Kentucky News: Gilpin Death Was An Accident

Players and medical experts, the state Tuesday as the defense began presenting its arguments in the case of former football coach Jason Stinson. A former coach at the Park Ridge High School will be charged for manslaughter and wanton risk in August 2008, deaths caused by heat from the player Max Gilpin.

The defense witness at first a good friend and teammate Gilpin, a player so close to the Gilpin he has a tattoo on the death of his friend received an honorary Gilpin. The player, he said the jury and Gilpin went together on the ground, and he thought of his hot during August 20th practice. “He did not say anything to feel good, and usually I have not heard complaints Max how he feels.”

His team said that Gilpin was feeling bad as soon as lunch that day.

The players who testified for the protection of Stinson described as a friend, not as a master of the jury had heard. Stinson said they wanted others to hurry to rest, because they were redundant.

Gilpin friend told me that he and another player has left the early years with Gasser Gilpin was still running. Despite all that football players and other witnesses who testified for the prosecution said, the player said he had never heard Stinson deny water or players say they will work next to someone. “Max was one of my best friends, y’all. You must understand that it was like a brother to me. If I thought people (Stinson) is something wrong, I’ll be the first man who said: “The players showed.

Another team member said he does not see patients and have not heard Stinson said that the players until one team or seek to terminate Stinson said: “Ding Ding Ding, we have a winner “if you do not leave anyone.

Former player David Keown PRP also said he had not seen a practice player ill. During the cons-examination the prosecutor asked about best friends with his coach Keown. Keown said the jury was right. “When I needed clothes and no money for food, he was there. If I needed someone who was there. When I need a place to stay, his door is always open to discuss with me.”

The defense began calling health professionals. Unlike witnesses, said Dr. Dan Danzl, Department of Emergency Medicine at the University of Louisville, he does not believe in heat stroke is caused by dehydration. Danzl said he thought May Gilpin is a viral infection associated with Adderall and the possible use of creatine Gilpin will be a factor in heat stroke.

“Sometimes you can not predict who and why some patients with heat stroke,” said Danzl.

After Danzl, water ice Gilpin putting his condition would have helped. It’s something Danzl, said that medical students in tests main response heatstroke. He told the jury that if medical students have raised before the court that the patient is immersed in ice water for the treatment of heat stroke, it will not pass the test.

Another defense witness in the first day was Dr. George Nichols, a former medical examiner of the state of Kentucky. In his testimony, said Nichols, “the nature of death in this case is a coincidence.”

Nichols said three separate tests are not drained Gilpin when he arrived at the hospital. Nichols also said at 4 weeks of clinical trials of ADHD drug Adderall, 2.4% of research participants, the study develops a fever.

Neither Nichols nor Danzl Gilpin personally seen after he was taken to Kosair Children Hospital, both of which only examine his medical records. One of the doctors ICU pediatric treatment Gilpin, who showed last week Kosair dehydration is the cause of his death.

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