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If I´m not mistaken, nails and hair are the only thing that keep growing for some time after death...Also hair can give investigators a very good results about any toxins in a body...
Quote from: "See"If I´m not mistaken, nails and hair are the only thing that keep growing for some time after death...Also hair can give investigators a very good results about any toxins in a body...Yes I understand this. That is why hair is plucked at the autopsy. Hair is plucked so that the hair follicle can be analyzed not the hair itself. The follicle will give you the most accurate chemical readings. So no matter how the hair has grown postmortem the follicle will read the same. My question is why wait another 6 weeks? Most people will have buried their dead by then so why wait 6 weeks to take more samples? What would they have done if he would have been buried? Any coroner worth their salt is going to take more than enough samples, especially with such a controversial high profile case. It's still not adding up.
they said there was an unidentified reisude on the hair 2,what would that be!! and also wouldn't the body be really stinky by now, i mean six weeks is a long time even embalming i think you would still be stinky, plus did anyone notice they said in the TMZ one that DR Murray did CPR on the floor!! not the bed!! :shock: and that reviving someone off propofol had a high success rate unless they'd been dead for quite sometime!!
and that reviving someone off propofol had a high success rate unless they'd been dead for quite sometime!!
Quote from: "lisap27"and that reviving someone off propofol had a high success rate unless they'd been dead for quite sometime!!I don't know where you got that info from, but it is exactly what's been bothering me too from the very beginning.Propofol is neuroprotective, which means it protects the brain from damage. Besides it's use as an anesthetic, it is also an important substance used with cryopreservation. Cryopreservation is an alternative to burial or cremation, where the deceased is preserved at low temperature for future revival: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login. The very first step in the cryopreservation protocol is to inject the deceased person with propofol as soon as possible in order to preserve the brain.Therefore, it is remarkable that UCLA was not able to resuscitate MJ.
Quote from: "Raven"Quote from: "lisap27"and that reviving someone off propofol had a high success rate unless they'd been dead for quite sometime!!I don't know where you got that info from, but it is exactly what's been bothering me too from the very beginning.Propofol is neuroprotective, which means it protects the brain from damage. Besides it's use as an anesthetic, it is also an important substance used with cryopreservation. Cryopreservation is an alternative to burial or cremation, where the deceased is preserved at low temperature for future revival: You are not allowed to view links. Register or Login. The very first step in the cryopreservation protocol is to inject the deceased person with propofol as soon as possible in order to preserve the brain.Therefore, it is remarkable that UCLA was not able to resuscitate MJ.it was in the autopsy report, i read through 51 pages of it last night and this stood out to me with all the different stories of when he actually died!!
This is the exerpt: "The report also reveals how, six weeks after Jackson's death, coroner's officials traveled to Forest Lawn Memorial Park to take hair samples from Jackson's head "for potential toxicology testing." In the presence of Jackson's sister La Toya, "samples were collected by plucking with gloved hands." Jackson, who was viewed in a "secured lobby," was "supine in a yellow casket with blue lining."
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