I would imagine that the average person who overdoses on fentanyl has some tolerance for it, and yet Floyd's level was higher than the average fenty overdose.
What special medical knowledge would "tear that apart"?
If people keep arguing "he had enough Fentanyl in him to kill a horse!" it's just not as simple as that and also not true. The smart conclusion is that he had a high amount of Fentanyl in him for someone with no tolerance; however, seeing as he was walky-talky, he didn't have a lethal dose of anything in him. It most likely contributed to the overall picture, but it's not cut and dry like that.
The big thing is that he had no life-threatening injuries. How do you kill someone by force if there are no life-threatening injuries? The most likely answer is that he was kept from breathing by the police officer's positioning and weight, and the fact that he had polysubstance abuse, and severe CVD led to his death.
What are you claiming killed him if not fentanyl?
I would imagine that the average person who overdoses on fentanyl has some tolerance for it, and yet Floyd's level was higher than the average fenty overdose.
What special medical knowledge would "tear that apart"?
I'm not sure that's higher than the average fentanyl overdose. But that's part of my point. Fentanyl doses like that postmortem are not reliable.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3576505/
If people keep arguing "he had enough Fentanyl in him to kill a horse!" it's just not as simple as that and also not true. The smart conclusion is that he had a high amount of Fentanyl in him for someone with no tolerance; however, seeing as he was walky-talky, he didn't have a lethal dose of anything in him. It most likely contributed to the overall picture, but it's not cut and dry like that.
The big thing is that he had no life-threatening injuries. How do you kill someone by force if there are no life-threatening injuries? The most likely answer is that he was kept from breathing by the police officer's positioning and weight, and the fact that he had polysubstance abuse, and severe CVD led to his death.
Sounds like you have reasonable doubt. In other words Chauvin walks.
Exactly.