
I am not making any claims on how Bob Woolmer died, just my own feeling what happened. I had written a blog like this long ago, when I did not know how to blog, but anyhow, this is for Bob.
If you read the article below, you will know notice that the statement states from The Daily Telegraph:
He was found in a pool of blood with vomit and faeces in his bathroom in room 375 on the 12th floor of the hotel.
According to what I know, vomit happens when the body can’t take something it can’t handle. The first time, they spoke about it on TV saying, “blood with vomit and faeces”, I knew that had to be poison.
There is no doubt in my mind that he was killed by a drug or more.
One other write-up, Telegraph, how ladies like to murder states:
Katherine Watson is not concerned to titillate or dwell unduly on horrors, but a death from arsenic or strychnine was indeed terrible. The arsenic victim died, often slowly, in a foul stench of “vomit and faeces” after suffering pain which one victim described as like being gnawed alive by a rat, while the convulsions in strychnine poisoning were so violent that the victim’s body was frequently wrenched into a hoop.
One of the classic elements of poisoning with a drug called Arsenic is that it has side effects of severe gastric distress, burning esophageal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea with blood.
Strychnine is another drug that is as fast-acting like arsenic, its colorless.
A write-up by Michele Acker, How to Poison your Fictional Characters, states the following on Strychnine:
The symptoms begin in ten to twenty minutes with the victim’s neck and face becoming stiff. Then the arms and legs begin to spasm and soon the whole body is in an arched position with the head and feet on the floor. Death occurs from asphyxiation or sheer exhaustion from the convulsions. After death, rigor mortis sets in almost instantly, leaving the body in a convulsed position. While this poison is popular in movies and literature, it’s seldom used in real murders.
Now, need I say any more. We all know how he died and if they say poison was not found, well, I would say, of course, you would not find poison, because some cannot be detected.
I will leave you with the thought that someone had to be close to him that evening. After all, they did lose and we all know what happens when one loses.
Bob, we love you.
Via: coolbeanryan30
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