Anonymous 05/28/2026 (Thu) 14:04 Id: b43e15 No.184657 del
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TJ Harker @TJ_Harker - Below is a common error.
Here are the facts: Dr. Andrew Baker, the Chief Medical Examiner for Hennepin County (who was the only person that conducted the autopsy of George Floyd) did not agree with the prosecution’s evolving theories of the cause of Floyd’s death.
He did not find that Floyd died from a vascular restraint (blood choke), which was the prosecution’s theory at the beginning of trial.
And he did not agree that Floyd died of positional asphyxia, which became the prosecution’s fall back theory when, in the middle of trial and to prosecutors’ utter surprise, their blood choke theory imploded in real time (due to it being physiologically impossible to kill somebody by compressing only one of their carotid arteries).
Baker’s autopsy provided zero evidentiary support for everything the prosecutors wanted the jury to believe.
But it’s worse than that. Baker also found a lack of evidence where one would expect to find evidence had the prosecution’s theories been correct. Baker called this absence of evidence the “pertinent negatives,” and they all - ALL - worked against the prosecution.
Quote:
Gary Koepnick @garykoepnick
Yet you think you know more than the medical examiner who did the autopsy
You’re just another racist MAGA POS.
https://x.com/TJ_Harker/status/2059375414242603045

Today In History @historigins - Director John Hughes had originally planned for Molly Ringwald to dance alone, but she felt very self-conscious and insisted that he include the rest of the cast.
This change led to the iconic synchronized dance in the library, which many fans consider the most memorable moment in the entire film.
Video: Director John Hughes had originally planned for Molly Ringwald to dance alone, but she felt very self-conscious and insisted that he include the rest of the cast.
This change led to the iconic synchronized dance in the library, which many fans consider the most memorable moment in the entire film.

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