E
epic1959
Member
- Mar 2, 2021
- 10
What if anything can we learn from autopsy reports about celebrity partial hanging suicides? I've read three (readily available on the internet): Robin Williams, Chris Cornell, and Chester Bennington.
RW: He used a belt stuck between a door and door frame - the anchor being the tightness between door and doorframe. His buttocks were several inches above the floor but his feet were touching the floor.
CC: He used an exercise band with the anchor being a carabiner jammed into the top of a door - closing the door held the carabiner tightly secure and the exercise band noose hung from that anchor. He was found on the floor with the band still tight around his neck.
CB: He used a leather belt similar to RW, the tightness between door and door frame providing the anchor point. His feet were touching the floor. The top of the door he was hanging from was only 65 inches from the floor. From the floor to the level of the belt buckle was 48 inches. CB's feet were on the floor and his knees were bent.
What strikes me about each situation is how the person found a secure anchor point. I wouldn't have thought that sticking the end of a belt between door and door frame would be secure but it was for RW and CB.
RW and CB were alone for several hours, but CC was being monitored by his wife (via phone) - she called security when he stopped responding. So CC perhaps had much less time.
Anyway, do these details or anything made public gives us clues as to why they succeeded? So many here report failure with partial suspension. It may be mostly a question of the will to overcome SI - these three had it - but one wonders if the technique or method also plays a major role.
RW: He used a belt stuck between a door and door frame - the anchor being the tightness between door and doorframe. His buttocks were several inches above the floor but his feet were touching the floor.
CC: He used an exercise band with the anchor being a carabiner jammed into the top of a door - closing the door held the carabiner tightly secure and the exercise band noose hung from that anchor. He was found on the floor with the band still tight around his neck.
CB: He used a leather belt similar to RW, the tightness between door and door frame providing the anchor point. His feet were touching the floor. The top of the door he was hanging from was only 65 inches from the floor. From the floor to the level of the belt buckle was 48 inches. CB's feet were on the floor and his knees were bent.
What strikes me about each situation is how the person found a secure anchor point. I wouldn't have thought that sticking the end of a belt between door and door frame would be secure but it was for RW and CB.
RW and CB were alone for several hours, but CC was being monitored by his wife (via phone) - she called security when he stopped responding. So CC perhaps had much less time.
Anyway, do these details or anything made public gives us clues as to why they succeeded? So many here report failure with partial suspension. It may be mostly a question of the will to overcome SI - these three had it - but one wonders if the technique or method also plays a major role.