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1.
Clin Ter ; 175(Suppl 2(4)): 202-204, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39101427

ABSTRACT

Background: Personal identification is a forensic procedure of recognizing a subject, whether corpse or living, based on a set of parameters and evidence. Spreading of video surveillance cameras has changed forensic application in identification. Indeed, there has been a shift from the evaluation of universally recognized anthropometric parameters to the spasmodic search for individual traits and/or characteristics that could be safely attributed to a single subject. Case Series: Authors analyzed two different cases of personal identification with the analysis and processing of images extracted from video surveillance systems. The first case involved two individuals suspected of throwing an ordnance into the relevant space of a public building. The second case involved a subject suspected of committing a robbery against a commercial establishment. Conclusion: In the field of personal identification focused on images processing extracted from video surveillance systems, as in the cases presented by the authors, there are lot of critical issues and limitations, which could undermine data. Correct personal identification can be achieved by comparing the clearly visible and objectively recognizable somatophysical and physiognomic characteristics of the offender with those of the suspects. So how compatible are two subjects compared? Compatibility and identification are two very different con-cepts. It is not necessarily the case that full compatibility is equivalent to personal identification. It is not necessarily the case that the absence of morphological similarity is equivalent to identification exclusion.


Subject(s)
Forensic Sciences , Humans , Male , Forensic Sciences/methods , Forensic Medicine/methods , Video Recording , Adult
2.
Clin Ter ; 175(Suppl 2(4)): 205-208, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39101428

ABSTRACT

Background: "Complex suicide" refers to suicides in which more than one suicide method is applied. The victim can either plan different and simultaneous ways of death, to prevent any failures, or change the method because the first one fails or turns out to be too painful. Case report: A Middle-age-man was found dead inside a car, in a field, near the seaside. Clothes were intact, wet, and smeared with mud and gravel. His shirt had dried whitish biological material on the thoracic area, referable to oedema fluid, his trousers were down to his ankles exposing external genitalia. Inside the car, a kitchen-serrated blade knife and scissors were found, both smeared with dried blood material. Cadaveric inspection showed: multiple superficial stab/cut injuries; nasal cavities leaking aqueous-like fluid; triangular and linear stab lesions all over the body; hesitation marks on both latero-cervical regions and both wrists; no defensive injuries referrable to third parties; maceration over both palmar and plantar surfaces. Autopsy showed: hemorrhagic infiltration for thoracic muscles; expanded and heavily congested lungs. Conclusions: This is the first Italian case, and one of the few cases reported in major literature (third case worldwide), of unplanned complex suicide achieved through stabbing and drowning by a man with no psychiatric or substances abuse history. Therefore, analyzing any evidence to distinguish this kind of sudden/unnatural death from accidental or homicidal ones is mandatory. Such cases require a flawless approach to judicial inspection, autopsy, and toxicological exams. Moreover, a multidisciplinary perspective including psychiatric criminological investigation is needed.


Subject(s)
Drowning , Suicide, Completed , Wounds, Stab , Humans , Male , Italy , Middle Aged
3.
Clin Ter ; 175(Suppl 1(4)): 16-19, 2024.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39054973

ABSTRACT

Background: Aspiration of food or liquids can result in suffocation, evolving in coughing, difficulty breathing and forced exhalation. Asphyxia occurs when the aspirated material occludes the upper airways, either in the proximal or distal tract, resulting in the inability to breathe. The risk of asphyxiation death, is increased if a person makes sudden movements while eating, walks or runs while eating, or even becomes distracted or frightened. It is higher in individuals with neurological diseases, intellectual disability (ID), cognitive impairment, psychiatric pathologies or their pharmacological treatments and people carrying additional physiological impairments, which can cause oral dysfunction and dysphagia. Protective mechanisms may sometimes lack or fail to expel food fragments stuck in the airways, which completely obstruct them. Case series: The authors present some peculiar cases of subjects who died from food bolus choking, namely a case of mozzarella-cheese clogging in a young subject (25 years old) undergoing rehabilitation treatment following a stroke; a 38-year-old man with middle-grade mental retardation died from first airway food bolus (mush of bread) clogging; a 26-year-old subject with epilepsy died from tripe clogging in the course of a seizure; a 38-year-old subject in psychiatric treatment for depressive disorder who died from clogging with octopus tentacles. Conclusion: Food bolus clogging asphyctic deaths generally occur in subjects with psychic/neurological pathologies, resulting in altered deglutition mechanisms or lack of protective reflexes. Foodstuff, especially if large or viscous, obstruct the proximal or distal airways, leading to acute respiratory failure and death. Autopsy is diriment in ascertain the cause of death.


Subject(s)
Asphyxia , Humans , Male , Adult , Asphyxia/etiology , Airway Obstruction/etiology , Food
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