:54,040 Speaker 1: to take about one to three hours. A lot of 291 00:17:54,040 --> 00:17:58,040 Speaker 1: it's going to be, first off, dependent upon the physiology 292 00:17:58,080 --> 00:18:01,399 Speaker 1: of the person, and then it's also going to be 293 00:18:01,480 --> 00:18:05,960 Speaker 1: dependent upon the ambient environmental temperature. And we always have 294 00:18:06,000 --> 00:18:10,560 Speaker 1: to remember that anything that involves heat speeds things up. 295 00:18:10,640 --> 00:18:14,080 Speaker 1: So it's going to take about ten to twelve hours 296 00:18:14,400 --> 00:18:16,679 Speaker 1: for it to be complete. So why is that important 297 00:18:16,680 --> 00:18:20,160 Speaker 1: if we're death investigators. Well, it's very important because if 298 00:18:20,200 --> 00:18:23,280 Speaker 1: I show up at a scene, Dave, and the body 299 00:18:23,320 --> 00:18:31,760 Speaker 1: is completely rigid, like you can't move it, then I'm 300 00:18:31,800 --> 00:18:34,359 Speaker 1: going to hazard guests. Based on ryger morts loan, that 301 00:18:35,080 --> 00:18:40,280 Speaker 1: person's been dead for ten to twelve hours perhaps, So 302 00:18:42,080 --> 00:18:49,040 Speaker 1: my question is going back to Idaho. I'm not being 303 00:18:49,040 --> 00:18:53,399 Speaker 1: disrespectful here. It's a legitimate question. We have such a 304 00:18:53,520 --> 00:19:00,399 Speaker 1: delay and when those students were last known alleged to 305 00:19:00,520 --> 00:19:05,400 Speaker 1: have been alive. Okay, the big number that everybody talks 306 00:19:05,400 --> 00:19:09,520 Speaker 1: about is slightly after four am, roughly, okay, give or 307 00:19:09,520 --> 00:19:12,880 Speaker 1: take all, right, going down until you know about half 308 00:19:12,880 --> 00:19:17,520 Speaker 1: past the hour. That nine one one call doesn't originate 309 00:19:19,119 --> 00:19:24,679 Speaker 1: until like eleven something am almost so yeah, almost twelve, 310 00:19:24,720 --> 00:19:29,800 Speaker 1: So you know you're looking at seven seven hours, I 311 00:19:29,800 --> 00:19:34,879 Speaker 1: guess roughly, and you'd have to bracket that very carefully. 312 00:19:36,200 --> 00:19:43,960 Speaker 1: I'm I'm curious. This is dangerous ground here. I'm curious 313 00:19:43,960 --> 00:19:48,040 Speaker 1: as to what the coroner saw because she said in 314 00:19:48,119 --> 00:19:55,200 Speaker 1: one report, Dave, that huh that these kids were obviously 315 00:19:55,240 --> 00:20:00,239 Speaker 1: asleep when this happened. So my question based upon on 316 00:20:00,440 --> 00:20:04,639 Speaker 1: that statement that she made in an interview, like within 317 00:20:04,800 --> 00:20:07,880 Speaker 1: like two days, two or three days after this happened. 318 00:20:09,560 --> 00:20:14,440 Speaker 1: So talk to me about rigidity. Did you measure rigidity? 319 00:20:14,480 --> 00:20:16,639 Speaker 1: Because I don't know, you're telling me that everybody was 320 00:20:16,680 --> 00:20:21,320 Speaker 1: obviously asleep, all right, Well, according to what we're hearing now, 321 00:20:21,400 --> 00:20:26,080 Speaker 1: particularly based upon the dateline dump that came out, these 322 00:20:26,119 --> 00:20:29,400 Speaker 1: bodies were not in the position that we were led 323 00:20:29,440 --> 00:20:32,760 Speaker 1: to believe. They certainly weren't tucked into beds, you know, 324 00:20:32,840 --> 00:20:36,720 Speaker 1: all snug in the bed. So for the medical legal authority, 325 00:20:36,800 --> 00:20:39,280 Speaker 1: I would have to ask what was the extent of 326 00:20:39,280 --> 00:20:42,119 Speaker 1: your examination at the scene. Did you check for rigidity 327 00:20:42,119 --> 00:20:45,480 Speaker 1: in the bodies? You know, was there stiffness in the jaw, 328 00:20:45,560 --> 00:20:49,720 Speaker 1: stiffness in the limbs? You know, where the bodies flaccid? Still? 329 00:20:49,720 --> 00:20:53,239 Speaker 1: Could were they movable? And that's that's just on the 330 00:20:53,280 --> 00:20:57,840 Speaker 1: point of Roger Mortis alone. I think that that's a 331 00:20:57,920 --> 00:21:00,960 Speaker 1: legitimate question that's going to come out. Of course, if 332 00:21:01,000 --> 00:21:03,520 Speaker 1: the case goes off in August, which you know we're 333 00:21:03,520 --> 00:21:07,840 Speaker 1: thinking it might. I don't know. I sit back and 334 00:21:07,880 --> 00:21:12,720 Speaker 1: I think about that data and how it was collected 335 00:21:12,800 --> 00:21:17,960 Speaker 1: that's scene. Was rigidity measured? Because you know, my friends, 336 00:21:18,080 --> 00:21:21,800 Speaker 1: I got to tell you, you can't measure the stuff at 337 00:21:21,840 --> 00:21:25,080 Speaker 1: the morgue. The forensic pathologist if you ever read an 338 00:21:25,119 --> 00:21:28,240 Speaker 1: autopsy report, they'll say that when I received the body, 339 00:21:29,040 --> 00:21:33,080 Speaker 1: the body was cool to the touch, rocking mortis was 340 00:21:33,080 --> 00:21:36,160 Speaker 1: present in the jaw and the extremities. That's their boilerplate, 341 00:21:37,160 --> 00:21:40,400 Speaker 1: and they'll talk about post warmal avidity, we'll get into 342 00:21:40,400 --> 00:21:43,960 Speaker 1: that in a second. But you can't that assessment at 343 00:21:43,960 --> 00:21:48,800 Speaker 1: the morgue by the forensic pathologist be honestly, you ain't 344 00:21:48,840 --> 00:21:51,680 Speaker 1: worth a gunpowder to blow at hell because that data 345 00:21:51,720 --> 00:21:54,440 Speaker 1: really doesn't mean anything. The body has been taken out 346 00:21:54,440 --> 00:21:57,680 Speaker 1: of context by that time, David. It's a three hour 347 00:21:57,800 --> 00:22:04,280 Speaker 1: drive a Moscow to Aida County where these autopsies were done, 348 00:22:05,040 --> 00:22:07,760 Speaker 1: and once the bodies are removed, they're going to go 349 00:22:07,800 --> 00:22:10,520 Speaker 1: into a cooler, so that's going to affect the data. 350 00:22:10,680 --> 00:22:13,720 Speaker 1: You can't and then if there was air conditioning or 351 00:22:13,720 --> 00:22:16,639 Speaker 1: no air conditioning running in the van, that's going to 352 00:22:16,680 --> 00:22:19,080 Speaker 1: impact once you take those bodies out of that environment. 353 00:22:19,080 --> 00:22:22,439 Speaker 1: If you don't do that assessment right then and there 354 00:22:23,359 --> 00:22:28,320 Speaker 1: at that moment, it's not worth doing. So that's I 355 00:22:28,359 --> 00:22:46,280 Speaker 1: think that's a legitimate question. The stiffness that you encounter 356 00:22:46,800 --> 00:22:51,760 Speaker 1: with the human remain it's shocking, you know, when you 357 00:22:52,160 --> 00:22:55,760 Speaker 1: and even for me, as you know, a guy that 358 00:22:55,880 --> 00:22:58,919 Speaker 1: was involved in this field for a long time. It 359 00:22:58,960 --> 00:23:02,159 Speaker 1: was shocking for me. You know, when I would you 360 00:23:02,240 --> 00:23:04,600 Speaker 1: still have an expectation when you're around the dead. I mean, 361 00:23:04,640 --> 00:23:07,840 Speaker 1: obviously they're human. You still have an expectation they're going 362 00:23:07,880 --> 00:23:11,480 Speaker 1: to respond to you like any other human. But the 363 00:23:11,560 --> 00:23:15,640 Speaker 1: dead don't respond that way. There is a stiffness that 364 00:23:17,280 --> 00:23:23,960 Speaker 1: they have that you don't encounter in any other context. 365 00:23:24,640 --> 00:23:27,120 Speaker 1: You can even think about, say, for instance, if there's 366 00:23:27,119 --> 00:23:30,120 Speaker 1: somebody resisting you and they're holding their arm like you've 367 00:23:30,119 --> 00:23:34,119 Speaker 1: grabbed them by their arm, and that resistance, they are 368 00:23:34,200 --> 00:23:39,560 Speaker 1: still not the strength of riger It's quite striking. But 369 00:23:39,680 --> 00:23:49,360 Speaker 1: here's another thing. You think about the changes in bodies 370 00:23:50,040 --> 00:23:56,480 Speaker 1: relative to temperature. If any of you have ever lost 371 00:23:56,520 --> 00:24:01,240 Speaker 1: a loved one, and in those last moments when you're 372 00:24:01,359 --> 00:24:04,400 Speaker 1: at a funeral home or wherever it is, maybe you're 373 00:24:04,480 --> 00:24:10,160 Speaker 1: sitting with a loved one and they pass on, there's 374 00:24:10,160 --> 00:24:15,560 Speaker 1: something about the coolness of death. It's it's like no 375 00:24:15,720 --> 00:24:24,679 Speaker 1: other type of sensory perception on your part like the 376 00:24:24,680 --> 00:24:27,080 Speaker 1: coolness of death. It's like you can, like if you 377 00:24:27,080 --> 00:24:30,080 Speaker 1: go outside in the wintertime and your fingers are cold, 378 00:24:30,160 --> 00:24:33,360 Speaker 1: or your nose is cold. You've got you've always got 379 00:24:33,359 --> 00:24:35,400 Speaker 1: the friend that walks up to you and says, hey, 380 00:24:35,520 --> 00:24:37,639 Speaker 1: feel this, and they put their hands on your face, 381 00:24:37,680 --> 00:24:44,080 Speaker 1: you know, and you retract. There's something about the coolness 382 00:24:44,080 --> 00:24:46,240 Speaker 1: of death, and that's one of the reasons. Even in 383 00:24:46,400 --> 00:24:49,680 Speaker 1: literature you'll hear terms like the icy fingers of death. 384 00:24:51,200 --> 00:24:53,160 Speaker 1: And it's a real thing. I mean, if you've ever 385 00:24:53,200 --> 00:24:55,760 Speaker 1: been next to an open casket and you touch someone 386 00:24:55,840 --> 00:25:01,080 Speaker 1: in there, there's something. It's the absence of of any 387 00:25:01,200 --> 00:25:07,359 Speaker 1: kind of life, I think, And when you're attempting to 388 00:25:07,520 --> 00:25:14,760 Speaker 1: assess the dead based simply upon temperature, this is something 389 00:25:14,840 --> 00:25:18,760 Speaker 1: that most people, I think out there believe that this 390 00:25:18,840 --> 00:25:23,639 Speaker 1: is our go to and for me, it's probably some 391 00:25:23,680 --> 00:25:28,840 Speaker 1: of the most worthless data that exists. The reason is 392 00:25:28,840 --> 00:25:31,439 Speaker 1: is that there are too many variables involved, and no 393 00:25:31,480 --> 00:25:35,000 Speaker 1: one can quite seem to come up with a methodology 394 00:25:35,840 --> 00:25:39,600 Speaker 1: where they want to measure the temperature of a body. 395 00:25:39,640 --> 00:25:43,200 Speaker 1: And let me give you an example. So you've got 396 00:25:43,200 --> 00:25:47,000 Speaker 1: a real baseline here when you're talking about how cool 397 00:25:47,960 --> 00:25:53,119 Speaker 1: or cold body is, and you touch the body and 398 00:25:53,720 --> 00:25:56,240 Speaker 1: people will either say, well, the body is warm to 399 00:25:56,320 --> 00:25:59,480 Speaker 1: the touch or cool to the touch. That's very baseline, 400 00:25:59,600 --> 00:26:03,800 Speaker 1: very base right. Then you have other methodologies that are employed, 401 00:26:03,880 --> 00:26:08,600 Speaker 1: like using a thermometer. Well, you run into a lot 402 00:26:08,640 --> 00:26:11,720 Speaker 1: of problems using a thermometer, and here are a few 403 00:26:13,440 --> 00:26:16,440 Speaker 1: many people will try to do what's called an axillary temperature, 404 00:26:16,480 --> 00:26:20,879 Speaker 1: and that means that you take a glass thermometer and 405 00:26:20,920 --> 00:26:25,200 Speaker 1: you place it in the armpit externally and you place 406 00:26:25,280 --> 00:26:31,840 Speaker 1: the arm against the armpit, holding the thermometer in place 407 00:26:31,880 --> 00:26:34,119 Speaker 1: for about five minutes so you can get an accurate reading, 408 00:26:34,200 --> 00:26:37,879 Speaker 1: and all the while you have another thermometer hanging in 409 00:26:37,960 --> 00:26:43,720 Speaker 1: the air, suspending the air, taking the ambient environmental temperature. Now, 410 00:26:43,760 --> 00:26:48,119 Speaker 1: you can either do that with an analog thermometer like 411 00:26:48,119 --> 00:26:51,000 Speaker 1: an old glass thermometer mercury thermometer, or you can do 412 00:26:52,359 --> 00:26:55,960 Speaker 1: a temperature reader in a room which exists widely. Now, 413 00:26:56,520 --> 00:26:58,480 Speaker 1: and you have to do this like every I think 414 00:26:58,520 --> 00:27:00,080 Speaker 1: it's like every You do it in twenty men in 415 00:27:00,119 --> 00:27:02,280 Speaker 1: at intervals while you're at a scene to try to get 416 00:27:02,280 --> 00:27:05,240 Speaker 1: an idea if you can get an idea of how 417 00:27:05,280 --> 00:27:07,120 Speaker 1: the temperare is dropping off on a body, but it's 418 00:27:07,119 --> 00:27:12,520 Speaker 1: still wildly inaccurate. Now there's a whole group of people 419 00:27:12,560 --> 00:27:16,520 Speaker 1: out there in medical legal debt investigation. Now I'm about 420 00:27:16,520 --> 00:27:18,600 Speaker 1: to blow your mind with what I'm going to tell you. 421 00:27:21,680 --> 00:27:30,840 Speaker 1: They believe that it is good practice to take a 422 00:27:30,960 --> 00:27:33,959 Speaker 1: human body at a scene. Remember, we have to do 423 00:27:34,040 --> 00:27:36,040 Speaker 1: everything that's seen. You can't do it, the more it's 424 00:27:36,040 --> 00:27:42,560 Speaker 1: worthless data. And you take scalpel and you take a 425 00:27:42,640 --> 00:27:48,159 Speaker 1: digital Turkey thermometer. You make an incision beneath the last 426 00:27:48,240 --> 00:27:52,600 Speaker 1: rib on the right side, which is that overlays your liver, 427 00:27:52,840 --> 00:27:58,320 Speaker 1: which is the most dense organ in the body. And 428 00:27:58,359 --> 00:28:01,000 Speaker 1: so you're looking for what's called and you guys have 429 00:28:01,040 --> 00:28:05,400 Speaker 1: heard this before, core body temperature. So once you make 430 00:28:05,400 --> 00:28:08,960 Speaker 1: that incision, you take the thermometer and insert it into 431 00:28:09,080 --> 00:28:14,520 Speaker 1: deliver and it gives you a pretty instantaneous reading. But 432 00:28:14,600 --> 00:28:18,360 Speaker 1: here's the problem with it. If that's your methodology you're 433 00:28:18,359 --> 00:28:22,200 Speaker 1: going to employ, it doesn't matter what the case is. 434 00:28:22,480 --> 00:28:25,879 Speaker 1: If you try to go to court with that, you 435 00:28:26,000 --> 00:28:30,280 Speaker 1: better be doing it every damn time. So that means 436 00:28:30,320 --> 00:28:33,040 Speaker 1: that did you get a core temperature on the multiple 437 00:28:33,040 --> 00:28:36,960 Speaker 1: stablind victim? Just think about just for a second, let 438 00:28:36,960 --> 00:28:39,760 Speaker 1: that seep into your ground water. So you've got a 439 00:28:39,760 --> 00:28:42,920 Speaker 1: body at a scene, a homicide that's got multiple stab wounds. 440 00:28:43,320 --> 00:28:46,400 Speaker 1: Now you're going to take a scalpel and make another 441 00:28:46,480 --> 00:28:51,880 Speaker 1: incision into the body and then insert the thermometer. Oh 442 00:28:51,920 --> 00:28:54,360 Speaker 1: and by the way, this is what they tell you 443 00:28:54,400 --> 00:29:01,000 Speaker 1: to do. After you've done this, man marks a lot 444 00:29:02,240 --> 00:29:05,760 Speaker 1: and make a circle around your incision and put your 445 00:29:05,800 --> 00:29:07,640 Speaker 1: initials on it. Now. I remember the first time I 446 00:29:07,640 --> 00:29:09,960 Speaker 1: was taught this, I was thinking, okay, so let me 447 00:29:10,040 --> 00:29:15,400 Speaker 1: get this straight. You want me to open a body 448 00:29:15,440 --> 00:29:18,440 Speaker 1: at a scene where I'm surrounded by not just police officers, 449 00:29:18,440 --> 00:29:22,240 Speaker 1: but if I'm outside, which I have been before, surrounded 450 00:29:22,280 --> 00:29:25,000 Speaker 1: by angry group of people and they see me whip 451 00:29:25,040 --> 00:29:28,840 Speaker 1: out the cold steel and I'm kneeling over somebody's son. 452 00:29:29,160 --> 00:29:32,120 Speaker 1: In this environment, I'm to make an incision in front 453 00:29:32,160 --> 00:29:36,280 Speaker 1: of this group of people and insert a digital thermometer. 454 00:29:36,480 --> 00:29:40,240 Speaker 1: That's what you're asking me to do. Got it? Good idea? 455 00:29:41,600 --> 00:29:44,680 Speaker 1: So you know the problem is is that your adopted practice. 456 00:29:44,760 --> 00:29:47,560 Speaker 1: You have to do that every single time. You know, 457 00:29:47,640 --> 00:29:49,320 Speaker 1: you can't say, well, I'm going to do it on 458 00:29:49,400 --> 00:29:51,200 Speaker 1: some cases, I'm not going to do it on the others. 459 00:29:51,200 --> 00:29:55,560 Speaker 1: Because if you take that in that your office adopted 460 00:29:55,640 --> 00:29:59,800 Speaker 1: policy and you go into court with it. Defense attorneys 461 00:29:59,800 --> 00:30:02,280 Speaker 1: can potentially eat you up. They'll say, well, you did 462 00:30:02,280 --> 00:30:03,960 Speaker 1: it on all these other cases, what do you do 463 00:30:04,040 --> 00:30:06,800 Speaker 1: in this case? In your data kind of invalid at 464 00:30:06,800 --> 00:30:10,000 Speaker 1: this point, and you see how this can become a 465 00:30:10,040 --> 00:30:13,080 Speaker 1: real problem. And plus, I don't know, I'm just not 466 00:30:13,120 --> 00:30:15,880 Speaker 1: a fan of making incisions in dead bodies at the 467 00:30:15,920 --> 00:30:20,280 Speaker 1: scene in an uncontrolled environment. And look, maybe that is 468 00:30:20,480 --> 00:30:25,600 Speaker 1: very accurate, but I have to ask this question, and 469 00:30:27,320 --> 00:30:30,719 Speaker 1: I don't know, is the data that you're going to 470 00:30:30,800 --> 00:30:37,280 Speaker 1: glean from that one procedure is it worth compromising a case. 471 00:30:37,880 --> 00:30:39,520 Speaker 1: It's kind of like, you know, for years there were 472 00:30:39,520 --> 00:30:42,080 Speaker 1: people that said, oh, well we need to do a 473 00:30:42,160 --> 00:30:46,040 Speaker 1: rectal temperature at a scene on a dead body. Well, 474 00:30:46,040 --> 00:30:49,520 Speaker 1: if that's going to be your office policy, what about 475 00:30:49,600 --> 00:30:52,240 Speaker 1: rape cases? Are you going to take a foreign object 476 00:30:52,960 --> 00:30:57,840 Speaker 1: at a suspected rape homicide case and do a rectal 477 00:30:57,960 --> 00:31:01,640 Speaker 1: temperature at the scene because you're getting close to the 478 00:31:01,680 --> 00:31:05,840 Speaker 1: core kind of And maybe the data is valid, but 479 00:31:06,200 --> 00:31:09,200 Speaker 1: I think there's more important evidence that can be gleaned 480 00:31:09,360 --> 00:31:12,959 Speaker 1: from I don't know, directum. 481 00:31:12,240 --> 00:31:15,920 Speaker 2: Than be destroying evidence. You're ready to get the temperature. 482 00:31:15,840 --> 00:31:18,959 Speaker 1: Absolutely, so is the data actually worth it? Now? Let 483 00:31:19,000 --> 00:31:23,760 Speaker 1: me run this down to you. So with about the 484 00:31:23,800 --> 00:31:29,239 Speaker 1: first hour after death, you're going to lose about a 485 00:31:29,360 --> 00:31:33,040 Speaker 1: degree and a half to two degrees of temp that's 486 00:31:33,120 --> 00:31:36,120 Speaker 1: been generated in life. You're going to lose that temperature 487 00:31:36,200 --> 00:31:39,560 Speaker 1: off the body after the first hour. Then for the 488 00:31:39,600 --> 00:31:43,200 Speaker 1: next next twelve hours up to the twelfth hour, you're 489 00:31:43,240 --> 00:31:46,840 Speaker 1: losing one degree. Okay, So if you start off at 490 00:31:46,920 --> 00:31:49,280 Speaker 1: ninety eight point six, you can do the math from there. 491 00:31:51,680 --> 00:31:54,280 Speaker 1: So when you get to that twelfth hour after death, 492 00:31:55,040 --> 00:31:58,320 Speaker 1: you've heard people say, well, you've assumed room temperature. That's 493 00:31:58,440 --> 00:32:02,760 Speaker 1: kind of what it means. That means that you're and 494 00:32:02,800 --> 00:32:05,280 Speaker 1: I teach my classes at Jacksonville State this and it's 495 00:32:05,360 --> 00:32:08,040 Speaker 1: kind of gruesome, I know, but it's reality. You're just 496 00:32:08,120 --> 00:32:11,840 Speaker 1: like any other inanimate object that dwells that same space, 497 00:32:11,880 --> 00:32:14,719 Speaker 1: so a piece of furniture, a desk, you know, a 498 00:32:14,760 --> 00:32:19,720 Speaker 1: book bag, whatever it is. Because the life that once 499 00:32:19,800 --> 00:32:25,120 Speaker 1: existed within that shell of a person, you're no longer 500 00:32:25,360 --> 00:32:28,040 Speaker 1: going back cellul or the respiration. Your body's not producing 501 00:32:28,120 --> 00:32:32,800 Speaker 1: anything at that point, Okay, you are truly dead at 502 00:32:32,800 --> 00:32:35,520 Speaker 1: that point, and so there's nothing coming off of the 503 00:32:35,520 --> 00:32:38,160 Speaker 1: body as far as ratiing heat or anything like that. 504 00:32:38,320 --> 00:32:42,080 Speaker 1: So that can be it can be a real problem. 505 00:32:42,480 --> 00:32:45,440 Speaker 1: That's why my default position, I think pretty much throughout 506 00:32:45,480 --> 00:32:48,360 Speaker 1: my career was always either warm to the touch or 507 00:32:48,400 --> 00:32:50,960 Speaker 1: cool to the touch. But beyond that, what am I 508 00:32:51,000 --> 00:32:54,840 Speaker 1: going to glean by? You know, what they're saying nowadays 509 00:32:54,960 --> 00:32:57,600 Speaker 1: is kind of the industry standard of making an incision 510 00:32:57,640 --> 00:33:00,200 Speaker 1: and embodying and inserting. And this is happening. You know, 511 00:33:00,240 --> 00:33:04,400 Speaker 1: people think, oh, come on morning, now it happens. It 512 00:33:04,480 --> 00:33:07,880 Speaker 1: happens out there, there are people engaging in this practice. 513 00:33:08,160 --> 00:33:11,640 Speaker 1: I think it's foolhardy, it's reckless. It truly is, because 514 00:33:11,680 --> 00:33:14,720 Speaker 1: I think that the data that is obtained from that 515 00:33:14,720 --> 00:33:19,280 Speaker 1: that particular procedure, it's not worth the risk of ruining 516 00:33:20,040 --> 00:33:38,600 Speaker 1: an entire investigation. So at the risk of being crass, 517 00:33:40,080 --> 00:33:44,840 Speaker 1: if you've ever had a stomach virus at any point 518 00:33:44,880 --> 00:33:46,400 Speaker 1: in time and you've had to go in to make 519 00:33:46,440 --> 00:33:51,120 Speaker 1: an offering to the porcelain God, you have seen your 520 00:33:51,120 --> 00:33:55,680 Speaker 1: stomach contents, okay, and it's not a lot different from 521 00:33:55,720 --> 00:33:58,760 Speaker 1: what we see in the morgue. The only thing is 522 00:33:58,760 --> 00:34:01,560 Speaker 1: is that when you're kneeling before the porcelain God, you're 523 00:34:01,560 --> 00:34:04,400 Speaker 1: not studying it as a matter of fact, you're holding 524 00:34:04,400 --> 00:34:06,800 Speaker 1: your head and you're thinking, God, please stop the room 525 00:34:06,800 --> 00:34:10,520 Speaker 1: from spending. Please, I promise I'll do whatever. I guess 526 00:34:10,560 --> 00:34:12,760 Speaker 1: I'm talking about being drunk now, I guess I promise 527 00:34:12,800 --> 00:34:15,080 Speaker 1: I'll never do this again. You know, you're making all 528 00:34:15,080 --> 00:34:17,240 Speaker 1: these promises to God that I won't do this again. 529 00:34:17,640 --> 00:34:21,200 Speaker 1: And if you've got a bug, it's it's horrible as well. 530 00:34:21,480 --> 00:34:24,120 Speaker 1: You know, you're you're not thinking about necessarily what's coming 531 00:34:24,160 --> 00:34:26,319 Speaker 1: out of you. You just know that it's coming out of you. 532 00:34:26,360 --> 00:34:29,680 Speaker 1: And for us in medical legal death investigation, Dave, that's 533 00:34:29,680 --> 00:34:33,520 Speaker 1: something that, as disgusting and gross as it sounds, that's 534 00:34:33,560 --> 00:34:37,480 Speaker 1: something that we actually take our time trying to understand. 535 00:34:38,040 --> 00:34:41,040 Speaker 2: You know, I told you this before we started. When 536 00:34:42,320 --> 00:34:46,640 Speaker 2: Loadanna's nephew was murdered, there was a question he was 537 00:34:46,680 --> 00:34:49,520 Speaker 2: giving a friend a ride home and you know, attacked 538 00:34:49,560 --> 00:34:51,000 Speaker 2: the victim kind of thing. He was in the wrong 539 00:34:51,040 --> 00:34:53,160 Speaker 2: place at the wrong time. Talk about your innocent victim. 540 00:34:53,239 --> 00:34:55,399 Speaker 2: He really was. But because he was in his early 541 00:34:55,440 --> 00:34:58,520 Speaker 2: twenties and he was out late. It was two thirty 542 00:34:58,520 --> 00:35:02,040 Speaker 2: in the morning, they want to know alcohol, drugs, and 543 00:35:02,120 --> 00:35:05,319 Speaker 2: stomach contents. Were their pills in there? What was going on, 544 00:35:05,920 --> 00:35:09,880 Speaker 2: And what they found out was that there was no alcohol, 545 00:35:09,880 --> 00:35:12,120 Speaker 2: there was no drug, there was no pills. They actually 546 00:35:12,120 --> 00:35:14,080 Speaker 2: had the food that he had when he drove through 547 00:35:14,080 --> 00:35:17,480 Speaker 2: Hearty's late at night and got a traditional meal because 548 00:35:17,480 --> 00:35:21,839 Speaker 2: he was hungry, and that was one of as weird 549 00:35:21,840 --> 00:35:24,480 Speaker 2: as it sounds, it was very comforting for the family 550 00:35:24,719 --> 00:35:27,080 Speaker 2: because they had been put through all of this idea 551 00:35:27,120 --> 00:35:30,759 Speaker 2: that somehow their dead nephew, their dead grandson deserved it, 552 00:35:30,840 --> 00:35:32,839 Speaker 2: you know, And it was like he was giving a 553 00:35:32,920 --> 00:35:36,640 Speaker 2: guy a ride home and talk about your innocent victim. 554 00:35:36,640 --> 00:35:38,520 Speaker 2: But that was one thing, and we actually they asked 555 00:35:38,560 --> 00:35:40,719 Speaker 2: me about that. The family did later on about a 556 00:35:40,800 --> 00:35:43,040 Speaker 2: number of things with the case, And is something I 557 00:35:43,080 --> 00:35:45,680 Speaker 2: told you too many times people go through an entire 558 00:35:45,680 --> 00:35:48,719 Speaker 2: case with a loved one who dies in a way 559 00:35:48,800 --> 00:35:52,680 Speaker 2: other than natural, and there is so much going on, 560 00:35:53,120 --> 00:35:56,759 Speaker 2: they don't get answers that years later mean something. You know, 561 00:35:56,840 --> 00:35:59,480 Speaker 2: why did this happen? Or what does this mean? And 562 00:35:59,520 --> 00:36:01,560 Speaker 2: I'm thankful I was able to answer those questions. So 563 00:36:01,680 --> 00:36:03,200 Speaker 2: I had to look up a lot of them I knew, 564 00:36:03,239 --> 00:36:05,759 Speaker 2: but still I got them those answers, and it really 565 00:36:05,760 --> 00:36:08,320 Speaker 2: did help. There was a grieving process that had continued 566 00:36:08,640 --> 00:36:10,759 Speaker 2: for fifteen years, and I was able to help with 567 00:36:10,760 --> 00:36:13,440 Speaker 2: that in the end. And I did want to ask 568 00:36:13,480 --> 00:36:15,960 Speaker 2: you to mention something about Kathy maybut that was the 569 00:36:16,000 --> 00:36:18,799 Speaker 2: corner in Idaho. Yeah, you mentioned a few minutes ago, 570 00:36:20,320 --> 00:36:22,120 Speaker 2: and I went back and I pulled up my notes 571 00:36:22,800 --> 00:36:25,160 Speaker 2: from what did we learn in the first three days? 572 00:36:25,160 --> 00:36:26,800 Speaker 2: Because she remember, she was all over the place. 573 00:36:27,960 --> 00:36:30,759 Speaker 1: Yeah, which I gotta let me interject real quick, and 574 00:36:30,800 --> 00:36:31,560 Speaker 1: I'll shut my mouth. 575 00:36:31,719 --> 00:36:31,919 Speaker 2: No. 576 00:36:32,600 --> 00:36:35,279 Speaker 1: The thing, no, no, no, The thing about it is 577 00:36:35,719 --> 00:36:39,120 Speaker 1: that's foreboden in my world. Yes, you're a corner or 578 00:36:39,239 --> 00:36:41,839 Speaker 1: medical examiner, you know, to keep your mouth shut. You're 579 00:36:41,880 --> 00:36:46,120 Speaker 1: inside the investigative bubble. You take your cues from the police. Now, look, 580 00:36:46,160 --> 00:36:49,359 Speaker 1: if you're an elected corner, godspeed. I mean, you can 581 00:36:49,360 --> 00:36:50,960 Speaker 1: do what you want to do, all right. 582 00:36:51,280 --> 00:36:52,640 Speaker 2: And that's what this was, correct. 583 00:36:53,120 --> 00:36:59,960 Speaker 1: Oh yeah, yeah, she's and she's a nurse and an attorney, right, 584 00:37:00,160 --> 00:37:02,160 Speaker 1: and she got elected to the office of corner, which 585 00:37:02,200 --> 00:37:05,640 Speaker 1: is cool. I have no problem with that. However, if 586 00:37:05,680 --> 00:37:08,440 Speaker 1: you're inside the investigative bubble, there's just certain things that 587 00:37:08,520 --> 00:37:11,640 Speaker 1: we know that we don't because you still have killer 588 00:37:11,640 --> 00:37:13,200 Speaker 1: on the loose at this point, in tom. 589 00:37:13,120 --> 00:37:16,279 Speaker 2: Right, we're talking two days after Yeah, Yeah, and Joe, 590 00:37:16,440 --> 00:37:18,480 Speaker 2: this is what this is a summary. This is what 591 00:37:18,560 --> 00:37:21,480 Speaker 2: I've got from it. I was shocked, and I remember 592 00:37:21,520 --> 00:37:25,600 Speaker 2: when we had this information of double checking because I thought, 593 00:37:26,000 --> 00:37:27,680 Speaker 2: this has got to be wrong. This has got to 594 00:37:27,680 --> 00:37:31,280 Speaker 2: be internet rumor. You know, it can't be right, because 595 00:37:31,280 --> 00:37:33,799 Speaker 2: I've never heard this coming out of somebody's mouth this 596 00:37:33,960 --> 00:37:38,600 Speaker 2: close to an investigation. Multiple stab wounds. She stated that 597 00:37:38,600 --> 00:37:41,920 Speaker 2: each victim suffered multiple stab wounds, pretty extensive wounds. Actually, 598 00:37:42,000 --> 00:37:45,920 Speaker 2: she described the wounds as pretty extensive, set a large knife. 599 00:37:46,080 --> 00:37:49,600 Speaker 2: Victims were likely attacked with a large knife, according to 600 00:37:49,680 --> 00:37:54,520 Speaker 2: preliminary autopsy, some defensive wounds. At least one victim showed 601 00:37:54,520 --> 00:37:58,000 Speaker 2: signs of defensive wounds, suggesting they may have woken up 602 00:37:58,080 --> 00:38:00,919 Speaker 2: during the attack, because if you remember, they were all 603 00:38:00,960 --> 00:38:05,840 Speaker 2: attacked while they were sleeping. Yeah, she said some defensive 604 00:38:05,880 --> 00:38:12,319 Speaker 2: wounds tears or tears rather tears and big open gouges. 605 00:38:15,280 --> 00:38:16,719 Speaker 1: Not a term I would use, but. 606 00:38:16,920 --> 00:38:21,640 Speaker 2: This is what kayligan Zava's father said. Kathy maybe shared 607 00:38:21,680 --> 00:38:25,879 Speaker 2: with him, described those wounds on his daughter as big 608 00:38:25,920 --> 00:38:32,440 Speaker 2: open gouges and tears. Now. She also said that based 609 00:38:32,480 --> 00:38:36,160 Speaker 2: on that the murderer was pretty angry. It was a 610 00:38:36,160 --> 00:38:41,080 Speaker 2: pretty angry attacker. They were killed in their beds. Now 611 00:38:41,120 --> 00:38:45,440 Speaker 2: we have actually heard a little bit different on this. 612 00:38:46,120 --> 00:38:48,920 Speaker 1: But yeah, we have. Yeah, there's you know, there's a 613 00:38:49,000 --> 00:38:51,400 Speaker 1: number of things floating around right now. And again it 614 00:38:51,520 --> 00:38:56,400 Speaker 1: comes comes back from of the day Line, the dump 615 00:38:56,480 --> 00:38:58,960 Speaker 1: that happened with date Line, which we're still waiting to 616 00:38:58,960 --> 00:39:02,320 Speaker 1: find out who leaked that information. It doesn't surprise me 617 00:39:02,360 --> 00:39:04,920 Speaker 1: in the news media ran with it, but it's just 618 00:39:04,960 --> 00:39:07,120 Speaker 1: the fact that it was that it's out there. And 619 00:39:07,160 --> 00:39:12,400 Speaker 1: again going back to the corner's assessment, you know, you 620 00:39:12,480 --> 00:39:15,280 Speaker 1: can talk about I guess if you want to tears 621 00:39:15,280 --> 00:39:16,520 Speaker 1: and goalges, which is. 622 00:39:16,960 --> 00:39:18,680 Speaker 2: I want to ask you something that you could say 623 00:39:18,840 --> 00:39:21,439 Speaker 2: other that I've got to ask you if what it means? 624 00:39:21,800 --> 00:39:25,760 Speaker 2: What's that she said there were no significant bruising. Now 625 00:39:26,320 --> 00:39:30,200 Speaker 2: we know that there is a seven hour interval at 626 00:39:30,360 --> 00:39:33,080 Speaker 2: least between the times of the murders and the time 627 00:39:33,280 --> 00:39:35,920 Speaker 2: that ninem On one was called. At least seven hours. 628 00:39:36,640 --> 00:39:39,759 Speaker 2: Kathy may but at the time said she thought that 629 00:39:39,880 --> 00:39:43,960 Speaker 2: might have been killed around two am. Now they now 630 00:39:44,000 --> 00:39:46,759 Speaker 2: have moved that time to after four am, before four 631 00:39:46,920 --> 00:39:50,800 Speaker 2: thirty am, before four to twenty actually, but no significant bruising. 632 00:39:51,280 --> 00:39:55,560 Speaker 2: But there was a little bit of bruising, but nothing significant. 633 00:39:55,880 --> 00:40:00,359 Speaker 2: Is that not an uncommon occurrence in a You're seeing 634 00:40:00,400 --> 00:40:02,600 Speaker 2: bodies at least seven and by the time she got 635 00:40:02,600 --> 00:40:04,480 Speaker 2: out there, it had to be even more than just seven. 636 00:40:04,520 --> 00:40:06,080 Speaker 2: It had to have been closer to ten hours by 637 00:40:06,080 --> 00:40:08,000 Speaker 2: the time she got out there. She didn't get out 638 00:40:08,000 --> 00:40:09,480 Speaker 2: there in the first thirty minutes or so. 639 00:40:10,000 --> 00:40:12,799 Speaker 1: No, I can't imagine they would have locked They would 640 00:40:12,840 --> 00:40:16,520 Speaker 1: have locked the scene down. Police would have had had 641 00:40:16,520 --> 00:40:18,840 Speaker 1: a what's over? But if you remember as well, the 642 00:40:18,920 --> 00:40:21,719 Speaker 1: DA showed up out there too, I'll never forget, you know, 643 00:40:21,760 --> 00:40:23,719 Speaker 1: And apparently he had walked the guy with a big 644 00:40:23,760 --> 00:40:28,200 Speaker 1: beard he'd walked through as well at some point in time. 645 00:40:28,320 --> 00:40:31,719 Speaker 1: So I guess what it comes down to as far 646 00:40:31,760 --> 00:40:34,719 Speaker 1: as the duties of the corner and the assessment of 647 00:40:34,760 --> 00:40:39,400 Speaker 1: these kids, is how much data was collected at the 648 00:40:39,400 --> 00:40:43,040 Speaker 1: scene relative to you know, we had talked about rigidity, 649 00:40:43,920 --> 00:40:47,840 Speaker 1: we had talked about we had talked about body temperature. 650 00:40:49,600 --> 00:40:51,719 Speaker 1: Do we even have an understanding as to whether or 651 00:40:51,719 --> 00:40:53,960 Speaker 1: not the bodies were cool or worn to the touch? 652 00:40:54,400 --> 00:40:58,719 Speaker 1: I think that's important. And then you know, bringing it 653 00:40:58,800 --> 00:41:02,279 Speaker 1: back to Zanta. What what's the one thing here, and 654 00:41:02,280 --> 00:41:04,400 Speaker 1: this isn't a trick question, what's the one thing that 655 00:41:04,440 --> 00:41:07,520 Speaker 1: we know that Xana was doing that was she was 656 00:41:07,600 --> 00:41:10,240 Speaker 1: one of the last things that she was reportedly doing 657 00:41:11,440 --> 00:41:14,480 Speaker 1: relative to food, door Dash she was in door Dash 658 00:41:14,520 --> 00:41:16,920 Speaker 1: showed up and you know, one of my questions is 659 00:41:17,680 --> 00:41:19,000 Speaker 1: what kind of food was it? 660 00:41:19,080 --> 00:41:19,160 Speaker 2: Was? 661 00:41:19,200 --> 00:41:23,239 Speaker 1: Any of it consumed? And going back to earlier in 662 00:41:23,280 --> 00:41:29,400 Speaker 1: the evening when Maddie and Kaylee had one for you know, 663 00:41:29,440 --> 00:41:32,960 Speaker 1: they went to the grub truck, right, so they're going 664 00:41:33,040 --> 00:41:35,200 Speaker 1: to have food on board as well. 665 00:41:36,120 --> 00:41:38,600 Speaker 2: And would that would that be in their stomach contents? 666 00:41:38,600 --> 00:41:39,919 Speaker 2: I mean I don't know enough. Yeah. Yeah. 667 00:41:40,000 --> 00:41:44,760 Speaker 1: So so with generally, generally we as humans and this 668 00:41:44,760 --> 00:41:49,839 Speaker 1: this is this is heavily depended upon whether or not 669 00:41:50,080 --> 00:41:55,920 Speaker 1: we have we have some kind of gastrointestinal problem. You know, 670 00:41:56,880 --> 00:42:02,920 Speaker 1: is our stomach and digestive system functioning normally? Okay, So 671 00:42:03,280 --> 00:42:06,200 Speaker 1: that's the caveat to this. So it takes it takes 672 00:42:06,239 --> 00:42:12,759 Speaker 1: about four to six hours four to six hours for 673 00:42:12,920 --> 00:42:15,600 Speaker 1: the stomach to empty. So where is it empty? It 674 00:42:15,600 --> 00:42:20,040 Speaker 1: empties into the small intestine. The small intestine is slower. 675 00:42:20,880 --> 00:42:23,680 Speaker 1: You know small intestine. You know you heard these wild 676 00:42:23,760 --> 00:42:28,120 Speaker 1: stories about how long the small intestine is. Well it 677 00:42:28,160 --> 00:42:33,120 Speaker 1: the small intestine takes about twelve hours to eliminate. Okay, 678 00:42:33,160 --> 00:42:35,080 Speaker 1: it's going to be So if you block that and 679 00:42:35,120 --> 00:42:39,080 Speaker 1: you say, well, what happened, you know during this period 680 00:42:39,080 --> 00:42:42,919 Speaker 1: of time, there's not a lot you know, you can 681 00:42:43,400 --> 00:42:47,080 Speaker 1: there's some appreciable evidence in the small intestine. But if 682 00:42:47,120 --> 00:42:49,960 Speaker 1: you go back to the stomach and you have you 683 00:42:50,080 --> 00:42:53,200 Speaker 1: have food remnant in the stomach, gastric content as it 684 00:42:53,360 --> 00:42:56,799 Speaker 1: referred to. When you open that stomach, and when we 685 00:42:56,880 --> 00:43:01,200 Speaker 1: take out the stomach at autopsy, you clip it at 686 00:43:01,760 --> 00:43:05,720 Speaker 1: where essentially I won't go into all the specific anatomical terms, 687 00:43:05,719 --> 00:43:07,919 Speaker 1: but just think about where the esophka is coming down, 688 00:43:07,960 --> 00:43:12,239 Speaker 1: descending out of the mouth, descends right before it gets 689 00:43:12,320 --> 00:43:14,880 Speaker 1: his stomach. You tie it off and you clip it. Okay, 690 00:43:15,960 --> 00:43:19,600 Speaker 1: Then you clip the end of the stomach after tying 691 00:43:19,640 --> 00:43:22,759 Speaker 1: it off, where it's about to dump into the small intestine, 692 00:43:22,760 --> 00:43:26,120 Speaker 1: so you can remove the stomach completely intact without spilling 693 00:43:26,160 --> 00:43:29,680 Speaker 1: the contents. It's messy business and most of the time 694 00:43:30,520 --> 00:43:34,040 Speaker 1: we will take the stomach away from the body over 695 00:43:34,080 --> 00:43:37,520 Speaker 1: to a sink and we've got a pan. If you've 696 00:43:37,520 --> 00:43:40,160 Speaker 1: ever seen you know, when you go to a grocery 697 00:43:40,200 --> 00:43:44,920 Speaker 1: store and you're going to put produce in a scale, 698 00:43:45,400 --> 00:43:48,279 Speaker 1: that pan that you put produce in the scale with, 699 00:43:49,600 --> 00:43:51,720 Speaker 1: that's what it looks like. We have those in the morgue. 700 00:43:51,760 --> 00:43:54,480 Speaker 1: So we will have the stainless steel pan. We'll open 701 00:43:54,520 --> 00:43:57,360 Speaker 1: the stomach in the pan and dump out the contents 702 00:43:57,360 --> 00:43:59,880 Speaker 1: in there, and that way we don't lose anything. Because 703 00:44:00,200 --> 00:44:03,680 Speaker 1: I've worked with forendsic pathologists in the morgue before that 704 00:44:03,760 --> 00:44:07,200 Speaker 1: would literally open the stomach inside the cavity. Well, that's 705 00:44:07,280 --> 00:44:13,399 Speaker 1: that's dangerous business because if you don't, if you don't 706 00:44:13,880 --> 00:44:18,840 Speaker 1: dissect out the stomach and per the evisceration and you 707 00:44:18,920 --> 00:44:20,799 Speaker 1: remove the stomach, if you just try to do it 708 00:44:20,840 --> 00:44:26,280 Speaker 1: in there the interior of the body or the cavity, okay, 709 00:44:26,360 --> 00:44:30,640 Speaker 1: it's very bloody stuff. You've got standing blood that's in there. 710 00:44:30,680 --> 00:44:34,240 Speaker 1: So now you're going to commingle the stomach contents. Everything 711 00:44:34,280 --> 00:44:37,040 Speaker 1: gets very confused, so it's best to take it out. 712 00:44:37,120 --> 00:44:39,719 Speaker 1: And so if you have stomach content, you know that 713 00:44:41,600 --> 00:44:44,839 Speaker 1: this person had eaten four to six hours roughly, because 714 00:44:44,880 --> 00:44:47,759 Speaker 1: it takes that time for the stomach to clear. All right. 715 00:44:48,440 --> 00:44:52,480 Speaker 1: Another thing that's dependent is if you drink. If you 716 00:44:52,560 --> 00:44:56,520 Speaker 1: drink a sports shake, okay, that ain't the same as 717 00:44:56,680 --> 00:44:59,000 Speaker 1: going and eating a Porterhouse steak and a baked potato. 718 00:44:59,200 --> 00:45:00,960 Speaker 1: It's going to take a lot, a lot longer for 719 00:45:01,040 --> 00:45:03,880 Speaker 1: that pass through your system. Okay, so you have to 720 00:45:03,920 --> 00:45:06,400 Speaker 1: take that into account. But here's what's kind of interesting. 721 00:45:06,480 --> 00:45:10,280 Speaker 1: Day you had talked about this loved one of yours 722 00:45:10,360 --> 00:45:14,440 Speaker 1: that had died, and he had gone I think you 723 00:45:14,480 --> 00:45:18,040 Speaker 1: said he'd gone to Hearty's, which serves these giganic hamburgers. 724 00:45:18,080 --> 00:45:20,839 Speaker 1: All right, Well, you know when you get when you 725 00:45:20,880 --> 00:45:25,399 Speaker 1: open up the stomach, you can actually appreciate. People think 726 00:45:25,400 --> 00:45:28,239 Speaker 1: they chew their food really well, they really don't. You 727 00:45:28,280 --> 00:45:31,000 Speaker 1: can actually look. You can see ground beef. Pasta is 728 00:45:31,000 --> 00:45:33,000 Speaker 1: one of the worst things. You can see spaghetti. You 729 00:45:33,040 --> 00:45:36,160 Speaker 1: can make out what kind of noodles there are. Hot 730 00:45:36,160 --> 00:45:39,040 Speaker 1: Dogs are probably at the top of list because they're encased, 731 00:45:39,560 --> 00:45:41,920 Speaker 1: so you either have a natural casing, which is like 732 00:45:42,400 --> 00:45:45,960 Speaker 1: an intestine, or you have one of the disgusting I'm 733 00:45:46,000 --> 00:45:51,920 Speaker 1: a big Nathan's hot dog fan. I love Nathan's because 734 00:45:53,600 --> 00:45:57,400 Speaker 1: there they have a natural casing. All right, I'm not 735 00:45:57,520 --> 00:46:01,080 Speaker 1: a fan of like things that have I won't name 736 00:46:01,120 --> 00:46:05,960 Speaker 1: a brand, things that have synthetic casingtona. And so even 737 00:46:06,040 --> 00:46:09,160 Speaker 1: with that, hot dogs will remain in place. You'll see 738 00:46:09,160 --> 00:46:17,080 Speaker 1: that anything like grains, corn rice, vegetables, broccoli for instance, 739 00:46:17,400 --> 00:46:20,680 Speaker 1: Lettuce doesn't. It's not like you chew it up and 740 00:46:20,719 --> 00:46:24,240 Speaker 1: it's gone. Generally, things like soups, those sorts of things 741 00:46:24,440 --> 00:46:27,160 Speaker 1: where the vegetables that are contained in there are cooked down. 742 00:46:27,920 --> 00:46:30,040 Speaker 1: But there's a lot that you can recognize. And the 743 00:46:30,080 --> 00:46:33,880 Speaker 1: reason I'm not saying this in order to discuss listeners 744 00:46:34,200 --> 00:46:38,879 Speaker 1: what I'm The reason I'm saying this is because there's 745 00:46:38,960 --> 00:46:42,120 Speaker 1: valuable information contained in the stomach, particularly if you're talking 746 00:46:42,120 --> 00:46:46,520 Speaker 1: about a drug good. Maybe somebody has ingested something that 747 00:46:46,880 --> 00:46:51,800 Speaker 1: was toxic. That's why that from that, when we remove 748 00:46:51,840 --> 00:46:55,720 Speaker 1: the stomach, will actually get a very large plastic test 749 00:46:55,719 --> 00:46:59,759 Speaker 1: tube and will collect the stomach contents and put a 750 00:46:59,800 --> 00:47:02,040 Speaker 1: lift on it. We actually submit that to the state 751 00:47:02,160 --> 00:47:05,640 Speaker 1: crime lab because you can run you can run test 752 00:47:05,719 --> 00:47:07,879 Speaker 1: on that, you can actually do toxicology off of that. 753 00:47:08,120 --> 00:47:09,760 Speaker 2: That's I was going to ask you, how does alcohol 754 00:47:09,880 --> 00:47:12,880 Speaker 2: play a factor in what is in your stomach? Like 755 00:47:13,440 --> 00:47:16,640 Speaker 2: is wine different than beer? And is whiskey different than 756 00:47:16,840 --> 00:47:17,680 Speaker 2: what yeah, well. 757 00:47:19,000 --> 00:47:21,319 Speaker 1: Yeah, well. The thing about it is, this is kind 758 00:47:21,320 --> 00:47:27,720 Speaker 1: of an interesting little side. If you've ever been around 759 00:47:27,719 --> 00:47:31,680 Speaker 1: somebody that had been as my granddaddy, you say, pulling 760 00:47:31,719 --> 00:47:35,399 Speaker 1: a cork the night before, the next the next morning, 761 00:47:35,440 --> 00:47:39,440 Speaker 1: I don't care if they brush your teeth, showered, shaved, 762 00:47:39,800 --> 00:47:45,839 Speaker 1: put on Aqua velva, high karate, English leather, pick your 763 00:47:45,840 --> 00:47:51,239 Speaker 1: poison or Georgio. You can still smell the alcohol coming 764 00:47:51,280 --> 00:47:54,480 Speaker 1: off their body. If you think that's intense around a 765 00:47:54,520 --> 00:47:58,440 Speaker 1: living person. If you've got somebody that has been drinking 766 00:47:58,920 --> 00:48:01,480 Speaker 1: the night before and they died, like in a car crash, 767 00:48:01,640 --> 00:48:03,760 Speaker 1: or maybe they got no fight and they were hammered, 768 00:48:03,880 --> 00:48:07,040 Speaker 1: you know when they when you open the body, and 769 00:48:07,080 --> 00:48:09,319 Speaker 1: I'm talking about not even opening some I'm just talking 770 00:48:09,320 --> 00:48:12,240 Speaker 1: about the initial opening of the body, it like rushes 771 00:48:12,280 --> 00:48:15,640 Speaker 1: out like a big gasse at fist and punches you 772 00:48:15,719 --> 00:48:20,000 Speaker 1: right in the nose. You have that smell that like 773 00:48:20,320 --> 00:48:27,400 Speaker 1: permeates everything. It's everywhere, and so you can It's the 774 00:48:27,440 --> 00:48:29,919 Speaker 1: only way I can really describe it is that it's 775 00:48:29,920 --> 00:48:32,879 Speaker 1: sickly sweet. It's got this sickly sweet odor to it, 776 00:48:33,040 --> 00:48:35,360 Speaker 1: much like you know the smell that comes off of 777 00:48:35,400 --> 00:48:37,440 Speaker 1: somebody's body that's been drunk. They have that kind of 778 00:48:37,440 --> 00:48:40,520 Speaker 1: sickly sweet smell. It's even more pronounced in the dead 779 00:48:40,600 --> 00:48:43,160 Speaker 1: when you open the body. I used to work with 780 00:48:43,600 --> 00:48:47,000 Speaker 1: forensic pathologists. Guy's dead now. He was really, really old 781 00:48:47,120 --> 00:48:53,400 Speaker 1: and very listen. To say that forensic pathologists are eccentric 782 00:48:54,040 --> 00:48:57,560 Speaker 1: is an insult to eccentric people, because they are so 783 00:48:57,560 --> 00:49:02,120 Speaker 1: so eccentric. This guy used to claim, and he was. 784 00:49:02,239 --> 00:49:05,640 Speaker 1: He he fancied himself a wine connoisseur. He was in 785 00:49:05,680 --> 00:49:08,280 Speaker 1: New Orleans, so you'd go to all of these beautiful 786 00:49:08,360 --> 00:49:11,719 Speaker 1: creole restaurants and he would always sample wise. He used 787 00:49:11,760 --> 00:49:14,000 Speaker 1: to claim that just by the odor, he could claim 788 00:49:14,120 --> 00:49:16,800 Speaker 1: he could state what type of wine they had been drinking. 789 00:49:16,840 --> 00:49:20,319 Speaker 1: I'm thinking, you're so full of it's you're so full 790 00:49:20,360 --> 00:49:23,560 Speaker 1: of it, you can't do that. But for us, you know, 791 00:49:23,600 --> 00:49:27,880 Speaker 1: in the morgue, the gastric content tells a lot about 792 00:49:28,000 --> 00:49:33,200 Speaker 1: the activity of an individual. You know, we don't think 793 00:49:33,239 --> 00:49:37,799 Speaker 1: about like passively. If we're if we're eating, if we're 794 00:49:37,800 --> 00:49:40,960 Speaker 1: eating either for nutrition or we're eating because of stress 795 00:49:41,080 --> 00:49:43,120 Speaker 1: or whatever. We might pick up a handful of something 796 00:49:43,160 --> 00:49:46,279 Speaker 1: we're gonna pop it in our mouth or we just 797 00:49:46,280 --> 00:49:48,840 Speaker 1: grab a quick something to eat. Well, you don't know 798 00:49:49,400 --> 00:49:52,840 Speaker 1: if that ingestion of that thing is going to be 799 00:49:52,880 --> 00:49:55,239 Speaker 1: the last thing you ever consume and that's going to 800 00:49:55,320 --> 00:49:59,080 Speaker 1: travel with you. So that's one of the reasons. And 801 00:49:59,320 --> 00:50:06,040 Speaker 1: I from a scientific standpoint, I value the information that 802 00:50:06,080 --> 00:50:10,040 Speaker 1: I gleaned from gast content. But probably out of all 803 00:50:10,320 --> 00:50:15,440 Speaker 1: of the postmarm interval elements, it has to be postmarmal 804 00:50:15,520 --> 00:50:20,719 Speaker 1: avidity or live mortis for me. And here's why all 805 00:50:20,719 --> 00:50:25,200 Speaker 1: of these other things are so and particularly riger mortis 806 00:50:25,920 --> 00:50:30,200 Speaker 1: and an alger mortise, which is body temperature, they're so 807 00:50:30,360 --> 00:50:38,520 Speaker 1: heavily environmentally dependent, Dave liver mortis is not so. Just 808 00:50:38,600 --> 00:50:42,000 Speaker 1: imagine if you've got someone that dies sitting like the 809 00:50:42,040 --> 00:50:43,920 Speaker 1: guy you know, I showed you the image the other 810 00:50:44,000 --> 00:50:46,400 Speaker 1: day when we did the first segment of this teaching 811 00:50:46,440 --> 00:50:51,160 Speaker 1: series about decomposition. The guy that was seated in the chair, well, 812 00:50:51,200 --> 00:50:53,280 Speaker 1: the guy that was seated in the chair that died 813 00:50:53,480 --> 00:50:56,160 Speaker 1: of an m I just a natural death, had a 814 00:50:56,200 --> 00:51:02,200 Speaker 1: heart attack based upon how he seated. The blood because 815 00:51:02,200 --> 00:51:04,920 Speaker 1: it's no longer pumping through the body, it's going to 816 00:51:05,000 --> 00:51:09,120 Speaker 1: settle to the gravitationally dependent areas of his body. Gravity 817 00:51:09,200 --> 00:51:13,040 Speaker 1: is like the one constant universe that kind of never changes. Now, 818 00:51:13,480 --> 00:51:17,520 Speaker 1: if I had I've got an old friend that's an astrophysicist, 819 00:51:17,560 --> 00:51:19,440 Speaker 1: probably one of the brightest people I've ever met in 820 00:51:19,440 --> 00:51:21,960 Speaker 1: my life. As you can imagine Country's butter too, you 821 00:51:22,000 --> 00:51:25,080 Speaker 1: wouldn't you wouldn't suspect this guy's got PhD In astrophysics 822 00:51:25,280 --> 00:51:27,360 Speaker 1: from Clemson. I used to eat lunch with him. I 823 00:51:27,480 --> 00:51:32,320 Speaker 1: just sit there amazed by this guy. He would dispute 824 00:51:32,320 --> 00:51:36,000 Speaker 1: this with me because you know, I'd say gravity is 825 00:51:36,000 --> 00:51:38,040 Speaker 1: the one constant, it doesn't vary. He say, oh, well, 826 00:51:38,080 --> 00:51:39,680 Speaker 1: if you go to the poles, it's different. You know, 827 00:51:39,680 --> 00:51:42,520 Speaker 1: if you're on the equator, it's different. We understand what 828 00:51:42,520 --> 00:51:44,760 Speaker 1: we're saying here. It's not as it's not as variable 829 00:51:44,800 --> 00:51:48,080 Speaker 1: as temperature. All right. So if you're seated in a 830 00:51:48,160 --> 00:51:51,560 Speaker 1: chairing and you have somebody that passes away, the blood 831 00:51:51,640 --> 00:51:54,480 Speaker 1: is going to settle well to the ankles, the feet. 832 00:51:54,640 --> 00:51:58,960 Speaker 1: We'll actually see the feet swell, they'll turn purple. That's 833 00:51:59,000 --> 00:52:03,080 Speaker 1: why it's called how many times have you ever heard 834 00:52:03,080 --> 00:52:06,680 Speaker 1: somebody say they didn't have another adjut to describe how 835 00:52:06,719 --> 00:52:11,560 Speaker 1: angry they were, and they said, I was livid like that. Well, 836 00:52:11,680 --> 00:52:14,680 Speaker 1: that's where we get this term live or mortis, it's 837 00:52:15,000 --> 00:52:19,920 Speaker 1: or post mortem lividity. It's that kind of purple coloration 838 00:52:20,080 --> 00:52:23,480 Speaker 1: that comes on the body. And it's not a decompositional change, 839 00:52:23,480 --> 00:52:25,200 Speaker 1: you know where you'll see bodies that will go kind 840 00:52:25,200 --> 00:52:26,960 Speaker 1: of purple and black and that sort of thing. It's 841 00:52:27,000 --> 00:52:30,959 Speaker 1: not like that. This is the blood pooling. It goes 842 00:52:31,000 --> 00:52:34,200 Speaker 1: first to the vessels, the capillary beds. They're not meant 843 00:52:34,239 --> 00:52:37,960 Speaker 1: for storing blood. They're meant for moving blood. And those 844 00:52:37,960 --> 00:52:40,840 Speaker 1: little beds burst and when they burst, it leaches out 845 00:52:40,880 --> 00:52:45,040 Speaker 1: into what's called the interstitial tissue, the kind of the 846 00:52:45,080 --> 00:52:48,319 Speaker 1: fatty tissue that surrounds all the vessels and it stains it. 847 00:52:48,640 --> 00:52:52,839 Speaker 1: And dude, once it's gotten in there, you can't change it. 848 00:52:53,719 --> 00:52:57,359 Speaker 1: So if you like, for instance, we have cases where 849 00:52:57,400 --> 00:53:01,040 Speaker 1: people will be killed in one location, the person might 850 00:53:01,080 --> 00:53:03,640 Speaker 1: think about whether they're going to do with the body. 851 00:53:03,760 --> 00:53:05,920 Speaker 1: They'll crumple up the body after it's been laying on 852 00:53:05,920 --> 00:53:07,880 Speaker 1: the floor for about an hour or two hours, and 853 00:53:07,920 --> 00:53:10,160 Speaker 1: they'll put them in a trunk. Well, the first time 854 00:53:10,239 --> 00:53:12,759 Speaker 1: they lay them on their left side, they've been laying 855 00:53:12,760 --> 00:53:14,680 Speaker 1: on the left side where they were killed, they place 856 00:53:14,760 --> 00:53:16,840 Speaker 1: them on the trunk laying on the right side. So 857 00:53:16,920 --> 00:53:20,560 Speaker 1: you might have two presentations of post mortal avidity. And 858 00:53:20,760 --> 00:53:24,719 Speaker 1: before it gets fixed, it can actually migrate around. And 859 00:53:24,760 --> 00:53:27,640 Speaker 1: that's a real problem, you know, if you're trying to 860 00:53:27,719 --> 00:53:32,360 Speaker 1: do an assessment. So it takes a measured point in 861 00:53:32,480 --> 00:53:36,319 Speaker 1: time for post mortal avidity to fix, and once it's 862 00:53:36,320 --> 00:53:39,399 Speaker 1: fixed and it stains the skin, it's not going to move. 863 00:53:40,160 --> 00:53:43,359 Speaker 1: And so if you've got a body. If we come 864 00:53:43,400 --> 00:53:45,480 Speaker 1: to a scene and we've got an individual that is 865 00:53:45,600 --> 00:53:49,400 Speaker 1: lying in a prone position, which means their chest is 866 00:53:49,400 --> 00:53:52,319 Speaker 1: in contact with the ground, and I show up at 867 00:53:52,360 --> 00:53:55,839 Speaker 1: the scene and they're laying like that, but yet they've 868 00:53:55,880 --> 00:53:59,600 Speaker 1: got post mortal avidity between their shoulder blades, I'm going 869 00:53:59,680 --> 00:54:02,880 Speaker 1: to know that before I arrived, somebody moved that body. 870 00:54:02,920 --> 00:54:05,759 Speaker 1: At one point in time, they were face up and 871 00:54:05,800 --> 00:54:08,760 Speaker 1: then all of a sudden, someone got the grand idea 872 00:54:08,920 --> 00:54:11,440 Speaker 1: to either flip them or move them, you know. And 873 00:54:11,480 --> 00:54:15,960 Speaker 1: this goes to scene staging as well. Well. Going back 874 00:54:16,000 --> 00:54:22,480 Speaker 1: to our four unfortunate students in Idaho, based upon the 875 00:54:22,600 --> 00:54:31,120 Speaker 1: timeframe of postmartal lividity, I can tell you this post 876 00:54:31,160 --> 00:54:35,640 Speaker 1: wal avidity is close to being completely fixed by the 877 00:54:35,640 --> 00:54:37,480 Speaker 1: time the corner shows up at the scene. That's how 878 00:54:37,560 --> 00:54:40,759 Speaker 1: much of a lag time you've had. And the way 879 00:54:40,760 --> 00:54:42,640 Speaker 1: we test it in the way I would hope that 880 00:54:42,680 --> 00:54:45,200 Speaker 1: she had tested it at the scene, is if you 881 00:54:45,239 --> 00:54:48,759 Speaker 1: get one of these big purple, vivacious areas, if you 882 00:54:48,840 --> 00:54:52,640 Speaker 1: take your thumb on a gloved hand and you depress 883 00:54:52,719 --> 00:54:57,880 Speaker 1: that area that's purple and it doesn't blanch, it still stays. 884 00:54:58,080 --> 00:55:00,200 Speaker 1: That means it's fixed. That means that those little appt 885 00:55:00,239 --> 00:55:04,560 Speaker 1: their beds have erupted and it's still you know, it's 886 00:55:04,600 --> 00:55:07,880 Speaker 1: no longer blanchable, whereas you can get that staining. 887 00:55:08,600 --> 00:55:09,160 Speaker 2: But if you. 888 00:55:09,160 --> 00:55:13,920 Speaker 1: Press it and it blanches, that's called blanchable avidity. That 889 00:55:13,960 --> 00:55:16,760 Speaker 1: means that it hasn't fixed yet. And so for both 890 00:55:16,800 --> 00:55:22,480 Speaker 1: of those, both those instances, there's a measured amount of 891 00:55:22,600 --> 00:55:26,720 Speaker 1: time that you know, it takes for this to occur. 892 00:55:26,920 --> 00:55:31,120 Speaker 1: So when we're looking it'll be a parent. You can 893 00:55:31,160 --> 00:55:34,160 Speaker 1: see it kind of pop up on the radar within 894 00:55:35,000 --> 00:55:40,120 Speaker 1: twenty to thirty minutes after death. It's kind of like 895 00:55:40,520 --> 00:55:43,080 Speaker 1: the kid that you saw when you I wasn't one 896 00:55:43,120 --> 00:55:44,520 Speaker 1: of these kids that could do that that you go 897 00:55:44,560 --> 00:55:46,600 Speaker 1: to playground with and they can hang upside down the 898 00:55:46,640 --> 00:55:48,880 Speaker 1: monkey bars and their head turns the red and it 899 00:55:48,920 --> 00:55:52,080 Speaker 1: kind of swells. Less blood set now it still moving, 900 00:55:52,200 --> 00:55:56,280 Speaker 1: but you know what I'm saying. So if within twenty 901 00:55:56,320 --> 00:55:58,880 Speaker 1: to thirty minutes, you'll see the blood kind of pooling 902 00:55:58,960 --> 00:56:02,839 Speaker 1: in these areas and it's going to take and intensity 903 00:56:02,920 --> 00:56:06,759 Speaker 1: is going to increase up until about the seventh or 904 00:56:06,760 --> 00:56:11,200 Speaker 1: eight hour, and then it's there. It's not moving. So 905 00:56:11,280 --> 00:56:15,080 Speaker 1: wouldn't that be an interesting set of data to have 906 00:56:15,280 --> 00:56:20,680 Speaker 1: about the cases in Idaho? Was a lividity fixed where 907 00:56:20,719 --> 00:56:25,120 Speaker 1: there are multiple presentations of lividity. And I hope, I 908 00:56:25,160 --> 00:56:32,279 Speaker 1: certainly hope that coming up in August that all of 909 00:56:32,280 --> 00:56:36,960 Speaker 1: these questions there are many, but all of these questions 910 00:56:37,280 --> 00:56:40,319 Speaker 1: that can be answered, and that can be answered through 911 00:56:40,360 --> 00:56:45,480 Speaker 1: science and that assessment that hopefully took place on that 912 00:56:45,640 --> 00:56:50,439 Speaker 1: day back in twenty twenty two in November, I hope 913 00:56:50,440 --> 00:56:54,560 Speaker 1: it will thorough and I hope that we learn more 914 00:56:54,960 --> 00:57:00,719 Speaker 1: about what happened that night. I'm Joseph got Morgan and 915 00:57:00,960 --> 00:57:02,800 Speaker 1: this is bodybags. 916 00:57:10,920 --> 00:57:10,960 Speaker 2: H