Apologize if someone already posted this. I am still going back and forth between suicide and homicide.
Thought this may be helpful from the snohomish county medical examiner examiner website on manner of death.
Interesting that suicide requires evidence of intent while homicide does not require intent to cause death. I guess that does make sense, IMO.
Suicide
Suicide is defined for Medical Examiner death certification purposes as a death from self-inflicted injury with evidence of intent to die. Evidence of intent includes an explicit expression, such as a suicide note or verbal threat, previous attempts, or an act constituting implicit intent. An example would be of a self-inflicted contact/close range gunshot wound (particularly of the head, chest, or abdomen) that is recognized as having very high potential for lethality, and is considered to be implicit evidence of intent to die.
Homicide
Homicide is defined as the action of one person directly causing the death of another. *A death that occurs during and is related to the commission of a felony is also considered homicide. *A violent death may stem from some kind of deliberate or purposeful action, but intent to cause death need not be present or proven for the classification as homicide.*
Homicide and murder are not the same. *All murders are homicides, not all homicides are murder. "Murder" is not an acceptable manner of death classification for death certification purposes. *"Murder" is a term used under specific conditions in criminal law matters and as a general concept. *An example might be that of unintentional firearms-related hunting death. *While it may be classified as a homicide, it is up to legal authorities to determine when to prosecute such case as a murder, manslaughter, etc.
http://snohomishcountywa.gov/806/Cause-Manner-of-Death
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