Do we know if there was water in her lungs?
No official info either way. What concerns me, however, is that I heard a report that the cause of death was not apparent at the autopsy so they sent for toxicology to find out more. That indicates to me that no water was found in the lungs. So perhaps - I don;t know because I don't understand much about decomp - her body was too decomposed to tell, or maybe she just didn't drown. If they rule out drowning that would tend to tip me more to a soft kill like asphyxiation.
If you have never seen the evidence before, of the video tampering, and if you come to believe that the tampering is true due to the inconsistencies in the timestamp, then before assuming too much, consider that the timestamp may be completely foreign to the video, and wholly pasted in. It might even be misleading if it doesn't reflect the true time or even day of the video. I have a lot of difficult questions due to this timestamp, which is why I'm here, to get your help if possible.
Who was the likely persons(s) to provide this butchered timestamp situation: the hotel, the killer(s), and/or the police? I would expect that the police provided the timestamp in the pixel form that it's in, but if so, did they perfectly convert the pixel numbers from the normal "English" timestamp of the original video? Can we trust the times in the timestamp, or are we to disregard it completely? Would the Los Angeles police answer someone's question if that question were put to them? What does this timestamp mean? Everything for solving the case, or nothing?
I;m really curious why none of the media are asking questions at all. Is it that no one cares anymore about this sweet girl or is it that they know they will receive no answers? Because it would be easy enough to ask such a question.
However, LE investigators absolutely know whether the video was altered or not and if so, why. I trust they are working this case like mad.
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Newton below added some clarity and I agree with Newton's post.
I am inclined to believe what the LAPD sergeant said when fielding a question regarding the search dog. He didn't seem bothered by the dog not hitting on her scent and says it could be due to the lapsed time. I am paraphrasing so please reference the linked video. I believe it is about 2:40 or so.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ctBF_PnRXis&sns=em
Here's the same video, cued, (hopefully):
http://youtu.be/ctBF_PnRXis?t=2m34s
Note that the officer says they believe Elisa was in the tank from the beginning, or words to that effect.
Just thinking out loud here......there are common recreational drugs like Ecstasy that make you crave water. A person using it will have their body burn up without water, literally.
So does that mean there's any connection with EL's strange behaviour and the fact that her body was found in a water tank? I don't know.....
Hmmm?????
It could be. There are so many possibilities. I tend to discount drugs though because, while there has been no evidence that Elisa was a partier type or did non-prescribed drugs, there is a ton of evidence that she suffered from serious mental issues for which she was prescribed some serious medication. Insomnia was one of her issues and she seemed to suffer frequently from that as well. A combination of bi-polar depression, or hypomania untreated morphing to mania, or a bad reaction to her meds, or abruptly stopping her medications, or the inability to sleep for days, all of those things either in various combinations, or alone, can cause psychosis. It just seems much more likely to me that something like that happened to her based on her history, than sleepwalking or drug usage.
And sometimes I think there is a definite urge to avoid a mental health explanation for a few reasons:
1. Because anyone can suffer from mental health issues at any time. That's scary because it is not necessarily controllable. It could happen to one of us or tone of our kids. So people fear it and want to avoid thinking about it or talking about it. (It does freak me out, frankly).
2. If Elisa died due to drug usage or her actions in meeting up with or socializing with strangers, then we can assure ourselves such a thing would never happen to us because we can avoid such behaviors.
3. There is a definite stigma, even greater among some cultures, surrounding mental illness. I get that sense that some feel if Elisa is deemed mentally ill and if her death is attributed at least in part to that, then she is being maligned in death, and demeaned. That's uncomfortable and feels unfair.
Hopefully we will find out soon. I hope the coroner and the investigators can give us some concrete answers and answer any unresolved questions. We'll see.
But no matter what, whether Elisa died due to mental issues in whole or in part, or as a result of something totally unrelated, she seems like a bright, shining, beautiful spirit. An interesting, complex soul with so much to offer the world.
Her death was a theft of an incredible life.