Talk:Death of Jimi Hendrix

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Featured articleDeath of Jimi Hendrix is a featured article; it (or a previous version of it) has been identified as one of the best articles produced by the Wikipedia community. Even so, if you can update or improve it, please do so.
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March 10, 2013Featured article candidatePromoted
March 24, 2014Featured topic candidateNot promoted
Current status: Featured article


Post Mortem Section Does Not Reflect The True Facts[edit]

Whoever wrote the Post Mortem section was deliberately deceptive because they misquoted Autopsist Dr. Donald Teare as definitively saying Jimi's Blood Alcohol Content was 100mg per 100ml...I am one of the world's authorities on this subject and possess Jimi's autopsy sheets...The correct presentation of Dr. Teare's autopsy is that he measured a 5mg per 100ml Blood Alcohol Content and entered it in the autopsy data sheet...As it is written, the "Post Mortem" entry is entirely misleading because it makes it sound like Dr. Teare measured a 100mg Blood Alcohol Content and stated so... Dr. Teare most certainly did not, and if the actual autopsy were properly reflected, the entry would have described the accurate circumstances of Teare measuring a 5mg Blood Alcohol Content, realizing it was too low for the assumed manner of death, and then making a special notation in the autopsy stating "I am estimating a Blood Alcohol Content at the time of ingestion of the pills of 100mg"...I possess Jimi's autopsy...Anyone can read it and see that Teare entered a special notation in a separate paragraph that literally said "I am making a special notation that I am ESTIMATING a Blood Alcohol Content of 100mg at the time of ingestion of the pills"...Not only does the entry, as written, fail to include this necessary context but it goes on to make it sound like Teare said Jimi had the equivalent of 4 pints of beer and would have failed a breathalyzer test...Teare never said that...Dr. Teare committed some serious violations in his Blood Alcohol Content analysis during the autopsy...It needs to be found out if estimating a critical forensic measurement like the Blood Alcohol Content is legal or violates autopsy laws because Dr. Teare was going by the timeline told to him by Monika Dannemann where Jimi ingested the Vesparax Barbiturate at 7:15 am and died at 11:35 am...If you read Kathy Etchingham's book 'Through Gypsy Eyes' she interviewed Dr. Teare's successor, Dr. Rufus Crompton, who inherited Jimi's autopsy from Teare, and he told her that the undigested rice Teare noted in Jimi's stomach "precluded any time of death after 5:30 am"...Etchingham's investigation and petition to re-open the case proved Dannemann was lying about the happenings that morning as well as times...This information is reliably sourced from published books so it creates an evidence path that is quite different from what is expressed in the "Post-Mortem" entry...Etchingham's confirmed 5:30 am time of death by the London Coroner's Office's top pathologist in England (Crompton) nullifies Teare's entries because it is medically impossible for a person's Blood Alcohol Content to go from 100mg to 5mg in the less than one hour Jimi had the pills in him...This is confirmed by the reliably-published film source "A Perfect Murder" 2019 where British Pathologist Dr. Atholl Johnston said Jimi only had 7 Vesparax tablets in his blood at autopsy...Since the manufacturer's product information published in Glebbeek's 2011 'Until We Meet Again' says that peak blood saturation is reached in an hour, and Jimi took 9 Vesparax, there being only 7 tablets worth in Jimi's blood is forensic evidence of Jimi only having the pills in him for 50 minutes before death...So the problem here is both Dr. Teare and the writer of the Post-Mortem section badly failed to reflect what the autopsy showed...If Teare had entered the correct times and interpreted the undigested rice correctly he would then look at the 46mg of alcohol in the urine and used it to determine a bodily alcohol digestion rate...Dr. Teare would have followed forensic science and realized he was limited to the Blood Alcohol Level when Jimi took the 9 Vesparax tablets - which could be determined by digestion tables that result in 5mg at death...I believe the body digests 20mg per hour, so Teare should have determined that Jimi had no more than 20mg of Blood Alcohol at the time of ingestion of the pills and NOT 100mg...Dr. Crompton also told Kathy Etchingham that Jimi did not have enough barbiturate in him to cause death...Monika Dannemann hired some German doctors to evaluate Jimi's death and they also told her the same thing - Dannemann: 'The Inner World Of Jimi Hendrix' 1995...Again - whoever wrote the entry says Jimi had a 1.8mg Blood Barbiturate Level...The autopsy quite clearly says .7mg was measured...The autopsy is quoted as saying "Jimi asphyxiated on vomit" without providing the very important detail that the "vomit" was witnessed by the attending Emergency Room doctor as being mostly red wine...Lastly, the entry mentions that Dr. Teare never bothered to enter a time of death without mentioning that the time of death is critical to any autopsy and is the means by which all of the autopsy's calculations are determined...An autopsy that doesn't enter any time of death is an invalid one by definition...Especially when serious drug actions are involved and the main witness was proven to be lying about the true times things happened...This is not original research...It is commonly accepted logic applied to the cited known reliable sources and their accurate information...The current entry has badly spun the previous sources into something that is quite misleading from the real facts... 73.107.206.24 (talk) 00:22, 20 May 2022 (UTC)[reply]

Are there any reliable sources to confirm this? 83.53.76.107 (talk) 08:01, 23 July 2023 (UTC)[reply]

As written, this article's chronology is hard to follow[edit]

This article is far superior to what I usually get (and, woefully, have come to expect, once I scroll down below the request for subsidizing cash and actually get to start reading) from Wikipedia. And so is the Tak-Page comment above that addresses some discrepancies. This kind of analysis is what one should ALWAYS expect. However, the chronology is not perfect. Some editing would make it more chronological. A phone-call from Monika Dannemann to Eric Burdon is not included in the chronology at the time it occurred. Nor is the time of arrival of Eric Burdon at the apartment, and the time at which Burdon and Dannemann left the apartment together. These events are listed in the order of the time they became known to other players (the ambulance crew), or became known to some researcher, not at the time they may have occurred.2600:1700:6759:B000:E894:BFCC:705D:880 (talk) 05:59, 9 February 2024 (UTC)Christopher Lawrence Simpson[reply]