14. Cullingworth: Med. Chron., Manchester, 1884-85, i., p. 577.—Woman, married, found dead. Bruise and ecchymosis beneath the ear; effusion of blood in underlying tissue. Other bruises on face, etc. Several bruises in mouth, on lips and tongue. Blood dark and fluid. Brain and membranes much congested. No marks of injury on throat. Lungs congested; surfaces emphysematous. Heart contained dark fluid blood. Urine and fæces had been discharged.

15. The Gouffé Case.—Murdered by Eyraud and Bompard in 1889. Archiv anthropologie criminelle, Paris, 1890, v., pp. 642-716; vi., 1891, pp. 17 and 179. Reports by Bernard, Lacassagne, and others. Gouffé was decoyed into a room and strangled; afterward his body was tied up, placed in a trunk, and taken some distance away. The murderers fled to America; but eventually Bompard returned to France and Eyraud was captured; both confessed. When found, the body was well advanced in putrefaction; after a very careful examination was identified. He was strangled by the pressure of fingers; the head was afterward wrapped in a cloth which was held in place by five turns of a cord around the neck; traces of the furrows made by these cords were found. Heart empty; no blood in muscles of neck; hyoid bone intact but superior thyroid cornua fractured at base.

16. Horteloup: Ann. d’Hygiène, 1873, xxxix., pp. 408-416.—Man found dead on some leaves in a fountain at bottom of staircase; skull and spine fractured. The murderers stated that they had struck him on the head with a crutch; then, believing him to be dead, carried him and threw him into the fountain. When examined, his face was livid, tongue between teeth and bitten nearly in two; and three parallel abrasions on left side of neck and one on right; slight wounds about the face in addition to the fractures mentioned. No report of examination of lungs or larynx. Horteloup concluded that the man had been strangled to death, and that when thrown into the fountain, alighting on his head, the jaws were brought together and tongue bitten.

17. Laennec: Journ. de med. l’ouest, 1878, xii., pp. 68-71.—Woman, age 53; attempted strangulation by her husband. There were slight ecchymoses on each side of neck under angle of jaw, most marked on left side; when seen, she complained of lassitude and lively pain in hypochondria and region of lower ribs antero-laterally; no sign of lesion. She stated that she was awakened from sleep by pressure on neck and chest and feeling of suffocation; she soon lost consciousness and so remained for some hours. Her statements were corroborated by other testimony. Laennec considered the case one of prolonged syncope from pressure on carotids.

18. Lancet, ii., 1841-42, p. 129.—Woman, found dead, her clothing on fire and lower part of her body burnt. Necroscopy showed face and neck swollen as low as thyroid cartilage, and purple; eyes prominent and congested; mouth closed; tongue not noticed; front of neck below swollen part showed two dark-brown hard marks and slight marks also of pressure; on incision the vessels were engorged. Blood, fluid; brain, congested. There were no vesications from the burns and no sign of inflammation.

19. Alguie: “Étude méd. and exp. de l’homicide réel ou simulé par strangulation, relativement aux attentats dont Maurice Roux a été l’objet,” Montpellier, 1864, p. 121.—This essay contains the reports of many interesting experiments on animals and the cadaver. His conclusions in this case were that the victim had first been struck on the neck by a club; then a ligature was placed on the neck, with many turns, tied tightly, but the knots did not remain tight. [The marks were visible four months afterward.] The assailant then tied the limbs. The victim recovered with temporary loss of voice, memory, etc.

20. Gatscher: Mittheil. d. Wien. med. Doct. Colleg., 1878, iv., p. 45.—A man found hanging. The examiner declared that he had hung himself. Eight years afterward, suspicion of violence. A commission appointed. The protocol had shown the blood fluid; a red-brown dry furrow around the neck; ecchymoses in connective tissues of same; the entire back and posterior parts of limbs showed post-mortem suggillation. The commission declared that the man had been strangled, had lain for at least three hours on his back, and then been hung up. The murderer confessed.

21. Ibid., p. 46.—Woman, age 50, found dead in bed. Blood fluid; two ecchymoses size of beans in crico-thyroid muscles of each side; patch of hepatization size of fist, in lung; injury of body. The examiner declared that she had been strangled by compression of larynx with two fingers, but he could not say how long the pressure had continued, that is, whether she had died of the strangulation or of the pneumonia. The assailant stated that he had choked her and when she seemed to be dead, had left her. The woman lived alone.

22. Waidele: Memorabilien, 1873, xviii., pp. 161-167.—Husband and wife quarrelled and fought; he stated that he choked her with her neck handkerchief, and as she turned round toward him, then choked her with his hand until she died. The examiner declared that she died of asphyxia; there was a brownish-red dry streak on each side of the neck in the laryngeal region corresponding to the handkerchief, and also two small abrasions of skin which might have been made by the hands; he concluded, however, that she had been choked to death by the handkerchief, because there were no ecchymoses.

23. Rehm: Friedreich’s Blätter f. ger. Med., 1883, xxxiv., pp. 325-332.—Woman, age 37. Choked by the hand on the neck, and at the same time assailant’s knee pressed against her abdomen, pressing her against a wall, causing hemorrhage around the pancreas. Death stated as due to asphyxia.