A lethal dose of fentanyl is sooooo small. It is not distributed equally when it is added to other substances. So one person may get a lethal dose and 10 other people get none. Or, 3 people get a lethal dose and 1 gets none, or a small enough dose that it makes him unconscious but doesn’t suppress the respiratory system enough to cause death.What I would like to know is who supplied the drug? Why did three get a lethal over dose and one did not. I would be asking that question. The tenant checked into rehab realizing he had a drug addiction. It is likely he also did drigs that night.
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There's usually a two year window for a payout due to suicide. If someone buys a policy with the express purpose of a payout to family members, the suicide cannot be within the two year window. I presume that is because most people see suicide as an impetuous act not something planned out. An insurance policy can be negated if the policy owner lied about past drug use, especially if an overdose death occurs. Excluding having engaged in illegal activities can also negate a policy. It's similar to health care plans that deny coverage for people with pre-existing conditions.Thank you for the info about suicide being the only reason for not paying life insurance.
I disagree with your comment about free will.
MOO.
Thank you @branmuffin for explaining that. Sounds like there is a way then for insurance companies to protect their payouts for something that could have been prevented.An insurance policy can be negated if the policy owner lied about past drug use, especially if an overdose death occurs. Excluding having engaged in illegal activities can also negate a policy. It's similar to health care plans that deny coverage for people with pre-existing conditions.
What I would like to know is who supplied the drug? Why did three get a lethal over dose and one did not. I would be asking that question. The tenant checked into rehab realizing he had a drug addiction. It is likely he also did drigs that night
Actually, 3x the lethal dose of fentanyl really is “a little”. Take a look at this photo to help visualize it.
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Willis did not hear the friends finance banging down the door, breaking into the house and screaming his name. He did not realize he had multiple text message. He did hear the police knock on the door.
IMHO I doubt this. Opening the door with alcohol and your underpants (when police are about to find 3 bodies) makes that a little convenient. JMHOhe may have seen the lights or heard the sirens if they were activated and was already downstairs when the police knocked - or may have started to wake up or thought he heard something and took his earbuds out - we just don't know - and did it say in MSM that someone was screaming his name in the house? I don't remember reading that JMO
We have several systems of liver cytochrome enzymes to metabolize drugs. Unless you know what type of a metabolizer you are, it is hard to predict your response.Some people have different reactions or sensitivities to drugs. The ER gave me Valium and morphine before giving me a chest tube for a lung collapse. It.didn’t.help. The ER doctor looked at the anesthesiologist because I was screaming in so much pain. He said he gave me the recommended dosage based on my height/weight and the doctor had to explain that not everyone reacts the same and not everything is cookie cutter. Regardless to say, worst experience of my life.
I went through most of them.There are actually too many to list for just this one deceased man over the years. Here is a list compiled by the state of Missouri. https://www.courts.mo.gov/cnet/name...e=clayton&middleName=&caseType=All&yearFiled=
I tend to believe this account.https://x.com/alcaprari23/status/1753923141766660513?s=46&t=s2RxeM4Fg01yesFUzL6bDw
"Just spoke to a source close to Jordan Willis, who is disputing the viral claims that he was a "Chemist" who manufactured designer drugs for his friends.
Source tells me he's devastated at the loss of his friends and would never make drugs for them. He's in rehab voluntarily after this "gigantic wake-up call." Says he's suffered from depression and alcoholism over the past 15+ years and would use drugs recreationally, but does not believe he is a narcotic addict.
"He never manufactured anything, that's not what he would do. That's so crazy to me that people would actually think, just because of his profession, that he is a mad scientist," source tells me. "The whole country is pointing fingers at him but he's had zero time to grieve... and now they are taking another life, essentially. He's never going to be able to get over this.""
Could be as simple as three did the drugs and one did notWhat I would like to know is who supplied the drug? Why did three get a lethal over dose and one did not. I would be asking that question. The tenant checked into rehab realizing he had a drug addiction. It is likely he also did drigs that night.
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I went through most of them.
Failure to pay child support, leaving the scene of a motor accident.
I see the behavior of an irresponsible person, but I don't see anything violent, or drug-related, so therefore I don't see anything remotely relevant to the way he died, i.e. "victimology."
What am I missing?
I don't believe suicide will be listed on the victim's death certificates as manner of death.
JMO
What an opioid overdose does is essentially relax someone so much they stop breathing. The man sitting in the chair fell asleep sitting up. He may have been sitting already, or sat when he started feeling short of breath.I wonder why one of the bodies was frozen in an upright position.. something doesn't sit right with me (no pun intended) regarding that. Others victims were all were found under snow from an apparent o/d so how would you quietly nod off without any movement to the point your frozen to a chair and unidentifiable; is something that's overlooked IMO.