Charlie Wilkes
Illuminator
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2009
- Messages
- 4,177
Charlie I thought the duodenum evidence was conclusive scientifically. I agree Cornwell's contribution on this is unconsidered, I am sure she made a simple declaration around general criminal profiling, and then introduced some erroneous detail to support her conclusion, so a complicated sequence, Cornwell, McCall etc. However I am most interested in the notion that the duodenum evidence is inconclusive, I simply don't understand. Yet I am persuaded by the continuation of the case that this must be indeed so. How is it inconclusive?
It's conclusive in terms of overwhelming probability, given this particular set of facts. She ate pizza at 6:30 and had dessert an hour or so later. This meal had not even begun to pass into her small intestine at the time of her death.
The normal variables, arising when the pathologist has to assess TOD at a more advanced stage of digestion, or from uncertainty about when the victim last ate, do not pertain to this case. From everything I have ever read, she had to have died within 2 hours of when she ate dessert.
But it's inconclusive as defined by what may be possible in rare cases, like the turret gunner who survived a fall from 20,000 feet.
Same with the cell tower data.
So, no one can prove - absolutely - that Meredith was not toying with her phone, with an undigested meal curdling in her stomach, when her phone inexplicably connected with a tower two miles away instead of the one that was 200 yards away.
And that is enough for Massei and the cultists on PMF.