squareandrabbet
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- Jan 26, 2018
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Did it ever say they couldn’t determine a COD? It’s my understanding that not being able to tell/not being able to release a COD are two different things. The woman had just passed and family needs to be notified. How horrific would it be to find out your mother died in this manner on a news article.
But I would be interested to see the contents of her phone. If I were to leave my girlfriend on a beach alone in an area neither of us were local to while she was in the middle of a medical episode and I was gone for 50 minutes...i would have been texting her constant updates and I would have been needing her to reply. I can’t get my head around leaving someone in a medical situation/emergency for 50 minutes and making no efforts to see how they were doing. If he was seeing how she was doing and she stopped replying at 20 minutes...he should have called someone
If someone better versed in the law than me could explain one other question...say the husbands story was true and he truly left this woman he was in love with alone on the beach and she passed away of this asthma attack. How could he be charged with anything more than involuntary man slaughter? My understanding is that second degree murder is still an intentional act of murder, just not premeditated. I thought manslaughter was when someone died due to your actions but without malice.
As to your last paragraph, I can't swear to it, but I should think that after being married for 18 years the husband knew other methods of solving Smriti's problem than trekking an hour and a half round trip to get her inhaler.
I mean, that just sounds SUPER implausible, IMO. Maybe there are some people who have really mild asthma attacks, but... I certainly promise that my father has lots of information on how to help out my mother, a Type 1 diabetic since childhood, if she is anywhere near going into diabetic shock, for example.