ILLUSTRATIVE CASES.
Suicide.
1. Harvey: Indian Med. Gaz., 1876, xi., p. 2.—Man, age 30. Found hanging by turban to bars of cell door; slip-knot around neck; heart beating feebly; died in about a minute after being cut down. “The point of suspension was forty-seven inches from the ground, the position of the noose twenty-eight inches, and the feet were forty-two inches away from the door supported on the toes.” Experiment showed that the turban could not have borne the full weight of the body. He died from strangulation.
2. Ibid., p. 3.—Insane man, age 60. Put his neck in a V-shaped fork of a tree and let his body swing. A broad abrasion found on each side of neck. Scalp, brain, and membranes much congested; reddish serum in lateral ventricles; two ounces clear fluid in pericardium. Lungs congested; all the heart cavities contained blood.
3. Ibid., p. 5.—Woman, age 28. Two marks of ligature on neck; one deep and circular passed up behind left ear; the other passed from the circular mark behind, crossed it on either side under lower jaw, thence up to chin. Appeared at first to be a case of strangulation following hanging; but the two marks were finally explained, that after the body was taken down it was ordered up again until the police should arrive.
4. Ibid., p. 5.—Man, age 45; first cut his throat and then hung himself. “He had probably only just had time to hang himself before dying.”
5. Ibid., p. 30.—Woman; hung herself with a twisted cloth. There was much ecchymosis about the neck and upper part of chest; lungs much congested; fibrin clot in left mitral orifice; liver, spleen, and stomach congested; transverse ligament of atlas ruptured.
6. Ibid.—Man, age 39. Distinct mark of cord around neck; no other mark of violence; laceration of larynx and dislocation of odontoid process; hands clinched; involuntary discharge of semen; thoracic and abdominal organs normal.
7. Ibid.—Man, age 70. Mark of cord around the neck, superficial in front, deep behind; second cervical vertebra dislocated; tongue slightly protruding; fingers clinched; meningeal vessels engorged; lungs tubercular, congested; right heart contained a little coagulated blood.
8. Ibid.—Sex and age not given. Found hanging on a tree; usual signs; odontoid process fractured; rope in a double noose without knot, a common dooree, such as is used for drawing water.
9. Ibid., p. 32.—Man, age 50. Face livid, eyes red and protruding; teeth clinched; lower jaw retracted; tongue behind the teeth; hands and feet contracted; anus covered with fæcal matter; circular depressed mark of cord around neck, hard as parchment, slightly ecchymosed along edges; some infiltration of blood in connective tissue beneath the cord; some tearing of soft parts; laryngeal cartilage displaced. Brain and membranes congested. Right cavities of heart distended with dark blood. Trachea congested.
10. Hurpy: Ann. d’ Hygiene, 1881, vi., pp. 359-367, with illustration.—Woman, age 77, suicided by hanging in the following way: a short cord was fastened by one end to a table leg; the other end was around her neck; she lay on the floor, face downward, clothing not disordered. The brain was congested; lungs congested and emphysematous; left side of heart empty (see Fig. 23).
Fig. 23.—Suicide. The cord on the neck is 44 cent. from the cord on the table leg; vertex of head 30 cent. from table leg. Case reported by Hurpy (see p. [717], Case 10).
11. Champouillon: Same journal, 1876, xlvi., p. 129.—Man, age 62; first tried to suffocate himself with charcoal smoke and then hung himself, but the rope broke and the body fell. He lived two days.
12. Pellier: Lyon thesis, 1883, No. 188, p. 72.—Boy, age 16, hung himself; rope broke; he was resuscitated; reddish circular furrow on neck, not like parchment; he had erection and ejaculation; buzzing in his ears and flashes before his eyes.
13. Lacassagne: Pellier thesis (supra), p. 71.—Man; hung himself; was cut down and sent to hospital; was aphonic for four days; then a severe bronchitis set in, and at the end of a week a gangrenous expectoration. The mark of the cord lasted fifteen days.
14. Maschka: Archiv. de l’anthrop. crim., Paris, 1886, i., pp. 351-356.—Man, age about 60, found dead under a tree in the woods near Prague. No sign of violence. A cord thick as a sugar-loaf around the neck; another cord attached to a branch of the tree. There was at first a strong suspicion of violence, but the conclusion reached was that he had hung himself and that the body had fallen from breaking of the cord; that death was due to asphyxia was shown by the furrow on the neck, the dark liquid blood, and the congested lungs. There was no infiltration below the furrow in the neck, and no lesion of larynx. The man had shown signs of melancholy.
15. Friedberg: Virchow’s Archiv, 1878, lxxiv., p. 401.—Suicidal hanging. Examination twenty-eight weeks after death. The front of the neck showed a groove above the larynx, firm and of gray color; ecchymosis in subcutaneous tissue.
16. Bollinger: Friedreich’s Blätt. f. ger. Med., 1889, xl., p. 7.—Man, age 48; found dead. Had made a ligature out of a night-gown and tied it around his neck, the other end around top of a low bed-post; his neck hung by the ligature placed below the larynx. Illustrated.
17. Med. Times and Gaz., London, 1860, ii., p. 39.—Woman; had collected accounts of celebrated persons who had been hanged; finally hanged herself.
18. E. Hoffman: Mitt. d. Wien. Med. Doct. Colleg., 1878, iv., pp. 97-112.—1st. Woman, age about 25; found dead sitting in bed, a handkerchief around her neck fastened to the bed-curtain. The police thought she had been killed and then hung, but the physician concluded that she had committed suicide. An examination of the stomach showed that she had previously tried to poison herself with arsenic.
19. 2d. Woman, age 51; found hanging in half-lying position.
20. 3d. Man, age 50. First tried to kill himself with phosphorus, then sulphuric acid; finally hung himself in a half-kneeling position.
21. Müller-Beninga: Berlin. klin. Woch., 1877, xiv., p. 481.—Man, age 40; hung himself. There was no swelling of genitals and no soiling of clothing. Necroscopy showed death from asphyxia, and in urethra near meatus quite a quantity of seminal fluid, as shown by microscopical examination.
22. Tardieu: Op. cit., p. 18.—The Prince of Condé was found hanging in his room, August 27th, 1830. He was suspended by two handkerchiefs to a window fastening, his feet, however, touching the floor. The knot was at the back of the neck (as shown by the illustration), the face turned slightly to the left, the tongue protruding; face discolored; mucus at the mouth and nose; arms hanging and stiff; fists shut; heels raised; knees half bent. The text says that the knot was nearly under the right ear, but the illustration shows a different position (see Fig. 22, p. 743).
23. Allison: Lancet, 1869, i., p. 636.—Three cases of suicide by hanging, in which there was no mark: 1st. Woman, hung herself with a piece of sheep-net band; cut down before death. 2d. Man, hung with plough-string; cut down in about six minutes. 3d. A heavy man.
24. Tardieu: Op. cit., pp. 93-105.—Woman, died of coma and asphyxia from suicidal hanging, according to report of Drs. Costan and Facieu. Tardieu approved their report. It was at first thought a case of homicide with subsequent hanging, more especially because of the kind of knot used, nœud d’artificier. But Tardieu showed that it was also a nœud de batalier. Her feet touched a chair, and her knees were bent. There was a neckcloth in front of her mouth, but it did not seem to have interfered with respiration.
25. Ibid., pp. 67-72.—The famous case of Marc-Antoine Calas, who committed suicide by hanging (see Voltaire, “Traité sur le tolérance,” etc., in Nouv. Philos. Histor., 1772, xxxii., p. 30). He hung himself to a door. No sign of violence. The city hangman said it was impossible for a man to commit suicide in that way. The father was accused and convicted of homicide. Tardieu shows that the act was a suicide.
26. Ibid., p. 72.—Another famous case. A woman, age 30, hung herself to the key of her bedroom door. Her husband cut her down. He was accused and convicted of the crime and condemned to prison, where he died. Tardieu showed that the case was one of suicide.
27. Hofmann: Wien. med. Presse, 1880, xxi., p. 201.—Man, age 68, suicide by hanging. There was profuse hemorrhage from both ears.
28. Ibid.: 1878, xix., pp. 489-493.—Woman, found dead sitting in bed. She first tried to poison herself with arsenic, then hung herself.
29. Ibid.—Man, tried to poison himself with phosphorus and sulphuric acid, then hung himself. There was a transverse rupture of the sterno-cleido mastoid muscle and suffusion in its sheath.
30. Maschka: Wien. med. Woch., 1880, xxx., pp. 714, 747, 1075.—Man, age 63. It was at first a question of suicide by hanging or homicide by strangling. He concluded that it was the former.
31. Ibid.—Also man, age 58. Similar case. Same opinion.
32. Ibid. 1883, xxxiii., pp. 1118-1120.—Woman. age 23. Question whether she committed suicide by hanging or was strangled and then hung. Opinion, that it was a case of suicide.
33. Hofmann: Allg. Wien. med. Zeit., 1870, xv., pp. 192-214.—Man, age 60. Suicide by hanging or homicide; opinion, that it was the former.
34. Van Haumeder: Wien. med. Woch., 1882, xxxii., pp. 531-533.—Suicide by hanging or homicide. There were many wounds in the head; these occurred during the delirium of typhus.
35. Maschka: “Sammlung gericht. Gutacht.,” etc. (Prag), Leipzig, 1873, p. 137.—Boy, age 9; found dead in sitting position. Injuries on neck and elsewhere. Question, had he hung himself or been choked? Were the injuries inflicted before or after death? Opinion, suicide.
36. Ibid., p. 144.—Boy, age 13. Found hanging in sitting position. Question whether murder, suicide, or accident. Opinion, suicide.
37. Ibid., p. 149.—Woman, age 60; found hanging, sitting position. Suicide or homicide. Opinion, suicide.
38. Ibid., p. 156.—Woman, age 30; found hanging. Opinion, suicide.
39. Ibid., p. 165.—Man, age 63. Suicide by hanging, or homicide by strangling? Opinion, suicide.
40. Berliner: Viert. f. ger. Med. und öff. San., 1874, xx., pp. 245-253.—Woman, age 30; found hanging. Opinion, suicide.
41. Deininger: Friedreich’s Blät. ger. Med., 1884, xxxv., pp. 47-59.—Woman, age 61; found hanging. Opinion given, suicide.
42. Mader: Bericht d. k. k. Rud. Stift., Wien. (1875), 1876, p. 378.—Woman, age 43; tried to hang herself. She was at once cut down, bled, and taken to hospital unconscious. Next day, face red; pulse and temperature normal. Third day, conscious and could speak, but not aloud; tongue twisted and turned to right; paralysis of right hypoglossal nerve. Uvula drawn to left. Skin of right limb felt “furry.” Applied electricity and gave strychnine; phonation was more distinct during the use of the battery. Two months later she was still aphonic, but the vocal cords were in better action. The right hemiparesis was lessened.
43. Grant: Lancet, 1889, ii., p. 265.—Man, age 48; found sitting against a door, hung to the knob by a handkerchief.
44. White: Lancet, 1884, ii., p. 401.—Woman, age 53, insane. Made several attempts at suicide; once with a stocking around her neck, once with an apron; the last time by fastening a portion of her dress to a ladder. She was quickly cut down, cold affusion applied, and artificial respiration (Sylvester). The eyes were prominent and glassy, pupils widely dilated, no reaction to light; conjunctivæ insensitive; lips livid; tongue swollen and pale; face pale; oblique depressed mark on neck, most marked on left side; skin cold; no pulse; no heart-beat recognizable; no respiration; no reflex action. Galvanism failed to arouse any muscular action. The details are too numerous to give all of them. There was reduplication of heart-sounds for several days, due to interference with pulmonary circulation. She recovered both bodily and mental health.
45. Richards: Indian Med. Gaz., 1886, xxi., p. 78.—Man, age 20; suicide; was cut down and lived for four days.
46. Kite: Univ. Med. Mag., 1888-89, i., p. 475.—Man, age 69; suicide.
47. Terrier: Prog. Méd., 1887, vi., pp. 211-214.—Two men, age 29 and 25, insane. Attempted suicide by hanging. Both resuscitated.
48. Nobeling: Aertz. Intellig.-bl., 1884, xxxi., p. 213.—Two suicides by hanging; men, ages 24 and 40.
49. Ritter: Allg. Wien,. med. Zeit., 1886, xxxi., p. 375.—Soldier, found hanging. Cut down in ten minutes. Artificial respiration applied; fifteen minutes later, an effort at respiration; face changing from blue to white and then to red; pulse small, irregular; still unconscious; mark of ligature distinct; a few hours later had a maniacal seizure; gave morphia hypodermically and he slept; was also aphonic. Gradually recovered and returned to duty.
50. Strassmann: Viert. f. ger. Med., 1888, xlviii., pp. 379-381.—Three cases of suicidal hanging in men, ages 27, 37, and 40. The last was found kneeling.
51. Balta: Pest. Med. Chir. Presse, 1892, xxviii., p. 1244.—Man, age 45-50; hanging; suicide. Thyroid cartilage and hyoid bone broken.
Fig. 24.—Double Suicide
(see Case 55).
52. Hackel: Op. cit., p. 35.—Man, found hanging to a beam by a sheet. Had previously tried to choke himself with his hands.
53. Ibid.—Two cases of suicidal hanging where the cord made no mark. In the first the body hung free; in the second the body was partly supported. In the first there was no rubbing of the skin; in the second the body was soon cut down.
54. Freund: Wien. klin. Woch., 1893, vi., pp. 118-121.—Man, found hanging; cut down, but could not be resuscitated. Ligature between hyoid bone and larynx, then crossed over itself about middle line of neck, passed up along each side of face, knotted above the head, then thrown over a beam, and on the other side the loop was caught between his legs.
55. Hoffman: Op. cit., p. 525, illustrated.—Case communicated by Dr. Rosen, of Odessa. Man, age 21, and woman, age 17, hung themselves by same ligature thrown over an open door, one of them on each side. They had previously tried other means of suicide without success (see Fig. 24).
56. Ibid., p. 530.—Man found hanging by handkerchief to branch of tree but sitting on the ground. Mark of handkerchief superficial and pale. When the necroscopy was made the mark had disappeared. Also a similar suicide where there was no mark at all.
57. Ibid., p. 541.—Man found hanging to a window. Another man cut the cord and the suspended one fell into a cellar, fracturing his skull.
58. Ibid.—Man found hanging; cut down; the fall caused rupture of liver.
59. Ibid., p. 539.—Drunkard hung himself; there was evidence that he had previously injured himself during his drunkenness.
60. Ibid.—Boy hung himself because he had been punished by the schoolmaster. There were marks on his back and lower limbs from the punishment.
See also Taylor, “Medical Jurisprudence,” pp. 451-452; Tidy, “Medical Jurisprudence,” incomplete hanging, Cases 33 to 36 and 62; Hofmann, “Lehrbuch,” p. 538.
Homicide.
61. Harvey: Indian Med. Gaz., 1876, xi., p. 3.—Woman, age 20, feeble. Her mother-in-law had kicked her; she probably had fainted; supposing her to be dead, the husband hanged her to a tree within half an hour after the supposed death. Autopsy: No marks of injury; oblique mark of cord on right side of neck; tip of tongue between the teeth; face somewhat livid; right side of heart full of dark blood; lungs congested posteriorly.
62. Ibid., p. 4.—Woman, age 38. Rope close under the chin passed upward behind the ears. Head bent on chest. Large wound above clavicle. Under the rope was a depression (made after death) but no hemorrhage. Much blood in abdomen and a hole in the liver. Kidney bruised and blackened. Right lung torn through; blood in pleuræ. Wounds were supposed to be gunshot, but the husband confessed that he had thrust a sharp solid bamboo into her body and afterward hung it up. She died of hemorrhage.
63. Rehm: Friedreich’s Blät. f. ger. Med., 1883, xxxiv., pp. 332-362.—Man, age 73; first roughly maltreated; afterward hung.
64. Tardieu: Op. cit., p. 125.—Woman found hanging in her room. Circumstances indicated homicidal strangulation and that the hanging was done to avert suspicion. Post-mortem examination showed the base of the tongue ecchymosed, and ecchymosis extending up to the soft palate; mucous membrane of pharynx congested; connective tissue and mucous membrane between hyoid bone and larynx congested posteriorly; epiglottis showed slight ecchymosis, mucous membrane red. These ecchymoses were not caused by the cord, for the latter was placed below the hyoid bone and this bone was not broken. There were also marks on the collar-bone like the mark of two hands.
65. Ibid., p. 124.—Girl, 15 years old. Body found hanging. Post mortem showed beyond doubt that she had been violated, then strangled, then hung. Her head showed many ecchymoses from either the fist or the foot; blood flowing from left ear. Brain slightly congested. Tongue between teeth, bitten and bloody. On front of neck were two marks: the lower were impressions of fingers close together, nearly uninterrupted, and which had bruised, flattened, and tanned the skin, which here was dry, hard, and horny. This lesion was above the intraclavicular notch and extended toward the sides of the neck with regularity of curve and neatness of imprint, evidently made with the right hand. Above the first furrow under the skin was a kind of track, less extended, more regular, a bruising of the same nature as the preceding, but continued, due to the pressure of the index finger and thumb of left hand. A little below the jaw was a livid place on the skin, which was otherwise unaffected by the ligature. There was nothing to indicate a circular action of the ligature. Froth in larynx and bronchi. Lungs apparently normal. Food had passed from stomach into œsophagus and air-passages.
66. Ibid., p. 122.—Woman found hanging in her room, and was resuscitated. She stated that the man who lived with her had tried to strangle her and then hung her. Tardieu saw her in hospital. Respiration short and embarrassed; pains in neck and jaw. Found narrow, circular, sinuous, horizontal, uninterrupted line around the neck below thyroid cartilage; line everywhere equal, deep, and three to four mm. wide; the skin excoriated and covered with thick crust. Below this were several superficial excoriations. There were many contusions on other parts of the body. Tardieu concluded that the mark on the neck was from attempt to strangle; the wounds elsewhere to prevent resistance. She had at the time pulmonary consumption. She died of this disease aggravated by the assault.
67. Ibid., p. 106.—The Duroulle affair. Woman found hanging. Presumption of homicide; arrest of husband; acquitted. She was found with her face to the floor, one end of a cord around her neck; another similar cord attached seven feet above to a rafter, over which it passed three times. Bidault and Boulard reported it a suicide. The results of the post mortem were as follows: Skin of a red-violet color; face swollen; eyes prominent and congested; conjunctivæ a vinous red; lips violet; tongue swollen, tip between teeth; froth in air-passages; lungs congested; brain congested; blood fluid. Circular depression around neck with congestion of skin above and below; ecchymosis in subcutaneous tissue on level of angle of jaw and about one centimetre in size, supposed to correspond to the knot. Tardieu reported that the marks rather resembled those of strangulation than hanging; the ecchymoses were more like those produced by the hand over the mouth. The marks on the face supposed to have been made by a supposed fall of the body were by him considered to have been caused by violence. He believed the woman had been strangled and then hung.
68. Ibid., p. 130.—The Daugats affair. Man found hanging, sitting on the ground, head and trunk somewhat inclined to the left; legs stretched out; clothing not disordered; the part of the cord which was around the neck was applied to the neck of the waistcoat and shirt; on his head a woollen cap. The ground had been recently swept. Necroscopy twenty-four hours afterward. Face pale; right eye open and prominent, left closed; mouth closed, contained food apparently from the stomach; tongue retracted; slight mark on neck under which the tissue was normal: atlas dislocated on axis, but tissues around were normal; no lesion in spinal canal; penis not erect; moisture having the odor of urine on the shirt; large ecchymosis and infiltration of left cheek; extensive contusions on scrotum, with hemorrhagic infiltration, especially around right testicle. Veins of head engorged with black fluid blood. Brain normal. Some black fluid blood in right cavities of heart, left side empty. Lungs black. Other organs normal. Causse and Orfila concluded that the man had been suffocated and then hung. The wife and son confessed that they had injured the testicle through the pantaloons; he then fainted; they then suffocated him with the woollen cap placed over the mouth and nose; the son kneeled on the man’s belly, the body was then hung up and the head violently twisted.
69. Passauer: Viert. f. ger. Med. und öff. San., 1876, xxiv., pp. 26-49.—Woman found hanging in a kneeling position. The ligature on the neck was loose. The necroscopy showed the following: Tongue between the teeth; eyelids swollen and livid; livid spots on face and left ear; lower lip torn; a number of marks on neck; one red stripe not sharply limited; skin not parchmenty and no ecchymosis; ecchymoses of scalp; periosteum of skull reddened; hemorrhage in temporal muscle; brain and pia mater congested; much fluid in ventricle. Larynx and trachea dirty red-brown; right side of heart empty; a little dark fluid blood in left; great vessels, including aorta, containing much dark fluid blood. Lungs congested and œdematous. Liver, spleen, and kidneys congested. Opinion given that she died of asphyxia and was either choked or hanged. Reference to Royal College of Medicine, Königsberg, where the opinion was given that she died of injuries on head and neck and was afterward hanged.
70. Becker: Same journal, 1877, xxvii., pp. 463-473.—Woman, age 52; found hanging. Death caused by shock and incipient asphyxia from strangulation and probably the wounds on head and limbs.
71. Maschka: “Samm. gericht. Gutacht.,” etc. (Prag), Leipzig, 1873, published a number of interesting cases, in each of which there was a question raised as to the cause of death.
72. Ibid., p. 127.—Man found dead. Had he been strangled or hung, or had he died some other way? Opinion, death from paralysis of the brain.
73. Ibid., p. 133.—Woman, age 42; found hanging; a mark around her neck. Did she hang herself or die of other injuries? Opinion, died of other injuries.
74. Rehm: Friedreich’s Blätt., 1883, xxxiv., pp. 322-362.—Man, age 73; found hanging. Opinion, while weak, sick, and suffering from wounds inflicted by his own son, he was hanged by his daughter-in-law.
75. Hofmann: “Lehrbuch,” p. 538.—A father hung his five children, the eldest 9 years. Another man hung two children, the eldest 13 years.
See also Tidy, “Med. Juris.,” Cases 40, 48, 51, 57(?), 58(?); “Hanging after Death,” Case 50.
Judicial Hanging.
76. MacLaren: Indian Med. Gaz., 1873, viii., p. 234.—Three cases of judicial hanging; hung at the same time and cut down and necroscopy begun forty minutes afterward; drop twelve inches. In the first and third there were reflex movements for a few minutes after drop fell. First man, age 40; pupils slightly dilated; no protrusion of tongue or eyeballs; mark of cord above thyroid cartilage; no discharge of semen or fæces; ecchymosis under cord, left side; dislocation of atlas from axis; odontoid ligaments ruptured; transverse ligament uninjured. Brain and membranes much congested; clear fluid in lateral ventricles. Lungs collapsed, anæmic; one ounce straw-colored serum (measured) in pericardium; dark fluid blood in both ventricles of heart; liver much congested.
77. Second man, age 16; pupils widely dilated; eyeballs protruding. Marks of cord same as in preceding case. No discharge of fæces or semen. No ecchymosis under cord; dislocation and rupture of ligaments between axis and third vertebra. Brain did not show well-marked congestion. Lungs collapsed and anæmic. One and one-quarter ounces serum (measured) in pericardium. Heart normal; dark blood in both ventricles; liver normal.
78. Third man, age 20; pupils slightly dilated; eyeballs and tongue not protruded. Marks of cord as in preceding. No discharge of fæces or semen. Slight ecchymosis under cord; mark in front of neck. Dislocation of occipital bone from atlas. Brain and membranes much congested. Lungs collapsed and anæmic. Half ounce serum in pericardium. Heart normal; dark fluid blood in both ventricles; liver normal.
79. Cayley: Ibid., p. 122.—Man, age 35; executed by hanging. Scarcely any convulsive movements after drop fell. Necroscopy two hours afterward. No congestion or protrusion or swelling of the tongue; no muscular rigidity or contractions. About half-way around the neck was indentation of cord, obliquely directed; hardly perceptible in front; its surface appeared rubbed and compressed; no discoloration; no ecchymosis under skin. Cord lay across upper part of thyroid cartilage. Larynx and trachea not injured. Fracture and dislocation of upper cervical vertebræ. Lungs collapsed, not congested. Pericardium empty; heart distended, left side with red blood just beginning to clot; right side with fluid black blood. Liver and other abdominal organs much congested. No discharge of fæces or semen.
80. Garden: Same journal, 1880, xv., p. 12.—Man, age 40, weight about one hundred and twenty pounds; drop two feet; was in a fainting condition, and had to be supported; was not probably fully conscious when platform fell. There were spasmodic retractions of arms and legs for about two minutes; forty seconds after the drop his jungeas fell off; his penis was in strong erection, and the ejaculatory movements were seen. Necroscopy one and one-quarter hours after drop fell. Head and limbs cold; eyes open, natural; tongue not protruding; fingers clinched; superficial veins contained fluid black blood. Mark of cord extended from just below left mastoid process, where the knot was applied, across the thyro-hyoid membranes to a place on right side about two inches below ear. There was scarcely a trace of it behind. Skin dark and ecchymosed, but no ecchymosis of subcutaneous connective tissues. No discoloration nor fracture in neck. Subarachnoidal fluid in excess; puncta vasculosa unusually numerous. Under surface of epiglottis reddened and showed two small dark red ecchymoses; mucous membrane of larynx and trachea pale. Lungs showed venous congestion; no infarctions or small ecchymoses; right lung emphysematous; the left showed old firm adhesions throughout. Heart large, flabby, pale, a very little blood in each ventricle; subpericardial ecchymosis one-fourth inch square anteriorly, another larger one posteriorly; extensive pericardial adhesions. Liver and kidneys congested.
81. See two cases of judicial hanging by Wilkie, same journal, 1881, xvi., p. 275.
82. Porter: Archiv. Laryngol., New York, 1880, i., p. 142.—Redemier hung. Drop five feet. Pulse beat rapidly a few minutes, then lessened in frequency and stopped beating in fifteen minutes. During this time there was violent spasm of muscles of thorax and upper limbs. Necroscopy, dark groove around neck crossing larynx just below pomum Adami. Brain congested. Lungs emphysematous. Cricoid cartilage fractured diagonally. Laryngeal mucous membrane showed ecchymosis and œdema. Vertebræ neither fractured nor dislocated.
83. Another criminal hung at the same time had dislocation of cervical vertebræ.
84. Fenwick: Canada Med. Jour., 1867, iii., p. 195.—Man executed; drop six feet; second cervical vertebra torn from attachment to third; medulla torn across; hyoid bone and tongue torn from thyroid cartilage; general congestion of viscera; lenses normal; eyes congested; clot between sclerotic and choroid coats left eye.
85. Dyer: Trans. Amer. Ophthal. Soc., 1866, p. 13.—Man, age 24; weight one hundred and seventy-four and a half pounds; drop three feet; knot under left ear; for two minutes at intervals, slight motion of abdomen, like effort at respiration, and at same time knees drawn up a little. Death speedy and quiet. Cut down at end of thirty minutes. Necroscopy thirty-five minutes after drop. Body and head moist and warm; emission of semen; face livid; upper lid discolored; abrasion of skin under right ear; deep red mark around neck. Eyeballs not prominent; eyelids closed; corneæ dull; pupils a little dilated. Both lenses fractured. Brain normal; spinal cord normal. Heart empty.
86. Dyer: Same Trans., 1869, pp. 72-75.—Man hung. One eye showed fracture of lens, the other lens showed fine lines. A second case showed dislocation of a cataractous lens. A third showed fissure of lens.
87. Green: Same Trans., 1876, p. 354.—Man hung; drop seven or eight feet. Died quietly and without struggle. One-half to one hour after drop fell, eyes were examined. No lesion of capsule or lens.
88. Keen: Amer. Jour. Med. Sci., 1870, lix., p. 417.—Two criminals hung; drop five feet. Hyoid bone fractured in one; no fracture of vertebræ in other.
89. Clark: Boston Med. and Surg. Jour., 1858, lviii., p. 480.—Execution of Magee. Man, age 28; weight 130 pounds. Drop seven to eight feet. No struggle nor convulsion. Urine discharged at once. Seven minutes after drop fell, heart-beat one hundred; nine minutes, ninety-eight; twelve minutes, sixty and fainter; fourteen minutes, not audible; twenty-five minutes, body lowered. Face purple; pupils dilated; eyes and tongue did not protrude. Mark of cord just above thyroid cartilage, a deep oblique furrow except a small space under left ear; knot over mastoid process. Forty minutes, cord and strap removed; body, especially face, became paler. Necroscopy a little over an hour after drop fell. Body pale; skin mottled; small ecchymosis just above line of cord right side. Right sterno-mastoid muscle torn. Hyoid bone fractured; spine not injured. No seminal discharge. Ninety minutes, pulsation in right subclavian vein; heart-beat, eighty per minute; thorax opened, heart exposed; right auricle showed full and regular contractions and dilatations. The spinal cord was then divided. One hundred and twenty minutes, heart-beats forty per minute. These pulsations of right auricle continued at intervals for three and a half hours longer; readily excited by point of scalpel. Heart normal; left ventricle contracted; right ventricle not so; no coagulation. Brain normal; lungs collapsed; liver and spleen congested; mucous membrane of small intestine pinkish; other organs normal. In the discussion, Dr. Gay thought the absence of cerebral congestion was due to the circulation continuing in the left carotid.
90. Hofmann: Wien. med. Woch., 1880, xxx., pp. 477-480.—Man, a criminal, hung; after hanging ten minutes, the body was cut down. Examination half-hour after drop fell. He was resuscitated and partly regained consciousness, but died three days afterward of œdema of lungs after repeated severe convulsions. He had tumors of the neck which probably interfered with the compression of the trachea. See also Allg. Wien. med. Zeit., 1880, xxv., p. 161, and Wien. med. Blät., 1880, i., pp. 423-430; translated in Ann. Mal. Oreill. and Larynx, Paris, 1880, vi., pp. 99-112.
91. Kinkhead: Lancet, and 701-703.—Cases of hanging. In one, the body of the third cervical vertebra was broken across and the two pieces separated; in another case dislocation of second and third cervical vertebræ.
92. Nelson: Southern Clinic, 1885, viii., pp. 198-202.—Two colored men hung; drop five feet. In one there was atlo-axoid dislocation.
93. Dercum: Phila. Med. Times, 1886-87, xvii., p. 368.—Description of the brain of a man executed by hanging.
94. Kirtikar: Trans. M. and P. Soc., Bombay, 1885, vi., pp. 104-107.—Man, age 25, and woman, age 35. Both hanged. Drop nine feet. Knot tied over cricoid cartilage, a little to left side. In falling, the knots slipped to below the ear. There was fracture of the body of third cervical vertebra and rupture of ligaments. The cord was ruptured in each; in the woman in two places—once at the third cervical, the other at the dorso-lumbar junction.
95. Lamb: Med. News, Philadelphia, 1882, xli., pp. 42-45.—Execution of Guiteau. Drop six feet; knot placed under left ear, but slipped to back of head. Yellowish furrow a few lines wide around the neck, directed downward and forward. Sterno-mastoid muscles torn transversely about midway of their length. Thyro-hyoid ligament ruptured; hyoid bone and thyroid cartilage widely separated. Large blood-vessels not injured. No fracture or dislocation of vertebræ.
96. Thomson and Allen: Catalog. Surg. Sec. Army Med. Mus.; specimens 298 to 302.—Execution of Wirtz. Rope one-half inch diameter; drop five feet; knot under left ear. Several slight shrugs of shoulders, after which body was quiet; let down in fifteen minutes. No involuntary evacuation. Face pale, placid. Eyes partly open; pupils dilated; slight injection of conjunctivæ. Mouth open; tongue not protruding. Just above thyroid cartilage extending on right side from median line in front to spinous process was a dirty brown deep furrow with congested walls; on left side a line of discoloration due to direct action of rope. Soft parts above and below the line much swollen, particularly on right side. Larynx and hyoid bone unnaturally mobile. Right trapezius muscle torn; sterno-mastoid divided transversely, leaving an interval of two inches. Slight ecchymoses between muscle and larynx. Ecchymoses on ligamentum nuchæ. Hyoid bone, both greater cornua fractured and dislocated from body; lesions more marked on right side. Several small ecchymoses in vicinity. Larynx not injured. Brain normal. No bloody or frothy mucus in air-passages. Lungs not congested. One drachm of straw-colored serum in pericardium. Heart empty. Abdominal organs normal. Bladder somewhat distended with urine.
See also Tidy, “Med. Juris.,” Cases 1 to 4 and 60.
Accident.
97. Harvey: Indian Med. Gaz., 1876, xi., p. 3.—Boy, age 1½ years; was swinging by two ropes attached to two posts; the ropes became twisted around his neck. Necroscopy showed mark of very small rope in front of neck from ear to ear; mucous membrane of larynx dark; lungs much congested.
98. Hackel: Op. cit., p. 35.—Man, age 19, sitting on a load of wood, with the lines around his neck, fell and was hung by the lines.
99. Biggs and Jenkins: New York Med. Jour., 1890, lii., p. 30.—Case 16; child, 6 months old, sitting on a high chair, fell between the chair guard and seat and was asphyxiated by compression of neck.
See also Tidy (op. cit.), Cases 53 and 54.