Tippit Shooting, 1:15

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Offline John Mytton

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Re: Tippit Shooting, 1:15
« Reply #462 on: November 17, 2019, 08:53:55 PM »
The fact is no "medical professional" was in any position to pronounce Tippit "D.O.A." until AFTER his ARRIVAL at the hospital.

This isn't difficult, the time that the doctors say the patient is "DOA" is irrelevant, the only pertinent time is the actual time that the patient dies.



JohnM

Offline Martin Weidmann

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Re: Tippit Shooting, 1:15
« Reply #463 on: November 17, 2019, 09:00:33 PM »
This isn't difficult, the time that the doctors say the patient is "DOA" is irrelevant, the only pertinent time is the actual time that the patient dies.



JohnM

More stupidity...

The actual time that Tippit died was 1.15 pm and the place of death, according to the same document, was the Methodist Hospital.

Also, in his report, Detective Davenport wrote; "We assisted in getting the officer to the Emergency Room. And observed the doctors and nurses trying to bring the Officer back to life. At 1:15 pm (originally he  wrote 1:06 pm, which was later typed over) Dr. Richard Liquori pronounced him dead."

« Last Edit: November 17, 2019, 10:29:11 PM by Martin Weidmann »

Offline John Mytton

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Re: Tippit Shooting, 1:15
« Reply #464 on: November 17, 2019, 10:36:39 PM »
OK, for the less desperate, in the section where the precise details are filled in, the following quote makes it absolutely clear that Tippit was pronounced dead on arrival(DOA), which can only possibly mean that Tippit was dead before he arrived, Tippit may have died 1 second before he arrived but he was dead on arrival(DOA).

PERTINENT FACTS REGARDING DEATH

Deceased, a Dallas Police Officer was shot at 303 East Tenth Street was rushed to Methodist Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival.



The doctors who attempted to bring Tippit back to life would have a good idea of how long these horrific injuries would take to kill a man.





JohnM
« Last Edit: November 17, 2019, 10:42:05 PM by John Mytton »

Offline Martin Weidmann

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Re: Tippit Shooting, 1:15
« Reply #465 on: November 17, 2019, 10:44:12 PM »
OK, for the less desperate in the section where the precise details are filled in, the following quote makes it absolutely clear that Tippit was pronounced dead on arrival(DOA), which can only possibly mean that Tippit was dead before he arrived, Tippit may have died 1 second before he arrived but he was dead on arrival(DOA). The doctors who attempted to bring Tippit back to life would have a good idea of how long these horrific injuries would take to kill a man.

PERTINENT FACTS REGARDING DEATH

Deceased, a Dallas Police Officer was shot at 303 East Tenth Street was rushed to Methodist Hospital where he was pronounced dead on arrival.


The doctors who attempted to bring Tippit back to life would have a good idea of how long these horrific injuries would take to kill a man.

JohnM

Tippit may have died 1 second before he arrived but he was dead on arrival(DOA)

They verified his death at the emergency room and since he may indeed have only died 1 second before arrival they used the actual time as the time of death.


The doctors who attempted to bring Tippit back to life would have a good idea of how long these horrific injuries would take to kill a man.

Indeed, which is why they wrote that the actual of death was 1.15 pm and that he died at the Methodist Hospital.

It is also why Detective Davenport wrote in his report; "We assisted in getting the officer to the Emergency Room. And observed the doctors and nurses trying to bring the Officer back to life. At 1:15 pm (originally he  wrote 1:06 pm, which was later typed over) Dr. Richard Liquori pronounced him dead."

Mytton's hypocrisy knows no bounds.

Kennedy was shot and obviously killed at 12:30 pm at Dealey Plaza. Half his head was blown off, ffs, yet the doctors declared him dead at Parkland Hospital at 1 PM. In this case, Mytton has argued in the past that Kennedy could have survived the massive loss of blood and a fatal head wound for 30 minutes.

But when it comes to Tippit, he argues that when the doctors declared him dead, they actually used the time he was shot at 10th/Patton, because they would have known "how long these horrific injuries would take to kill a man."

Go figure!
« Last Edit: November 17, 2019, 11:23:07 PM by Martin Weidmann »

Offline John Mytton

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Re: Tippit Shooting, 1:15
« Reply #466 on: November 17, 2019, 10:47:18 PM »



JohnM

Offline Martin Weidmann

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Re: Tippit Shooting, 1:15
« Reply #467 on: November 17, 2019, 10:50:30 PM »


JohnM

Oh, look... Johnny is calling for his mommy

Offline John Iacoletti

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Re: Tippit Shooting, 1:15
« Reply #468 on: November 17, 2019, 11:31:07 PM »
Well John, the following document is quite clear, Tippit arrived DOA at the hospital therefore the time of death which by definition must have happened before Tippit arrives at the hospital, was 1:15 P.M. Sorry, you lose!

Pronounced DOA by Dr Liguori at 1:15 PM, "Mytton".  You lose.



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What you or I want is irrelevant, the fact is that the Dallas Police radio was based on a clock that was calibrated because time was the basic backbone of the job and having as accurate time as possible was paramount.

Do you have any evidence for how or if the police dispatcher's clock was "calibrated", or did you just make all this up?

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Btw an important part of your Tippit timeline relies on a "screwball", how does that work?

Corroborated by Bowley, Higgins, Dr Liguori.  How many do you need?