I would have. But one near death experience will make a person more agressive.
In my case, since I had other symptoms, I was worried and ended up wearing the 24 hour heart monitor, having an echocardiagram, etc.
I will say, though, that initially my doctors did not believe something so serious could possibly be wrong with such a young woman's heart (I was 32), so I really had to advocate for myself and my condition deteriorated as they tried to figure out what was going on. Also, if Lina's husband was in any way overbearing or controlling, she may have had a tendency to minimize her symptoms to herself and not make a fuss - in this way he may very well have had some responsibility, as did she. Some women do tend to minimize their own medical conditions, as well as having them minimized by the medical community and their own spouses. My father drove my mother around for an hour during her heart attack, thinking it might "get better" before finally going to the hospital.
Didn't Dr. Baden testified that the pink foam could be consistent with a poisining? I was sort of hoping they would throw his $31,000 testimony out with the dirty dishwater.
Still doesn't explain her neck trauma consistent with strangulation.
The neck wounds were there BEFORE the paramedics arrived. Kaufman described them when he called 911!
He didnt described the ,he mentioned marks on her neck. Unless I missed it at the end on the call.
There could have been a mark of two from the fall and then made worse later ,there isnt enough information there.
All they had to do we dispatch police to the scene and her body could have been dusted for prints. To see if she was moved and where she was touched after she died.
1. mistake of the dispatcher? The EMTS should have noticed the marks and even thought they couldnt call it (doa) they could have someone come to the scene who could ,but the dispatcher should have known that a DOA was possible before they got there as Adam said foam in the mouth and she was cold.
I dont remember the EMT saying he saw marks on her neck at all ,anyone?
Oh I didn't know that. I missed Dr. Baden's testimony. Why would he say that if he was a defense expert?
Lina poisoned herself? :waitasec:
Oh, I absolutely agree the neck trauma is an incontrovertable fact and difficult to explain by anything we have heard. And it would have had to be the 1 in 1,000,000 or greater odds that lead her to fall in just that way that they are trying to explain, or through the medical interventions.
I just felt compelled to share my own experience, because it COULD have happened, and myocarditis can be "quiet" and now hopefully someone who has read this board or seen the trial might actually be aware of the condition if they or someone close to them happens to develop symptoms. Get it checked out. Be an assertive patient and get answers, no matter what family, husband, even medical staff, may say.
Wow 175 guests!! Join us! :seeya:
He didnt described the ,he mentioned marks on her neck. Unless I missed it at the end on the call.
There could have been a mark of two from the fall and then made worse later ,there isnt enough information there.
All they had to do we dispatch police to the scene and her body could have been dusted for prints. To see if she was moved and where she was touched after she died.
1. mistake of the dispatcher? The EMTS should have noticed the marks and even thought they couldnt call it (doa) they could have someone come to the scene who could ,but the dispatcher should have known that a DOA was possible before they got there as Adam said foam in the mouth and she was cold.
I dont remember the EMT saying he saw marks on her neck at all ,anyone?
I think most here would agree that myocarditis is a real medical condition and chances are we knows someone who suffers from heart disease, fainting spells or some other medical condition that can be life threatening. The stretch here is that any of those conditions/syndromes happened in THIS specific case. It doesn't ad up, IMHO so speculating what could of happened instead of what we KNOW happened based on the facts presented in the trial just don't ad up to anything other than 'mechanical asphyxiation by manual strangulation'. (IMHO, of course
BBM for context. I could see marks on one side of her neck if she fell against the magazine rack, but on both sides? I've never bruised my neck in a fall unless it hit an object. One side up, one side down, can't fall on both sides of the neck and bruise both sides.
I think most here would agree that myocarditis is a real medical condition and chances are we knows someone who suffers from heart disease, fainting spells or some other medical condition that can be life threatening. The stretch here is that any of those conditions/syndromes happened in THIS specific case. It doesn't ad up, IMHO so speculating what could of happened instead of what we KNOW happened based on the facts presented in the trial just don't ad up to anything other than 'mechanical asphyxiation by manual strangulation'. (IMHO, of course
BBM for context. I could see marks on one side of her neck if she fell against the magazine rack, but on both sides? I've never bruised my neck in a fall unless it hit an object. One side up, one side down, can't fall on both sides of the neck and bruise both sides.
Thanks and Howdy!
Did not follow to any extreme, but did he have a girlfriend or fool around?
If he did, to me he sounded over the top on the 911 call!
Thanks and Howdy!
Did not follow to any extreme, but did he have a girlfriend or fool around?
If he did, to me he sounded over the top on the 911 call!