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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]Dumb question but how did everyone find Ellen’s Instagram before it was shut down? I’ve been following the story since the beginning and had tried to find it and couldn’t. Just curious- I know it’s private/locked now.[/quote] I found it because a poster on another website provided a link to it. [/quote] It was linked in this post on the first few pages. I looked through it b4 the trolls apparently got to it and started leaving nasty comments and rumors.[/quote] One comment SS on another forum (maybe Lipstick Alley) was from a friend of E’s. It was not particularly nasty in nature, more “I was afraid you’d do this.” Wth? I withhold judgement. I have no clue what occurred, other than what the sheriff and his spokeswoman released. MSM reports are inconsistent. It appears a few tests returned quickly ruling out alga and hazmat. Is it possible they pissed someone in the area off? Someone that knew they hiked and lied in wait at the end of the trail? Would strangulation be detectable to the naked eye.. I doubt it. The pathologist apparently will not release cause of deaths without toxicology. Is he saying he knows cause but prefers to have all documentation? As previously discussed, perhaps someone put something in their water bladder. Someone with access to their home that knew they hiked every weekend. Why did no one find it strange the family never cancelled their nanny for Monday yet felt no need to report them missing? If they could not reach them by text, phone, email and knew they hiked most weekends it seems like one of them might have considered an accident occurred. This seems to me to be so much more than what’s reported and what so many wish to believe. If I guessed & listed potential causes of deaths, heat would be the very last item on my list. I’m most interested in postmortem body positions. I once managed a large complex for seniors and disabled persons. Most suffered from alcohol and drug addictions as well as lifelong lack of healthcare and poor habits such as chain smoking, lack of exercise and proper nutrition. I found a deceased resident pretty much weekly. Generally, another tenant would advise me Mr. So and So’s TV has been on all night or Mrs. Opiod hasn’t been out for three days, all apartment doors opened to the interior halls so it was very easy to miss someone that was normally in the common areas. After being alerted, iI’d grab my master key to investigate and sadly find another deceased resident. While no expert in forensics, I discovered hundreds of bodies in various positions. Many on the floor, some in bed, some hanging off their bed, some in front of their commode, some dying at their breakfast table with a chair toppling over on them after gravity pulled them to the floor and so forth. I only recall finding one deceased in what I guess was considered a sitting position. He was in a recliner with the chair recliner in the maximum position but if not for the sturdiness of the chair I believe he would have toppled over as his upper body was resting on the padded chair arm. Not to be overly graphic but often someone had been dead for as long as a week before anyone mentioned not seeing them. We didn’t have roll call, it was independent living, no one was obligated to report sh*t. I had the coroner on speed dial (from office phone) and had to let her in the deceased’s apartment, answer a litany of questions. Basic stuff, who alerted you, when was she last seen, blah blah. When the coroner thought something was suspicious and required LE it was always because of the deceased’s position. And, not every deceased person died a normal death. Synthetic drugs had just hit the streets so we had a lot of ODs. Once, a female resident around 40 stopped by my office to report a minor maintenance issue, she was headed back to her third floor unit. I advised her I’d send maintenance up stat. The maintenance man on duty was also a police sergeant. In less than ten minutes he was at the woman’s door, knocking & calling her name. After getting no answer he used his master to gain entry. She was dead on the floor! He called the coroner from the woman’s doorway. This woman was a known addict so it was no surprise to learn she overdosed. Weeks later it was determined to be fentanyl. [/quote]
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