|
#11
●
05-12-2016, 08:27 PM
|
|
Re: Another Teen Bails Out
In fairness, not every person. Just the majority. According to a series of forensics studies conducted by French and Dutch researchers last decade, bladder and/or bowel evacuation occurs in roughly 85% of female hangings and 60% of male hangings.
|
|
#12
●
05-12-2016, 11:17 PM
| ||||||||
| My Rank: PRIVATE FIRST CLASS Poster Rank:3559 Join Date: Aug 2009 Posts: 97 Mentioned: 0 Post(s) Quoted: 28 Post(s)
| ||||||||
|
Re: Another Teen Bails Out
Maybe those 15 and 40 respectively were wise enough to relieve themselves beforehand. :)
|
|
#17
●
05-14-2016, 01:35 AM
|
|
Re: Another Teen Bails Out
Well, deaths directly linked to AEA hangings are really rare, as near as I've been able to determine. The two studies I mentioned simply used data from the scene of the death and the coroner/ME reports to determine whether or not there was bladder or bowel release (as well as several other factors) on a series of asphyxiation deaths over a period of several years' time. None of the deaths in the study were directly logged as AEA-related, though it is possible that they could have been. The study included manual strangulation, ligature strangulation, suicidal hangings, and a few bag suffocations, if I recall. The data I provided earlier (rough percentages because I don't have the study in front of me atm) was correct for suicidal hangings. If there were AEA hangings included, they were not differentiated. All that said, I've seen very very few photos of AEA deaths and none of the ones I saw included a visible bowel or bladder release. I have several autopsy reports on file from the US, of teenagers who ostensibly died while playing 'the choking game' rather than suicide and most of them filled their pants when dying. But I'm not necessarily sure I'd qualify 'the choking game' as AEA, per say. Even if it is used for the sensation of being high, it doesn't include any of the trappings or blatant sexual paraphernalia we'd associate with AEA. |