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

22. _Waidele: Memorabilien, 1873, xviii., pp. 161-167._—Husband and

wife quarrelled and fought; he stated that he choked her with her neck handkerchief, and as she turned round toward him, then choked her with his hand until she died. The examiner declared that she died of asphyxia; there was a brownish-red dry streak on each side of the neck in the laryngeal region corresponding to the handkerchief, and also two small abrasions of skin which might have been made by the hands; he concluded, however, that she had been choked to death by the handkerchief, because there were no ecchymoses.