With the death of Pope John Paul I on September 28, 1978, there should have been some raised eyebrows. After only 33 days as Pope, John Paul was found dead in his bed with no cause ever given for his unexpected demise.
In the New York Times Bestselling true crime book, David A. Yallop discovers the conspiracy threatened to be revealed by the newly appointed Pope and the cover-up of his death.
The conspirators felt certain (and they were right) no autopsy would be ordered and their crime would go undected.
In most states, it is the law that people who die in sudden or unexpected ways be given an autopsy. The reason for this is so that the coroner can rule out foul play, or murder.
Autopsy after death is a way to precisely determine a cause of death.
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) is the "sudden death of an infant under one year of age which remains unexplained after a thorough case investigation, including performance of a complete autopsy, examination of the death scene, and review of the clinical history"(Willinger, et al., 1991).
No, California law does not require an autopsy for a known suicide. If the death is suspicious or reasons for death are unknown, an autopsy is required.
Autopsy.
The autopsy finding in the death of Rhonda Hart was natural causes. She was not sick with any disease such as cancer at the time of her death.
Sudden death without chronic medical conditions that might result in death, in people who are young (usually under 50-54) and/or are not under managed care for a chronic, fatal ailment, will always call for an autopsy.
Autopsy.
Before declaring a cause of death, the officers waited for the autopsy results.
During an autopsy a body is usually dissected and it's tissue are tested. The reason for the autopsy is usually to determine the cause of an individual's death.
Sudden Infant Death Syndrome (SIDS) is a medical term that describes the sudden death of an infant which remains unexplained after all known and possible causes have been carefully ruled out through autopsy, death scene investigation, and review of the medical history.
Any unattended death requires an autopsy