Harmony 2
Retired WS Staff
- Joined
- Oct 12, 2008
- Messages
- 12,875
- Reaction score
- 22,202
There was bruising on one of her forearms.
Page 112
There were no noticeable injuries to the chest or abdomen.
The presence of two relatively slight areas of bruising, with scarce colouring and barely noticeable, were detected in the region of the elbow.
On the hands were small wounds showing a very slight defensive response.
A small, very slight patch of colour was noticed on the "anterior inner surface of the left thigh" (page 16). Another bruise was noted on the anterior surface, in the middle third of the right leg" (page 17).
Page 122
As to the presence of other injuries, the following were recalled: bruising of the right upper limb at the elbow; one bruise at the level of the arm; on the right hand, small cuts were present that could have defensive significance but not obviously so.
He indicated that the biological data did not allow for a determination of whether the injuries were caused by one person or by several people, claiming they were compatible with both possibilities "because one person could have acted and hit at [different] times in a kind of struggle, if we can use the term in quotation marks; he might have been one person acting alone and that would be compatible, or it could be with the avvicendamento [joining or alternation] of several people and this also would work" (page 22).
Page 125
This was considered to be the most important among the causes of death: an obstruction of the airways with compression, and associated with this are the lesions typical of this manoeuvre in the labial area [around the lips], in the area of the tongue and in the area of the mucous membrane of the lips, with compression on the dental arches. Therefore a mechanism of obstruction with compression of the external structures and of the respiratory orifices, which caused the characteristic asphyxiation lesions, represented by the small sub-conjunctival haemorrhages, [which are] typical of asphyxiation mechanisms.
An asphyxial cause [of death], therefore, [which was] composed of three mechanisms: a grasping of the chin and also of the neck, and immobilization; lesions from a pointed and cutting weapon; and compression and obstruction of the external airways (page 29 of the transcripts).
Page 136
[134] He then proceeded to describe the two bruised areas present on the left elbow of the victim, and with regard to these, he stated that these were not marks caused by restraining, but hypostatic stains. But since he could not absolutely exclude that they might be bruises stemming from an effort of the victim to defend herself, he noted that the fact that they were present only on the left forearm at the level of the elbow would mean that the forearm remained free, making it difficult to attribute the bruises to the fact of having been restrained.
http://truejustice.org/ee/documents/perugia/TheMasseiReport.pdf