Message from @Doc
Discord ID: 784121759501910044
Yes i think was him .. judge said .. please refer from making noise please
Also, he was not dead.
He died a few hours later.
but already showing signs of a class III hemorrhage.
Shot in the head. ????
So....dying.
Not dead
Graced in the head.
He wasnt talking for sure
He was shot in the liver/inner groin.
The shot that killed him was through the pelivis and a kidney.
oh...liver, perhaps.
He was shot, and he likely had extensive lung damage.
I believe the died from the hemorrhage, judging from his clinical presentation while filmed lying on his back trying to get up.
The autopsy results were available in the criminal complaint.
oh, cool!
can you link them to me?
I just saw the referate. Never the actual report.
It didn't say what the C.O.D was, or which impact I don't recall. I can get you the relevant text @Doc
(Also people do live for extended periods after being shot in the head frequently, @MatiLuc ) Don't believe what you hear on TV all the time.
Though it depends on your definition of live, I suppose.
@MatiLuc Combat medicine rule of the thumb: shot through one hemisphere = red, shot through both = blue/black/red-green
large arteries in lung, liver, pelvis, and the .223 is known to both tumble and flower (not same as expand) in terminal ballistics.
Not much blood was seen, but I honestly can't say, as your chest is a space which can fill with blood before you even know you're bleeding badly.
the only situation where you bleed outwards, is if the artery cant bleed in.
Kyle was using specialty SD ammunition, it was rapid-fragmentation. Likely special JSP or special JHP.
I once had a man delivered to my care with BP 50/0.
His entire volum of blood was in his abdomen under pressure.
So I don't expect tumbling was an issue.
Rather the rapid expansion was.
well, untill the .223 projectile hits bone, it tumbles.
Again, JSP/JHP ammo.
I know.
They begin expanding and fragmenting around an inch into ballistics gel alone.
which is not what your lungs are made of.
But you might be right. I havent seen civilian .223 cases.
I think this is a conversation best for private, as it's rather morbid.