A big thank you to all those of you giving twitter and news updates. Very much appreciated.![]()
Hear hear - thank you so much everyone, it is really appreciated!
A big thank you to all those of you giving twitter and news updates. Very much appreciated.![]()
How dare he wear a yellow tie !
First a wedding ring - that obviously meant nothing and now making a mockery of her memory wearing that tie![]()
Dr Milne said there were no definite injuries on Allison's body but post mortem changes limited his examination.
He said the putrefaction and mummification decomposition changed the colour the skin which could obscure injuries.
Dr Milner said there could also be head injuries where insects or animals had eaten to the soft tissue skin.
He said insects were attracted to the face area so the soft tissue decomposition could be purely insect activity or the site of an injury.
Dr Milne said the soft tissue damage to the chin was atypical for insects.
"It's likely there was some sort of injury there," he said.
"That's an injury that could have occurred before death or after death."
Dr Milne said putrefaction was a normal decomposition process where the body goes moist, the tissues go soft and the body changes colour.
He said mummification was a little different, occurring when there is a drier environment.
Dr Milne said Allison's body showed signs of both, with some parts on the mud and other parts exposed.
http://www.qt.com.au/news/gerard-baden-clays-wife-lover-apart/2285637/
I'm stuck in the office today, so have this running beside me. Makes it very hard to concentrate on the other type of work I'm supposed to be doing...!![]()
Let me see if I'm understanding this. Her body both showed putrefaction and mummification. So, she could've had open wounds where the insect and animal activity was. Which was mainly around her head and face and arms. Now her body was also in a dry environment to receive mummification which means her body wasn't in the water. Sorry about the content
Dr Milne said there were no definite injuries on Allison's body but post mortem changes limited his examination.
He said the putrefaction and mummification decomposition changed the colour the skin which could obscure injuries.
Dr Milner said there could also be head injuries where insects or animals had eaten to the soft tissue skin.
He said insects were attracted to the face area so the soft tissue decomposition could be purely insect activity or the site of an injury.
Dr Milne said the soft tissue damage to the chin was atypical for insects.
"It's likely there was some sort of injury there," he said.
"That's an injury that could have occurred before death or after death."
Dr Milne said putrefaction was a normal decomposition process where the body goes moist, the tissues go soft and the body changes colour.
He said mummification was a little different, occurring when there is a drier environment.
Dr Milne said Allison's body showed signs of both, with some parts on the mud and other parts exposed.
http://www.qt.com.au/news/gerard-baden-clays-wife-lover-apart/2285637/
Alioop or other can maybe explain random ordering of witnesses today? Scientific followed by defence- friendly witnesses?
Dr Milne agreed the Zoloft samples were taken from blood veins in the liver, tissues in the liver and from the stomach contents.
He agreed the blood level of the liver was 0.59mg per kg, in the liver was .5 mg per kg and within the stomach was 2.2mg per kg.
Mr Byrne: They are all rather high readings are they not?
Dr Milne: Its hard to say much about the liver and the stomach due to the decomposition. The levels in the blood are higher than expected due to the level of decomposition
Mr Byrne: May I suggest that a dosage of one tablet (of Zoloft) per day of 100mg, her blood sertraline levels would not be expected to be higher than 0.05 and probably closer to 0.03?
Dr Milne: Im not exactly sure on specific dosing.
He agreed the drug sertraline, or Zoloft, metabolised or broke down to a substance known as desmethyl sertraline.
Dr Milne said the sertraline levels found in the body would not go up but the level in the blood could increase depending on how the drug moved around in the body.
He agreed that the level of sertraline found in the liver could be reduced after death.
http://www.couriermail.com.au/news/...his-wife-allison/story-fnihsrf2-1226950152264
Hi WTHI'm not sure about the order, but I don't think they were necessarily defence friendly? From what I've read these witnesses described Allison as a mother who loved and nurtured her children (so likely would never leave them by choice), had dreams for the future (ballet school) despite suffering depression at significant times in her life due to specific circumstances (post natal, husband having affair) and was happy and chatty on the final morning of her life. Maybe I'm focussing too much on the positives but that is how I read it anyway.
That entire quote is very misleading. They're talking at cross-purposes, and Nathan Milne isn't being clear. He (Milne) is talking about the levels found in the liver, both liver tissue and liver blood. Byrne QC is referring to blood levels as would normally be measured by a peripheral blood sample taken from, eg the vein in front of the elbow, or a leg vein.
They are completely different things.
I wonder if the prosecution will put Rob Hoskins, the other pathologist, on the stand? He was the one who had that information about liver concentrations etc that blew the suicide theory out of the water for the bail application. If they DO put him up as a prosecution witness, he should be able to demolish that whole overdose idea again.
Kate Kyriacou @KateKyriacou
Older children were having sleepover at Ms Christ's house, younger at Baden-Clay house. They also talked about doing a Mother's Day stall.
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ABC talked about the future, loved her girls to bits, not suicidal imo.