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فسيلة - transplant
هي مكتبة رقمية تحتوي علي آلاف الفيديوهات العربية في جميع المجالات

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00:14music
00:16Wala Tarish
00:18You are doing nothing.
00:19The safe key is broken, wait a minute
00:20He told her
00:21And you're making me work in a forum on the house
00:23My mahrami mabasa'
00:24You'll go in like that and find your grandfather empty-handed.
00:25No worries
00:26I didn't have time to buy sweets
00:27Next time I'll make sure I'm prepared
00:30Let me find something else to do
00:30Take these gloves
00:32For fingerprints
00:35Talmi Ajl
00:36If they caught you with your fingerprints
00:38You won't get out of your good conduct and your arrogance
00:41That's perfect.
00:42One second
00:43Why aren't you wearing anything on your head?
00:45We are lost because of you
00:45Don't be afraid, my brother
00:46I won't open them all.
00:47I'll open it and extend my hand
00:50She changed, she got bored
00:51You're telling me, "Oh, you!"
00:53Keep this in mind
00:55Oh teacher
00:56If your hair was like this, you wouldn't see it like this.
00:58It's possible that your blonde hair will fall off
01:00The investigator holds it
01:01And your Laura will appear
01:03And then she says
01:04By God, this is not me!
01:07What is this?
01:09You stole the habit you're working in
01:11Why did you steal my hair?
01:13It chokes you
01:15Amal is not a doctor
01:16And besides, we're in a Creator's apartment.
01:18I feel like I'm still working at Burger King.
01:20Take this too
01:22Because of your scent
01:23Don't stick it to the safe
01:25So, Habo works in the officer's face.
01:27What smell?
01:28Am I a herring?
01:29No, so your wife doesn't know you were here.
01:31Yal Langs
01:32The broom remained in the place
01:34enough
01:35What else should I do before I open this cursed safe?
01:37Yes
01:38I'll respect you after you finish your work at the factory.
01:41And make sure you have removed all fingerprints
01:44Tiki is examining her because she's been in a lot of pain for a week now. She's been sleeping.
01:48I can't
01:52Hello
01:53Emergency Police
01:54Adi wants to report me
01:56One crazy guy's laziness
01:57You spoke to him from the city of Montroflek
01:58Who is this, Hajja?
01:59Menips Doctor
02:00That way they'll know how to look at you.
02:01The poem is from this man.
02:03A doctor from a man?
02:12Dear viewers, peace and blessings be upon you. Welcome to two new episodes of the Al-Dahiha program.
02:15There is a notice before the episode begins.
02:17This episode contains condolences and talk about death, murder, and suicide.
02:19We advise sensitive viewers not to be offended by it.
02:22And my dear ones, even the young ones don't see this.
02:24Give them half an hour to get the little ones away from you.
02:30Or is he already dead?
02:31smell?
02:32No, not at all. This is a respectable program.
02:33Even if there weren't children watching us
02:35In the novel The Book of Destiny
02:36For the French philosopher Voltaire
02:37The hero is honest and isolated in a simple house.
02:39On the banks of the Euphrates River
02:40One day, the queen's men were seen searching anxiously in the jungle.
02:44They asked him
02:44She didn't see a stray dog
02:45He told them, "You mean a dog?"
02:46They said to him, "Yes."
02:47She really is a dog
02:48Queen Ismanial's dog
02:49He told them she was approaching with her left foot
02:50Her ears are a little long
02:51He told him, "Aren't you going to congratulate her?"
02:52She got married
02:53The commander approached him and asked, "Where is she?"
02:54Salah told him, "I didn't even know the king had a dog."
02:56Well, my dear, nobody knows what this lineup was.
02:58Fasbuh Mshiu
02:59Days later, Yuvija returned with the soldiers again.
03:01They search with the same anxiety in the forest
03:03Hey guys
03:04They told him that King Hassan had fled
03:05I didn't see him
03:06He told them the height was about one and a half meters.
03:07His religion is about a meter long.
03:09And he wore a silver horseshoe
03:09They said to him, "Yes."
03:10He told them he didn't know or wasn't Fatoush
03:11The soldiers here told him that Sadiq was...
03:14The dog and the horse
03:15He was imprisoned and fined
03:16But after a few days they are surprised by the dog and the horse
03:19They are found in the forest, as usual.
03:21They ask Sadiq to explain their position.
03:22How did you know them without being the one who took them?
03:24Here is Sadiq Byrd
03:25I saw signs among her footprints
03:27It made me imagine her dangling breasts
03:29On the sides of her front feet
03:31There were signs that told me her ears were long and she dragged them
03:34All the footprints form a specific cavity, except for one foot.
03:37Therefore, I knew that she was exposing
03:39As for the horse, the tree dust on its paw is about a meter away.
03:42I concluded that this is the length of its tail that shakes off the dust.
03:45The leaves he was shaking were from a tree
03:47Its height is one and a half meters
03:48Can you predict the horse's height?
03:50And from the fingerprints that were fixed in the story, I deduced that it was made of silver.
03:53The astonishing conclusions drawn by the author, which are beyond imagination, are exactly what forensic investigators do, without exaggeration.
03:59So that they can imagine and construct the scenario in which the crime occurred, what will the signs affect?
04:04In this episode, my dear, I will review some tools that help investigators solve cases.
04:08We will also learn how to deceive them and uncover the full extent of the crime.
04:13Let me explain to you, my dear, if you don't already know, that we live in a society and that society is governed by rules.
04:20Therefore, when we break these rules, we commit a crime.
04:23And the effort, oh Joe, is ours, and the thought is that we are living in refrigerator compartments.
04:25Crime is as old as humanity itself, due to human nature.
04:28Our beautiful nature, my dear, is being distorted by things like anger, greed, or revenge.
04:33In order for society to maintain its order, it needs to hold accountable those who violate its rules.
04:37But how can they be held accountable if no one sees them committing the crime?
04:40Of course, my dear, as you know, every criminal leaves evidence behind.
04:43But not everyone can tell if this is evidence or not.
04:46But even the most hardened criminals leave behind evidence.
04:49This guide only needs a specialist to be able to read it.
04:51The specialist wasn't always available, so the law had no option but to conduct an interrogation.
04:55The accused will swear an oath, of course, and the suspect will deny it.
04:57The law resorted to the initial beard to uncover the secret
05:00Like what? Like torture, like setting the suspect on fire, for example.
05:02If it burns, it is a sin, and if it survives, it is a spark.
05:05Or he who drowns in the sea remains guilty
05:06Or what floats remains shiny
05:07Or the accused challenges his accuser to a duel.
05:10That's what he'll get in Tronz, and God will reward the honest one who is right.
05:14These interrogation methods are based on divine intervention.
05:18She will intervene and save him
05:18As humans progressed, they found more logical ways.
05:21In ancient India, for example, they would stuff the accused's mouth with dry rice and make him snort.
05:25He's watching to see if the rice will come out or stay stuck in his mouth.
05:27Here, my dear, and we're not throwing rice around.
05:29And they are not throwing away the accused's brilliance
05:30Because if he were honest, his saliva wouldn't be dry.
05:32Of course, these methods have made many innocent people pay the price for mistakes they did not commit.
05:37The need arose for a science that could assist the law in fulfilling its mission.
05:41One of the earliest attempts was in the fourteenth century in China.
05:43When the sickle was cut, they gathered all the sickles and piled them up together.
05:47They waited a little while until they saw which sickle would attract the most flies.
05:52And the sickle, from the countries where flies gather, they knew that it was the weapon of the crime.
05:56Oh Abu Ahmad, the knot and the zakat
05:58Is it true what a sickle means?
05:59It's something, my dear, that's similar to a banana peel, if you know what that is.
06:01I mean, yes
06:02Why, Abu Ahmad, do you have a question?
06:03What is the name of the science that helps this law?
06:05This, my dear, is known in Islamic jurisprudence.
06:07Not forensic medicine
06:08But Jafsh, what a group, Abu Ahmed
06:09Which is forensic science, which has different branches.
06:17For example, the study of projectiles
06:18Those who study the physics and behavior of different types of shots
06:21And also forensic psychiatry
06:23The one who determines the mental state of the patient
06:25And forensic dentistry uniform
06:26And these are the ones who make Abu Ahmed
06:28My dear, imagine with me
06:29If the body decomposes
06:30What will remain of it so we can find out the age and identity of its owner?
06:33The spear
06:34The teeth are the last organs to decompose in the body.
06:37This helps us, for example, with airplane lenses.
06:39Which is all remains and ruins
06:40Another science, like the science of Sharia-compliant arrows.
06:42Which is applied in cases of poisoning and drug abuse
06:45The victim, Mattel, tells us which poison and which drug.
06:47And the one who was bad, for example, was an Arab woman under the influence of alcohol.
06:50No, no, and so on and so on
06:52Every aspect of crime has a field of knowledge that can uncover and explain it.
06:55The truth is that films and series have created an inaccurate and misleading idea of ​​investigation.
06:58The case is getting complicated, so today we're talking to a brilliant investigator.
07:01It lifts fingerprints and solves the mystery
07:02He sends the evidence to the lab and the results are received on the same day.
07:05His conclusions were confirmed to be incorrect from the beginning.
07:07This, my dear, is an unrealistic level of efficiency.
07:09So, Abu Hamad, what is the reality?
07:10Let me tell you about the year 1910
07:11When the French scientist Edmond Lecarte established the first crime laboratory
07:15He set up a simple seating area.
07:16The principle of exchange or transfer of evidence
07:18Anyone who enters the crime scene will leave something behind
07:21He won't leave until he takes something with him.
07:22Especially in crimes involving physical contact
07:25The uniform of murder and neutering
07:26The victim and the perpetrator swap evidence.
07:28The starting point of the investigation
07:29The evidence will be the crime scene report.
07:31That's why
07:31The most important thing for the police
07:33The perpetrator prefers to remain as he is.
07:35Protects you from pollution
07:36Second one, Muhammad
07:37It means there is killing and blood everywhere, and body parts.
07:39Ahmed Samir from Helwan is the one who will pollute it.
07:41It's tied up here, my dear
07:42It is changing the location of anything or touching it.
07:45I'm telling you this, my dear
07:46So you don't end up like those 3-4 movie heroes
07:48Those who enter the crime scene
07:50And they, the poor souls of peace, leave their mark.
07:52And then they rise up for Hussein al-Sakina
07:54He walks and prefers to flee on charges
07:56He has no role in it.
07:5729. We're looking for someone who's mentally challenged.
08:01Stay away from the crime scene
08:02Why does crime play with anything?
08:04Sarkh Radi on the police
08:05Walk, grow old
08:07The first condition that arrives is that the crime scene is surrounded.
08:09Nothing is being removed or placed
08:11Those who are examining them wear protective clothing.
08:12They are looking for evidence.
08:14Evidence such as bloodstains
08:15The shoe caused
08:16Shakl Kodsh Arabic
08:17fibers
08:17It fell off the criminal's clothes
08:19The victim's clothes are also checked for traces.
08:21saliva or semen
08:22They describe the evidence, photograph it, and record its location.
08:24In a diagram of the crime scene
08:26This is an important strategy
08:27If the defendants' lawyer tried
08:29He is skeptical of the evidence.
08:30If every itch remained
08:31We arrived and found it like this
08:32Let's start solving the evidence.
08:33Let's see what comes out of it
08:34For example, you have blood stains
08:35Specialists analyze it
08:36Based on their knowledge of blood behavior
08:38Our blood
08:39He acts according to principles
08:40specific biological, physical, and chemical properties
08:43From the amount of blood
08:44And the pattern of its distribution
08:45We can deduce some things
08:47For example, if the victim
08:48She died from a sharp instrument.
08:49Or with a strong blow
08:50He will create pools of blood next to him
08:52If he was wounded by a gunshot
08:53It will produce smaller blood droplets
08:54Spread over a wide area
08:56If a drop of blood falls at a ninety-degree angle
08:58It will create a perfect spherical shape
09:00As the angle of attack changes
09:01The shape of the bloodstain will change
09:03This asks where the victim stood.
09:04The injury came from the direction of the door.
09:06Or from the window side
09:07What happened after the bloodshed?
09:09Is the blood found at the crime scene
09:11From the same species
09:12Or from two chapters
09:12So that he knows him
09:13Is the perpetrator attacking?
09:14Is it poured or not?
09:15Crime time
09:16And so and so and so on
09:17Another important cream, my dear
09:18the hair
09:19Therefore, when you commit a crime
09:20shaves a slap
09:21Human beings, my dear
09:21As is clear
09:22Hair falls out all the time
09:23Approximately 100 noodles a day
09:25Poetry is the scene of the crime.
09:26Can you specify if it's a man or a woman?
09:27Human or animal
09:29If it's an animal, what is it?
09:30Poetry tightened in a stifling atmosphere
09:31And it happened normally.
09:32His hair was shaved soon
09:33He stole his hair
09:34Even if there are suspects
09:35We can compare hair samples
09:37With their hair
09:37with a device called
09:38The comparazon microscope
09:39Pidog Microscopes
09:40Image of the two eyes
09:41Those you are comparing
09:42And this is the basis
09:42The killer's hair is identified
09:44No
09:44Of course, my dear
09:45This is not 100% conclusive evidence.
09:46But
09:47Wow!
09:48If the poetry fell on its islands
09:50This includes an upgrade
09:50here
09:51We can analyze using nuclear nuclear analysis.
09:53What is it?
09:54These are the golden standards
09:55By identifying
09:56Oh Abu Hamid
09:56Like fingerprints
09:57Let me tell you, my dear
09:58Fingerprints are evidence
10:00But it is not conclusive evidence.
10:02Swaan, Abu Hamid
10:03I mean, I'm going to commit murder.
10:04He didn't wear plastic gloves
10:06my dear
10:06Please, Qaw'a, do that.
10:07Plastic is very harmful to the environment.
10:08Why?
10:09Fingerprints are not conclusive evidence.
10:11The conclusive
10:12while
10:12We both know
10:13No two people have the same fingerprint.
10:15Not even identical prostheses
10:17Not even your own finger
10:18It has the same fingerprint
10:19Also, its shape
10:20Staying in your hand for your whole life
10:21It's the same fingerprint
10:23Even when your skin changes
10:24The problem, my dear
10:25In the process of analyzing it
10:25Our skin is sweeter with oil.
10:27When I invade like that
10:28Two oils
10:28This oil is like love
10:29Sakina held
10:30So it leaves oil on it
10:31Like the look of your screen, Aziz
10:33When the killer picks up the knife
10:34It leaves traces of oil on her
10:36The investigators are coming
10:36And he landed
10:37It sticks to the base of the oil
10:38The fingerprint is visible
10:39Our fingerprints are on it, protrusions
10:41And Khadid
10:41Things going up and things going down
10:43This creates a pattern
10:44Unique to each person
10:45A fingerprint consists of three things
10:4760% of them are Loops episodes
10:49Roll about by itself
10:5035% are circular or spiral vortices
10:53and 5% quasi-wave arcs
10:55Analysts are holding various types of fingerprint standards.
10:57They compare the fingerprints side by side.
10:59If they have enough details
11:00It will be determined
11:01Fingerprint
11:02Because it's from the same person
11:03Of course, this is a very important tool.
11:05But the studies found
11:06The error rates in it
11:08From the class
11:08Researchers are falling
11:09Errors in 1 out of 10%
11:11Because of contextual bias
11:13What do you mean, Bahmad?
11:141 out of 10% is 1 out of 1000
11:16This is a very small number
11:17And my dear, if you were one in 1000, that's it.
11:19You won't be thinking like that anymore.
11:20If I were sparkle
11:20Why did I come here so rudely?
11:29His fingerprints were positive
11:30With a fingerprint present at the scene of the incident
11:33Fingerprints are the same
11:34The suspect was very suitable
11:36In his view
11:36Especially since he recently converted to Islam
11:38We will be consoled by the word on 2004
11:39Meaning after the events of September 11th
11:412001
11:41Here is the FBI office
11:43He handed him over to the authorities.
11:44In order to begin the investigation with her
11:46Brandon, of course, denied the charge.
11:47He asked that he bring in experts and analysts of his own.
11:50But the surprise
11:51The analysts who came from his side
11:52They found the fingerprints matched too.
11:54But a month later
11:55Spanish authorities find the real culprit
11:57They release Brandon
11:58Federal Bureau of Investigation
11:59A 330-page report was issued
12:01Regarding the mistakes made by analysts
12:03Report containing a case study
12:05Regarding the potential drawbacks of fingerprint analysis
12:07These examples confirm that there is no conclusive evidence.
12:10Other than the numerical praise
12:11Fingerprints are very likely to be found here.
12:12It is not conclusive evidence.
12:13Tahali Aziz, this is someone in America
12:15They accuse him of doing something in Spain.
12:16Because the fingerprints are applied
12:17One year, Abu Ahmed
12:18We haven't even dealt with the body yet.
12:20Abba Lin Nallam Fi Sha'r
12:21We'll examine his blood and take fingerprints.
12:23We're going to get in there now, what's left for the body?
12:25Your carrier, my dear
12:26Eccentric Tabayt
12:28But I'm stranger than you
12:28I'll tell you that this is the role of forensic medicine.
12:30And I'm dying for him
12:31A forensic doctor is a doctor who studied medicine.
12:34But in many countries
12:35Forensic medicine is not a healthcare specialty.
12:37On the contrary, it would be more appropriate for a legal system to follow.
12:40Police or Public Prosecutor
12:41They are the ones who request the involvement of the forensic doctor.
12:43In case of suspected murder
12:44In the case of the world confirming the identity of the killer
12:47The forensic doctor is responsible for three things
12:48Initial examination of the body
12:50Preliminary analysis of time of death
12:51Secondly, the body is transferred to the pedestrians.
12:53In order to be examined
12:54Finally, they will present their testimony before the court.
12:57After all the analyses you did
12:58And the tests you did
13:00May you be blessed with happiness
13:00They submit a report detailing the cause and manner of death.
13:03All this is to reach two important milestones.
13:04Time of death and cause of death
13:06The first thing the forensic doctor determines
13:07It is the time of death
13:08Because even if we hear the sound of a gunshot
13:09Or hit, or slammed, or screamed
13:11Simply put, it could be the time of the shock that led to death.
13:14Not the actual moment of death
13:15It's possible for someone to survive an injury for hours, days, or months.
13:18So, Ahmed, we know who died at the time of death.
13:20And he is angry at the body
13:21The doctor who is the ordinary one who graduates from medical school
13:23He asks the case, and the case answers him.
13:25As for the case of forensic medicine
13:26The situation will be difficult for him to respond to.
13:28Why Ahmed?
13:29You see a high price from him
13:30Priest, my dear God
13:31The body doesn't speak
13:32Azizi confirmed in the forensic medicine case
13:34The doctor listens to the story the body tells after death.
13:37The first thing is called Qaljumurts
13:39Death Garden
13:40The first thing our heart stops beating
13:42Body temperature is around 37
13:44When our blood circulation stops
13:46The brain's thermoregulatory center stands
13:48Our body stops pushing itself
13:49It begins to cool at a rate of one degree Celsius per hour.
13:53Until it reaches the temperature of the room it is in
13:56Forensic medicine measures body temperature via the East
13:58The difference is calculated in comparison to the room temperature.
14:01If the man's temperature is 30
14:02The room temperature is 24
14:04So, we know
14:05This has been going on for a hundred years.
14:06This has been going on for about 6 or 7 hours.
14:08The problem might appear to us
14:09If the room temperature was 35
14:11Flow is a temperature of 35
14:13The room temperature is 35
14:14So we don't know
14:15He might have more than a hundred more than that.
14:16But the temperature, as we said
14:17The temperature gradually drops below the room temperature.
14:19Of course, my dear, this is what the experts say.
14:21But I said I'd tell you, me
14:22To understand the escalation of the situation
14:23The Sharia law also takes other factors into account in its rulings.
14:25Body mass and fat distribution
14:27Did he participate in the kohliyat program or not?
14:28Did he have a fever before he died or not?
14:30And so and so and so on
14:31The problem is if the body temperature
14:33I reached the room temperature
14:34Here there is no way we can know how to fulfill the promise.
14:37from the temperature
14:38So he goes to the forensic doctor for the muscles
14:39Body muscles after fulfillment
14:41It will be completely relaxed
14:42But one by one, they start to get angry.
14:44If I were to tell you that our muscles contain two types of proteins
14:47Actin and myosin
14:48Contraction time
14:49Actin binds to myosin
14:50It is made by actin myosin complex
14:52Here the muscle contracts
14:54Then they need energy in the form of something containing ATP.
14:56You can separate them
14:58Therefore, our muscle relaxes.
14:59After the breathing process stops
15:01Therefore, the body does not receive oxygen.
15:04Therefore, he won't be able to produce ATP.
15:05Here the muscles contract
15:07And you won't find the energy to undo it.
15:09A phenomenon known as post-mortem stiffness
15:11Regor Mortes
15:12This stiffness starts throughout the entire body.
15:14At the same time
15:15But it is completed in certain places first
15:17Because the muscles in it are small
15:18A phenomenon known as the process of ossification
15:20Regor March
15:21For example, the facial muscles around the eye
15:23jaw muscles
15:23The first signs of stiffness appear after about two hours.
15:26Then stiffness occurs in the arms and hands.
15:28Next, the large muscles in our lower limbs
15:30It takes 6 to 8 hours
15:32In the doctor's office, if it's not the face, then it's the stiff one.
15:34The loyalty remained, and this happened within approximately two hours.
15:36But I'm still not married (6 hours)
15:38There are still other signs that I will talk about later.
15:40The doctor will know the time more accurately.
15:43The entire body becomes completely rigid 24 hours after death.
15:46After that, the stiffness starts to disappear.
15:48Why the actin and myos proteins that we talked about?
15:51It begins to decompose
15:52And it disappears in the same order
15:53The first one disappears from the face
15:54And then the arms
15:55And then the big muscles underneath
15:57This stiffness will completely loosen after 36 hours.
16:00And it depends on the body's current condition.
16:01The forensic doctor can calculate the time
16:03If the body was killed at seven o'clock in the morning of the previous day
16:05The time interval between death and the ages on the body is estimated
16:09For example, ten [units of currency] would be published per hour.
16:10So we can then say that the time for fulfillment is from seven to nine in the evening.
16:13The third sign is the condition of the blood.
16:14When the body dies, the blood stops responding to the heart.
16:17And it begins to respond to gravity.
16:18Next, approximately half an hour after the heart stopped
16:21Blood begins to pool in the parts of the body closest to the ground.
16:24They color the place where the blood collected.
16:27In a bluish or deep purple color
16:28After approximately 6 to 8 hours
16:30These marks are permanent and lasting.
16:33But it can whiten
16:34If you press on it, it will turn a little white because the blood will flow out of it.
16:37When you remove your hand, the blood returns.
16:38These marks are called Levor Morts
16:40Not just useful for timekeeping
16:42But it also tells us how the body was positioned when it died.
16:45For example, if the bloodstains were on this part of the body
16:47This means that the victim died and remained lying on her back.
16:50If the blood drops down to the legs
16:52This means that the victim was standing
16:53The body remained standing for 6 hours after death.
16:56When he found the body, the bloodstains were different from its current state.
16:59I know this body has moved
17:01Someone might have interfered and moved the place
17:03Also, by analyzing the color and amount of sedimented blood
17:06Can we know the cause of death?
17:07If it's a small amount, the cause is likely severe bleeding.
17:09If it's too much, then the body was trying
17:11It increases the amount of blood loss.
17:13Because the heart is unable to pump
17:14And the reason remains
17:15heart failure
17:16He must have had a heart attack
17:18If the color of the marks is an opening
17:19It could be carbon monoxide poisoning
17:21If it's a faintness, then it's suffocation.
17:22The three important countries that are being examined
17:25Abu Hamid is still young in what you're saying.
17:27That is, if you are talking about the body being found
17:30Shortly after the death
17:32What if this body had been found days later?
17:34Or fingers, or months, or years
17:36These are the signs
17:37You and the forensic doctor can play with it anywhere.
17:39You've become a spent force.
17:40You and forensic medicine
17:42Wait, my dear, if I become
17:43Who was that burned?
17:43Why are you talking like that?
17:45The truth, my dear, is that in cases like these
17:46Investigators are turning to other scientists.
17:48entomologists
17:49Let me tell you, my dear, the first person to know there's a body
17:51Not the police, not the relatives, not the neighbors, not the neighbor's son, not the neighbor's dog
17:55But the flies
17:56Do you remember, my dear, the one in Qurna 14 who identified the murder weapon?
17:58Is it him?
17:59Flies are very sensitive to the smell of a decomposing corpse.
18:02He might arrive at the crime scene in just 15 minutes.
18:04Does he tell you, my dear, that the corpse opened up a lot of insect nests?
18:08The best of the drowned lineages
18:09An entire insect life revolves around the corpse.
18:12They eat from it, they lay their eggs in it, they let their offspring feed on the corpse
18:16The body is at their mall
18:17There are also insects that attack the body immediately after death.
18:20And other insects wait after the body has decomposed.
18:22countries of the children
18:23And insects come to feed on the larvae laid by other insects.
18:26When insects take turns, I have important information about the time of death.
18:29After cases of poisoning, the body begins to decompose.
18:32The only source for knowing the type of poison is the insects that collected the poison from the carcass.
18:36Forensic insect control determines the post-mortem period.
18:38By examining the insects living inside the body
18:40For example, an insect like a green fly
18:42It comes to feed and spends the night in one of the body's orifices.
18:45In the eye, on the bed, or on the genitals
18:46What if it lays eggs in an enclosed space?
18:48There was probably a wound here.
18:50This house takes 21 hours to hatch.
18:52This is if the temperature is 21 degrees Celsius.
18:54If the temperature is 27 degrees, it will only take 18 hours.
18:56The larvae hatch, they prefer to eat
18:58After about 20 hours, the larvae move to a second stage.
19:01Then a third stage until it grows
19:02The process of nubuing takes four days if the temperature is 20
19:05Or three days, 27
19:07Then she transforms into a virgin and spreads us
19:09After about seven to ten days, a fully grown shrew emerges, weighing
19:13She mates and lays about 22 eggs.
19:16Generations come and generations go, but the body remains.
19:19And we count these insects among the countries
19:22These generations
19:23The role of forensic entomologists is to determine the type of insect.
19:26She is now in her first stage or phase.
19:29Therefore, the time that has passed since the death
19:31And that doesn't happen easily.
19:32It's definitely disgusting
19:32My dear, after a while you do whatever you want, you'll stop being disgusted by it.
19:35The difficulty always lies in the presence of different types of worms and insects.
19:39You've always seen how temperature makes a difference in time and rates.
19:42If things were free, they would develop quickly.
19:43If things get cold, they will happen slowly.
19:45Therefore, they calculate the temperature at the crime scene.
19:47They take the weather forecast record of the maximum and minimum temperatures.
19:50They calculate the difference between the temperature at the crime scene and the ambient temperature.
19:54They check the temperatures of the past few days in the same way.
19:57Then they can see which fly larva this is by examining its larvae.
20:00If the intention is not available, register.
20:02They take the larvae and continue to raise them until they reach the adult stage.
20:05And from here they know exactly what "he's stuffing" means
20:07So, by God, they've left the corpse and the accused alone and are raising me in the larvae.
20:10My dear, these caterpillars are the only witness.
20:13Okay, my dear, all this fuss is to find out something very important, which is the time of death.
20:17Because the timing of death can help you when you investigate the accused individuals.
20:21And you see the excuse for each one of them being absent
20:23When the crime happened in the window, that was during the time you were there.
20:26What were you doing? Do you have any evidence to prove what you were doing?
20:29Where were you on Wednesday, the day of the quarter, the day of the eleventh, the day of the quarter?
20:31I'm watching my heroes
20:32Let me also tell you that the timing of the death is not 100% accurate.
20:35That's why it's called the estimated time of death.
20:38This is not just important for criminal investigations
20:40But civil matters, such as insurance companies, are also important.
20:42Okay, Abu Hamid, so now we know how forensic medicine determines the time of death.
20:46How does he know the cause and manner of death?
20:50Let me, my dear, make a very important distinction for you, which is the difference between the cause of death and the manner of death.
20:55The cause of death is the illness or disorder that led to the death.
20:58The forensic doctor can identify this by examining the affected part.
21:00As for the method of death, it means: was the death a natural death?
21:03No accident? No suicide? No murder?
21:05One cause of death can occur in many ways
21:07For example, in cases of suffocation, there are signs that tell the doctor if it's a death by suffocation.
21:11For example, if the eye is protruding or bulging outwards
21:13The lips are bluish and there is a bloody splatter on the face.
21:16The tongue is sticking out, the mouth is open, and foam is coming out of it.
21:18Upon examining the body, he finds the internal organs congested.
21:21The area is tender and affected, and there is an accumulation of abdominal fluids.
21:24This is the cause of death, but it can happen in more than one way.
21:26The person who died from suffocation may have had their respiratory centers in their brain blocked.
21:29Due to internal toxins such as urea or ammonia
21:32Or an external poison such as opium or datura
21:34Or a plan or a brainwave
21:35They exposed the brain and disrupted the respiratory centers in the brain.
21:38Death by these methods gives signs of death by asphyxiation.
21:40But it's also possible that suffocation occurred.
21:42As a result, he inhaled toxic air.
21:44Or he suffocated from the dust or high humidity
21:46Or a closed space with no oxygen
21:48The suffocation could be due to the blood not carrying enough oxygen.
21:52Such as cases of bleeding, dehydration, or heart failure
21:54It could be a blocked airway
21:56A medical need or someone who wrote about themselves
21:58Someone might have written themselves with their hand or with a pillow
22:00Or strangle him with a rope, a toy, or something similar.
22:02Each of these cases of suffocation has different signs.
22:05And the doctor then sees
22:06Are there any signs of a rope, edem, or resistance marks?
22:09Therefore, he can determine which of these countries caused the death.
22:12Then he decides
22:12Was this suicide, murder, accidental killing, or what?
22:15Oh Abu Ahmed, you are a gem, you understand me, is it possible for someone to betray someone by mistake?
22:18Oh, my dear
22:18For example, you have a mother who disciplines her child
22:20She fell asleep on him while she was trying to stop him.
22:22His airway became blocked and he died a natural death.
22:24Thus, through diagnosis and the use of logic
22:26The doctor can predict the cause of death.
22:28Ultimately, criminal investigations remain by their very nature
22:31It contains an element of mystery and tension.
22:33An attractive space for writers and artists
22:42About this picture
22:43The forensic doctor cannot deal with a living case
22:45He can see its effect on her
22:46But it helps justice in an important and pivotal way.
22:49It's taking its course
22:51A very significant responsibility, no less important than any other responsibility.
22:54That's why there's no room for individual reading.
22:56The person I told you about at the beginning of the episode is true.
22:57He had an extraordinary intuition that could entertain us.
22:59But when we move on to an important topic like law enforcement
23:02Destinies and lives of people
23:04The victim has the right not to say who killed her.
23:06Therefore, intuition must be supported by science, logic, and art.
23:09When you're dealing with the unknown, there are no easy answers.
23:11As you saw, my dear, throughout the episode
23:13The investigation is not the task of one person.
23:14But the task of many specialists in different scientific fields
23:18What they have in common is that their work begins when a person's life ends.
23:21There is no way to know the whole truth
23:23But when each branch plays its role
23:24This is the final image of their collaboration.
23:26A picture that has gone viral for sixty years in restoring rights to their owners
23:29And of course, there were mistakes.
23:30But she never stopped trying to find out the truth.
23:33That's all, my dear.
23:34If you want to see the real facts, the ones that lead to real things
23:37God willing
23:38Look at the past cases, look at the upcoming cases.
23:39Go down and look at the shelves
23:40We are on YouTube, subscribed to the channel.
23:41And Habib, excuse me, but I have a question, my dear, that I will ask you at the end of the episode.
23:44He authorized this crime.
23:45We present it starting with the silent letter

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