The Hyoid bone if intact & fractured could reveal strangulation.often with that bones in the neck are key, they are very fragile and can fracture or break under asphyxiation
The Hyoid bone if intact & fractured could reveal strangulation.often with that bones in the neck are key, they are very fragile and can fracture or break under asphyxiation
The Hyoid bone if intact could reveal strangulation.
What if a lethal drug was given, would that show up at autopsy after all this time?Seven news at 6pm announced that whilst no external injuries were detected at Karen's autopsy, the police are certain she was murdered.
If there are no external injuries, perhaps she was smothered? If so, the forensic indicia of asphyxiation may no longer be evident.
Manual strangulation, or strangulation with a ligature often damages the hyoid & fine joints in the neck, but I'm not sure that smothering say with a pillow would leave much of a trace on a body that's been out in the elements for 8 months.
What if a lethal drug was given, would that show up at autopsy after all this time?
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the contradictions are confusing.
THE stepson of murdered Melbourne mum Karen Ristevski has called for her killer to come forward, saying: “It’s only a matter of time before you are spending a long time behind bars.”
Anthony Rickard called for the killer to “man up” and “confess”.
Mr Rickard said he was “sorry” and would always have a place in his heart for the woman who helped raise him.
“The only person who showed me true love and will always have a place for u in my heart u were my one true soulmate,” he wrote on Facebook.
Mr Rickard had told the Herald Sun he hoped Ms Ristevski was still alive and believed she could have travelled overseas to start a new life.
http://www.heraldsun.com.au/news/la...i/news-story/ed513999a9b5e1554cb3a2854762791d
Would a broken neck be a possibility?
Times mobile phone pings have helped police crack murder case
IN THE digital age, police investigating a murder have even more tools available to them.
When Melbourne woman Jill Meagher vanished after a night out in September 2012, it was her mobile phone signal that led detectives to her rapist and killer.
More than two years later, when NSW school cleaner Vincent Stanford raped and murdered bride-to-be Stephanie Scott, it was his phone’s location that enabled police to find the young teacher’s body.
Late last year, the mobile phone signal of missing Melbourne woman Karen Ristevski gave detectives a major breakthrough.
Her disappearance in June initially baffled police.
http://www.news.com.au/national/cri...e/news-story/6191c8f68f4440c2be1886ac71222705
Looks like a skull where Karen lay? WTF. It's so clear. Some weird illusion? Look at the picture showing where she was found...
http://www.news.com.au/national/vic...a/news-story/884bc8d798ad09b9e81e3b99870ba1fc
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Given that most of us are constantly connected during all our waking hours, it's a tricky choice. What do you do with your phone in that situation? Take it with you? Might as well draw a map to the body. Turn it off? Sure hope your usage history shows you frequently go off that air for hours at a time or else that one time is going to look mighty suspicious. Leave it at home, switched on and unused? Let's hope no calls go unanswered while you're off doing the deed - and that your usage habits show that you often don't use the phone for hours on end.and. TGY, isn't it remarkable how many many people, often people who have no trouble recognising other peoples faults, such faults as would dictate their immediate death, who do not, and cannot grasp the simplest technology of the mobile phone.
It has been around 30 years since mobiles were used in AU.. they started off the size of a brick. .. it isn't new.
Have we heard anything about AR's biological mum?