Medical Jurisprudence, Forensic medicine and Toxicology. Vol. 1 by R. A. Witthaus et al.

21. _Ibid., p. 46._—Woman, age 50, found dead in bed. Blood fluid; two

ecchymoses size of beans in crico-thyroid muscles of each side; patch of hepatization size of fist, in lung; injury of body. The examiner declared that she had been strangled by compression of larynx with two fingers, but he could not say how long the pressure had continued, that is, whether she had died of the strangulation or of the pneumonia. The assailant stated that he had choked her and when she seemed to be dead, had left her. The woman lived alone.