Quote:
Originally Posted by domer2
How is that self explanatory? That is just random speculation.
Not only would he have to be wearing gloves that could easily be penetrated, they would need to be actually penetrated, and he would need to be completely unaware of it bleeding to notice that he was dripping all over the place.
The planting of the blood is the most logical explanation given the lack of fingerprints and the vial of blood that was penetrated.
We could use a real life Dexter to study the blood pattern. I would highly doubt the patterns found are consistent with how an actual human would bleed.
I am talking about people presenting it is something that cant happen, I wasnt saying thats obviously what went down, or saying I believe that is what went down, just there is a very easy explanation from the prosecutors side. By self explanatory I meant that it seems obvious how you can get blood and no finger prints. Obviously It could still be planted, I just saw in the doc, and on reddit, people throwing that out as the silver bullet.
According to people on reddit who have read more of the case and its decision:
- The blood did match that of a drip(the same guy who talked about the hair blood confirmed this apparently).
A quote from a guy on reddit(about the needle hole in the vial):
"I am not the OP. But I am a prosecutor. And formerly, while I was in college, worked in a lab as a phlebotomist and lab tech. I have collected hundreds, if not thousands, of blood samples in the exact vacutainer collection tubes that the Avery sample was collected in. I worked in the early to mid-late 90's, when the rubber top vacutainers were used (there are more modern ones, with a plastic/latex top cop combo that are different). I already made a post on this in this reddit. But the short version is that those rubber top vacutainers always have a hole in the top from the collection. The only way to collect blood with those is to put the needle in the patient's vein, then puncture the top of the vial through the rubber top with the other end of the needle so the blood goes directly from the patient's vein into the vial. Every rubber top vacutainer like the one shown will have the same exact puncture hole from the initial collection of the blood. The fact that any nurse, phlebotomist, or medical professional who collects blood knows that this is common knowledge made me suspect the motivations of this documentary."
Last edited by CCuster_911; 12-24-2015 at 06:04 PM.