I wonder if we could charge her with negligence? |
+1 My BFF lost both her parents last year within days of each other. Her mother had Parkinson’s and was nearing the end, was still at home with BFF’s father and one of their daughters. A couple days before the mother died, the father (who was in his 80s but heretofore fine) had to go to the hospital because he had been having chest pains for days but “didn’t want to bother anyone.” |
My theory is as people are figuring, near-simultaneous medical incidents.
Friends said they were happy and healthy. This kind of scenario is exactly how I pictured (but not to be, thank goodness) my two parents passing because they were retired, hanging around all day. One helped the other with physical stuff, one helped the other with house knowledge. They slept in different places for their different medical needs and space (not because of any loss of love). We didn’t know who would go first, because my dad (older) would be likely to with age, because men go early. Or my mom, younger, but more genetic stuff, incidents. Again, this is not how it happened with my parents, but if it did, that’s exactly what it would look like. |
Try not to think about this too hard, is my advice. |
Ok, but did they not have any helpers? Cleaning crew, gardeners, etc etc etc? No way Betsy did everything. |
My husband asked, in regard to the hantavirus, could rodents have come in after… and this is why hantavirus appears?
I guess medical examiners may have seen that before? In cases where there has been a delay in discovery? I don’t know, but they would. |
Very sad, people don't care about anybody, empathy is missing in most human beings. Blessings to those who care for family, and neighbors. |
FFS no. Please search or read through the last few pages of the thread. It’s not a product of decomposition. It’s a virus. |
No. Good grief. Do some people not understand basic biology and medicine? Dead people don't contract viruses. Viruses need LIVE CELLS to replicate in humans. They hijack the machinery of the cell, again let me reiterate the living cell, to replicate. She didn't have hantavirus "sprinkled" on her clothes by marauding rats or something. Medical examiners know what hantavirus pulmonary syndrome looks like. They know what lungs infected by HPS look like, which require the person to have been ALIVE and BREATHING for the virus to get into their lungs and replicate there and kill them. They wouldn't have said she died of it if they did not see the evidence in her lungs and tissues. |
Nah, what’s good for the goose is good for the gander. The daughter who insinuated that these complete strangers didn’t love their dad is opening herself up for judgement. And it sounds like she did the EXACT same thing as Hackman’s kids, which was to rely on *other people* (her sister and her sister’s family) to take care of him. Maybe she’s projecting, but either way her comments were gross. |
So was Gene just roaming around the house aimlessly for a few days by himself and totally unaware Betsy was dead? He didn't even gear a presumably barking dog in his crate?
I know he had Alzeheimers, but does that make you not even realize your wife/caretaker is not there? |
Good grief right back. You’ve answered my question. I didn’t see the part about it being deep in her lungs. That was the only basic question—did rodents appear on the scene later and leave traces. It’s a fair question from someone who didn’t read every single piece. Nowhere did I argue that like the person above ^^ that it is released upon decomposing. What? |
I think of people like Alicia Witt's parents, who had to have known that they'd be found dead together one day. They were eccentric, but they were smart and I don't think they were suffering from dementia. They wanted to be completely alone, and their end was a logical consequence. |
He might have noticed, thought he'd get help, then went to put his coat on and go out, only to forget why he'd put his coat on. He might have noticed, thought he'd get help, and forget when he was two steps past the bathroom. That could have happened dozens of times for days before he died. He could have discovered his wife and caregiver dead on the floor over and over again. Alzheimer's is terrifying. |
It's not a fair question. It's a ridiculous one. What do you mean, "the part about it being deep in her lungs?" The medical examiner said she died of hantavirus. That's literally what it is. It's like hearing that someone died of AIDS and then being surprised that it affected their immune system. If you think the only evidence of this was "traces" left by nearby rodents, then how exactly do you think she died? You think that she died of something else completely separate, like a massive aneurysm that the medical examiner somehow missed during the autopsy, and that a hantavirus-carrying mouse then came near the body and pooped or something, and this made the medical examiner become confused and guess that she had died of hantavirus just based on that? Like, what is the logic? |